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President Donald Trump’s escalating tariff threats have not deterred Wall Street, with the stock market continuing to rise ...
US stocks fell on Friday after President Donald Trump threatened a 35% tariff on Canada — a sharp escalation in an ongoing ...
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will keep working toward a new trade framework with the United States despite ...
U.S. stocks ended lower on Friday after President Donald Trump threatened to impose a 35% tariff on imports from Canada, with investors concerned about more potential tariff announcements over the ...
Stocks closed lower on Wall Street, pulling the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq composite below the records they set a day earlier.
European stocks, which have been trouncing their U.S. counterparts in 2025, led the way lower into New York trading. The popular Global X DAX Germany ETF DAX was on pace for its worst two-day drop ...
Aside from pockets of volatility in target currencies, stocks or commodities, markets have offered little in the way of reaction to the tariffs onslaught.
President Trump’s announcement wasn’t as bad as feared for Canada, but the country’s auto sector will still struggle with the 25% tariff on imported vehicles announced on Wednesday.
U.S. stocks opened lower on Friday, as President Donald Trump threatened additional tariffs on Canada, causing the S&P 500 to retreat from Thursday's record closing high. The Dow was off by 292 points ...
Wall Street seems to be heading for a red day, with stock index futures down on Friday, as President Donald Trump slapped a ...
On TheStreet Pro Stephen "Sarge" Guilfoyle asks whether yesterday's tariff letter to Canada was one letter too many. You see, ...
The Canadian economy shrugged of tariff uncertainty and added the largest number of jobs in six months, with unemployment ...