China, tariff deal
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The United States and Britain have reached a trade agreement, reducing tariffs on cars, steel, and agricultural products. The deal includes a significant cut in tariffs for British cars and steel exports,
India’s growing concert economy needs guardrails, a seasonally slow month for life insurance, growth outlook dims for AC makers, a diplomatic outreach that matches India's aspirations, and more
China has said it's evaluating approaches from US officials to start negotiations about tariffs, a potential deescalation in the trade war that has raised hopes formal trade talks could start soon. "If we fight,
US and China Cut Reciprocal Tariffs to 10% in 90-Day Reprieve – Highlights from US-China Trade Talks
New agreement sees reciprocal US-China tariffs drop from 125% to 10% for 90 days, with final US tariff rate on China lowered to 30%
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MoneyWeek on MSNUS and China trade breakthrough as tariffs reduced for 90 daysMarkets have risen on news of a US-China trade agreement. What has been announced, and what does it mean for your investments?
This revision reflects the US and China agreeing to a temporary reduction in tariff levels, the US-UK trade deal struck last week, and a modification in auto tariffs that allowed for offset rebates.
A tariff reduction on British car exports to the U.S. in a new economic deal brings relief to the UK car industry. The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders welcomes the development as a step towards further reducing trade barriers and fostering economic growth for both nations.
The ink on Britain’s landmark post-Brexit trade deal with India had hardly dried before the news broke that an agreement with the US was imminent. Writing on Truth Social overnight, Donald Trump said it was a “great honour” to have the UK be the first trade deal signed with the United States, claiming it will be “full and comprehensive”.
Under the new agreement, US tariffs on UK goods will be set at 10 percent ... Meetings will take place in Geneva, and are expected to address reductions on broad tariffs, duties on specific ...
Nearly a quarter (24 per cent) of UK defined benefit (DB) pension schemes are actively considering a reduction in their US asset holdings, research from WTW has revealed