Trump, TACO and tariff
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TACO returns to Wall Street: Investors shrug off Trump’s latest tariff threat as nickname sets the investor’s mood Experts weigh in on whether Trump will carry out his latest threat – and ...
US stocks hit records, and Nvidia closed above a $4 trillion market cap for the first time. Investors looked past tariffs and toward earnings season.
If investors widely bet that Trump will blink, that means there is no market freakout. And no market freakout in turn means no one is holding Trump’s feet to the fire, pressuring him to back away from policies that could damage the economy and corporate profits.
President Donald Trump didn't like his new nickname 'TACO'. Here's why people are calling Trump TACO and the meaning behind TACO trade.
2don MSN
In his new round of tariffs being announced this week, Trump is essentially tethering the entire world economy to his instinctual belief that import taxes will deliver factory jobs and stronger growth in the U.S., rather than the inflation and slowdown predicted by many economists.
Trump now says Aug. 1 is the hard deadline for the new tariff rates to be paid, downplaying hopes of further delays.
No TACO Tuesday: Trump insists Aug. 1 tariff deadline won’t be extended Trump has repeatedly changed his tune on how final his tariff deadlines are.
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Raw Story on MSNEconomist coins 8-letter acronym on MSNBC to mock Trump over tariffsPresident Donald Trump's affinity for tariffs had already earned him the nickname "TACO," which stands for "Trump Always Chickens Out." Now, it appears Trump's tariffs have earned him a different, albeit smaller,