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Will a 15% U.S. Tariff on EU Autos Reshape Global Car Trade?
In a move with major implications for the global automotive industry, the U.S. federal government has implemented a 15% import tariff on auto imports from the European Union. According to a federal register notice from September 24, the move affects cars as well as auto parts. That notice went on to indicate that the duties are also retroactive to August 1. The new tariff follows an August 21 announcement by the United States and the EU regarding a “Framework for an Agreement on Reciprocal, Fair and Balanced Trade.” Previously, imports from the 27-member trading bloc had faced duties up to 25%. “Most of the new ... (full story)
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From cnbc.com|Oct 15, 2025|11 commentsFederal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran said Wednesday that the latest impasse in trade talks between the U.S. and China poses new dangers to the economic outlook and makes the ...
From woodmac.com|Oct 15, 2025Global copper demand is set to surge 24% by 2035, rising by 8.2 million tonnes per annum (Mtpa) to 42.7 Mtpa, according to a new Horizons report from Wood Mackenzie, ‘High-wire ...
From zerohedge.com|Oct 15, 2025Fresh from reporting a solid set of numbers for the third quarter, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said he sees "some logic" in owning gold, while declining to say whether he thinks the ...
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From @LiveSquawk|Oct 15, 2025|6 commentsFed's Miran: AI Investment Could Lead To Higher Neutral Interest Rate FED'S MIRAN SAYS RECENT POLICY CHANGES, INCLUDING IMMIGRATION, HAVE PRODUCED FAST CHANGES IN THE NEUTRAL RATE || SAYS CURRENT FED POLICY IS MORE RESTRICTIVE THAN PEOPLE THINK BECAUSE THE NEUTRAL RATE HAS FALLEN FED'S MIRAN SAYS DON'T THINK MOVING BY MORE THAN 50 BPS CUTS IS NECESSARY MIRAN: NO EVIDENCE IN THE DATA THAT TARIFFS ARE RAISING INFLATION; ARGUMENTS OTHERWISE ARE BASED ON PRIOR TRENDS KEY CATEGORIES OF IMPORTED GOODS ARE NOT SEEING PRICE INCREASES THAT DIFFERENT FROM OTHER GOODS
From federalreserve.gov|Oct 15, 2025|5 commentsThank you for the opportunity to speak to you today about artificial intelligence (AI). AI is a powerful and rapidly advancing technology that has captured everyone's attention. If you've watched enough sci-fi, you know that major technological change is usually either dystopian or utopian—the robots either take over the world or improve it. These polarized views are also common among economists and technologists. On one side, there are the doomers—those convinced that new technologies will destroy jobs, widen inequality, and concentrate power. On the other, there are the techno-optimists—those convinced we're on the brink of an unprecedented leap in productivity, growth, and creativity if we let the technology proliferate. As usual, the truth about AI is probably somewhere in between. The job of an economic policymaker is to separate hype and hyperbole from hard data and sound analysis and understand what AI really means for growth, productivity, and the broader economy. FED'S WALLER DOES NOT COMMENT ON MONETARY POLICY IN PREPARED REMARKS ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
From @financialjuice|Oct 15, 2025|94 commentsUS Treasury Secretary Bessent urges the world bank to end support for China.
Statement from U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent for the World Bank Development Committee and IMF International Monetary and Financial Comm As we convene for this year’s Annual Meetings, the United States looks forward to working closely with partners around the world to confront today’s global economic challenges and secure a future underpinned by growth and stability. Achieving success will require collaboration with international financial institutions that are highly effective, efficient, and accountable in implementing their core mandates. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank can support America’s efforts to secure a more balanced, prosperous, and stable global economy through a return to their core missions and disciplined deployment of their resources. We have seen some progress towards these goals since the Spring Meetings. The IMF is folding its climate and gender units into one that is focused on macro-financial and structural policies, and management has eliminated extraneous, non-core issues from its Board Work Program. The World Bank has moved in the direction of an all-of-the-above approach to energy by removing its prohibition on the financing of nuclear power generation. And, the Bank has increased the weight given to quality in procurement decision making and boosted outreach to industry, both of which stand to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of its financing. Nonetheless, the IMF and World Bank must take more concerted steps to focus on their respective core missions and deliver greater impact to the countries they support and greater value to taxpayers from the United States and other shareholders. Here in the United States, we have been implementing President Trump’s America First economic agenda of tax cuts, energy abundance, and regulatory modernization. They are interlocking parts of an engine designed to drive economic growth and domestic manufacturing: tax cuts raise real incomes for families and businesses; an affordable, reliable, and secure energy supply drives down the cost of doing business; and regulatory modernization complements both by making it easier to invest in and grow new businesses. This includes passing landmark tax legislation in July to unleash the full potential of the U.S. economy, to protect American workers and families, and to save taxpayer dollars by cutting waste, fraud, and abuse. Thanks to actions taken by the Trump Administration, businesses are investing in America again. A revitalized private sector will propel econom
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- Oct 15, 2025 11:37am Posted byFundamental Analysis196
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