U.S. Employers Added 228,000 Jobs in March, but Outlook Is Clouded
© Karl Russell
© Karl Russell
© Elke Scholiers for The New York Times
Les nouveaux droits de douane de Donald Trump secouent sérieusement l’économie et cela pourrait notamment se traduire par une hausse importante des prix pour les iPhone. La hausse, si elle se met en place, concernera les États-Unis. Selon des analystes du cabinet Rosenblatt Securities, cité par Reuters, les prix des iPhone aux États-Unis pourraient augmenter […]
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L’article Les iPhone pourraient coûter 2 300$ à cause des droits de douane de Trump (analystes) est apparu en premier sur iPhoneAddict.fr.
© Yves Herman/Reuters
L’action d’Apple a chuté de plus de 4 % en début de séance à la bourse ce vendredi, prolongeant une tendance baissière amorcée jeudi. Cette réaction des marchés fait suite à l’annonce par la Chine de nouveaux droits de douane en réponse aux mesures protectionnistes de Donald Trump. Hier, l’action d’Apple avait déjà subi une […]
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L’article L’action d’Apple chute encore après les droits de douane et la réponse de la Chine est apparu en premier sur iPhoneAddict.fr.
© Photo illustration by Shannon Lin; photographs by Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images and Haldeman Papers
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© Hannah Yoon for The New York Times
While the US economy remains robust, Jerome Powell cautions there is high uncertainty over its direction
Donald Trump’s global tariffs assault is set to raise prices and slow down economic growth, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell has warned, defying the US president’s demands for an immediate interest rate cut.
While the US economy remains robust, Powell cautioned that there is high uncertainty over its direction. “Downside risks have risen,” he told an event in Arlington, Virginia, on Friday.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
© Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
© Illustration: Martin Rowson/The Guardian
© Illustration: Martin Rowson/The Guardian
L'instauration de taxes douanières par Donald Trump, une mesure annoncée le même jour que la Nintendo Switch 2, contraint le géant japonais à revoir ses plans commerciaux. Nintendo annonce qu'il n'ouvrira pas les précommandes le 9 avril, le temps de prendre une décision.
L'instauration de taxes douanières par Donald Trump, une mesure annoncée le même jour que la Nintendo Switch 2, contraint le géant japonais à revoir ses plans commerciaux. Nintendo annonce qu'il n'ouvrira pas les précommandes le 9 avril, le temps de prendre une décision.
Trump’s new 10% universal tariffs will not apply to many fossil fuel products in sign of his fealty, advocates say
The sweeping package of tariffs unveiled by Donald Trump on Wednesday includes an exemption for the energy sector, which is a clear sign of the president’s fealty to his big oil donors over the American people, advocates say.
Trump’s new 10% universal tariffs – which are higher for many major economies – are wreaking havoc on the global economy and are expected to increase consumer prices in the US. But the levies will not apply to many fossil fuel products, including liquefied natural gas imports, crude oil from Canada, and materials needed for making petrochemicals.
Continue reading...© Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images
© Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images
Companies with suppliers in Asian countries are likely to have to raise prices after the US president’s measures
Donald Trump’s “liberation day” tariff war has so far wiped trillions off the market value of publicly traded companies, with the sweeping border taxes of up to 50% poised to wreak havoc on businesses across the world.
US-based global brands from Nike to Apple have suffered some of the heaviest falls in share price and market value, as investors react to fears of price increases and a potential slowdown in consumer spending. Here, we examine some of the most exposed industries and brands.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images
© Photograph: Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images
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Small businesses that import goods brace for steep price increases that they have to pass on to their customers
It’s just two days since Donald Trump launched his extraordinary tariff assault on the world in a bid to rebuild the US economy and roll back an era of globalization. But already shopkeepers are bracing for recession, and their customers spending less, as they prepare to increase prices.
“We’re going to have to put our prices up and people aren’t going to like it,” said Ian Anderson, store manager at Tea and Sympathy, a UK grocery store, restaurant and fish-and-chip shop stalwart in Manhattan’s West Village.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images
© Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images
© Dmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times
© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
US president says on Truth Social that ‘this is a great time to get rich’ despite China issuing a 34% tariff on all US goods
The Trump administration is taking aim at Brown University with threats to freeze $510m in grants, widening its promise to withhold federal funding from schools it accuses of allowing antisemitism on campus, according to multiple media outlets including Reuters and the New York Times.
University officials said they had not yet been formally notified, but the school was among dozens warned last month that enforcement actions could be coming as the administration seeks to crack down on academic institutions .
Continue reading...© Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
© Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Experts say UK may have to raise taxes in autumn as senior MPs caution against too many concessions in US trade talks
Donald Trump’s tariffs signal a new global economic era, Downing Street has said, as economists warned that the British government would probably have to raise taxes in response.
No 10 said on Friday the prime minister believed that this week’s trade announcement by the US president, which has started a global trade war and sent stock markets tumbling, marked a turning point in history.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images
© Photograph: Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images
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Using the platform was dangerous and wrong – but officials appeared to prioritize shielding themselves from litigation
No senior US government official in the now-infamous “Houthi PC Small Group” Signal chat seemed new to that kind of group, nor surprised by the sensitivity of the subject discussed in that insecure forum, not even when the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, chimed in with details of a coming airstrike. No one objected – not the director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, who was abroad and using her personal cellphone to discuss pending military operations; not even the presidential envoy Steve Witkoff, who was in Moscow at the time. Yet most of these officials enjoy the luxury of access to secure government communications systems 24/7/365.
Reasonable conclusions may be drawn from these facts. First, Trump’s national security cabinet commonly discusses secret information on insecure personal devices. Second, sophisticated adversaries such as Russia and China intercept such communications, especially those sent or received in their countries. Third, as a result, hostile intelligence services now probably possess blackmail material regarding these officials’ indiscreet past conversations on similar topics. Fourth, as a first-term Trump administration official and ex-CIA officer, I believe the reason these officials risk interacting in this way is to prevent their communications from being preserved as required by the Presidential Records Act, and avoid them being discoverable in litigation, or subject to a subpoena or Freedom of Information Act request. And fifth, no one seems to have feared being investigated by the justice department for what appears to be a violation of the Espionage Act’s Section 793(f), which makes gross negligence in mishandling classified information a felony; the FBI director, Kash Patel, and attorney general, Pam Bondi, quickly confirmed that hunch. Remarkably, the CIA director John Ratcliffe wouldn’t even admit to Congress that he and his colleagues had made a mistake.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
© Photograph: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Health secretary says roles will need to be reinstated amid Trump administration’s push to slash federal workforce
Around a fifth of the 10,000 jobs cut from the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) were done in error and will need to be corrected, the US health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, has admitted.
Mass layoffs from the health department began this week amid a push by Donald Trump’s administration to shrink the size of the federal government workforce. Union representatives were told around 10,000 people were to lose their jobs ahead of further reductions that could see the department’s 82,000-strong workforce slashed by nearly a quarter.
Continue reading...© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images
© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images
Trump’s moves have pushed hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians into a state of insecurity after they were welcomed to a safe haven
Not long after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Danyil packed everything he could in a bag and traveled 15 hours by bus from the Zakarpattia region in western Ukraine to the Czech Republic.
He fled the war at 17, just as the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, forbade men between the ages of 18 and 60 from leaving the country. Now aged 20, he watches from the US as the war drags on. In December, Zelenskyy said 43,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed and another 370,000 have been wounded in the war.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Julius Constantine Motal/The Guardian
© Photograph: Julius Constantine Motal/The Guardian