Trump targets EU and Apple with tariff threats
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Wall Street is assessing President Trump''s tariff salvo on Apple and what his giant tax bill means for the deficit and the economy.
It seems far too easy to blame the president for the stock market’s bad week. It wasn’t President Trump who rushed in to buy so much stock that the S&P 500 rose 19.6% from its low on April 8 through May 8,
U.S. stock futures are pointing lower to end the week; President Trump says Apple must pay a "Tariff of at least 25%" on iPhones not made in the U.S.; and Intuit stock surges on the TurboTax parent's strong results and lifted outlook.
Google has been worrying about losing search share to AI engines like ChatGPT for a couple of years.
Trump’s comment poses a challenge to Apple’s plans of selling only India-made iPhones in the US in the near term owing to higher tariffs imposed on China, where the company has its most significant production base.
UnitedHealth has gone from bad to worse, and its drop is impacting the Dow Jones Industrial Average even more than it is the S&P 500.
The latest quarterly results from a couple of major technology companies have soothed concerns about AI demand that prevailed in the market following the launch of DeepSeek.
However, Nvidia just rejoined Apple ( AAPL -0.98%) and Microsoft ( MSFT -0.21%) in the $3 trillion club. Could it even become the first $4 trillion stock by 2026? What did Nvidia do to bounce back? Nothing on its own. To understand the stock's rebound, we need to first understand why it fell in the first place.
President Trump revived his trade war Friday, threatening to slap hefty tariffs on the European Union and to hit Apple with tariffs if it doesn’t manufacture in the United States. His moves
Apple stock was down in early trading Thursday as Wall Street awaited the iPhone maker’s second-quarter earnings report. Shares were off 0.6% to $211.32 just after the stock market opened.
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Soy Nómada on MSNTrump's tariffs will also affect entrepreneurs in the USThe tariff policies under President Donald Trump have left a significant mark on the U.S. economy, particularly affecting factory owners and manufacturing businesses. The introduction of new tariffs in 2025,