The weekend for Americans abroad delivered a wild ride with plenty of positive performances from top U.S. players.
The European Union and Mexico revived a stalled free trade agreement on Friday, days before the return to the White House of Donald Trump, who has threatened both sides with tariffs.
The new Global Trade Agreement between Mexico and the 27-nation bloc would reduce Mexican tariffs of agri-food imports from Europe, remove a number of barriers that would allow European companies to more easily invest in Mexico and boost Mexican exports of ...
The European Union and Mexico link arms to fend off the impact of tariffs threatened by incoming U.S. President Donald Trump.
Tomatoes, T-shirts and cars are among the vast array of goods that could become pricier if tariffs pledged by President Donald Trump go into effect.
China isn’t the sole target. Trump has proposed 10% tariffs on European and Asian imports and 5% on Mexican goods. The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) could be invoked for swift, sweeping action,
The European Union has bolstered its trading agreement with Mexico, particularly for food and drink exports, as the bloc prepares for President Trump’s ‘golden era’.
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Any EU offer to buy more US goods should be backed up by a credible threat to retaliate robustly if Trump goes ahead with tariffs. If there is a full-blown trade war, the EU will have retaliatory tariffs ready: a “negative list” of US products drafted to mirror Trump’s proposed tariffs could serve as a deterrent.
The world is changing, and Europe must adapt if it wants to remain relevant. Donald Trump is just the clearest expression of this. What the continent can learn from this year's World Economic Forum meeting in Davos.
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Hedge funds have turned optimistic about European companies that sell things people want but don't necessarily need, especially luxury goods, according to a Goldman Sachs note on Wednesday seen by Reuters on Thursday.