
Dollar gains against yen as Trump's trade war intensifies
The greenback advanced against major peers on Tuesday after Trump began telling trade counterparts that sharply higher U.S. tariffs will start on August 1, but he later said he was open to extensions if countries made proposals.
Trump said on social media that there would be announcements on Wednesday regarding "a minimum of 7 countries having to do with trade," without specifying whether he would be announcing new deals or tariff letters.
Multiple rounds of talks have failed to result in a breakthrough between the U.S. and Japan, where policymakers are now increasingly focused on a critical upper house election this month.
"Talks appear to be stalled over Japan's rice market protections and it's hard to see the Japanese bending on this one," IG analyst Tony Sycamore wrote in a client note. "The (currency) pair's rise was also supported by a fifth day of gains in U.S. yields and a sharp rise in JGB yields on fiscal concerns ahead of Japanese elections on July 20."
The dollar climbed 0.2% to 146.85 yen , after touching a more than two-week high on the previous day. The euro was little changed at $1.1720 .
The dollar index , which tracks the U.S. currency against a basket of six major peers, was steady at 97.582 after a two-day climb. Sterling traded at $1.35795 , down 0.1% in early trading.
Bank of Japan board member Junko Koeda said she was keeping a close eye on possible second-round effects on underlying inflation from recent rises in the price of rice, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday.
The European Union will not receive a tariff letter and could secure exemptions from the U.S. baseline rate of 10%, EU sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Monday.
Trump on Tuesday said he would impose a 50% tariff on imported copper and will soon introduce long-threatened levies on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will skip a Group of 20 finance officials meeting in South Africa next week, sources familiar with his plans told Reuters, but will attend the World Expo 2025 in Osaka, Japan, according to a Treasury spokesperson.
The Australian dollar fetched $0.6526 , down 0.07% after Tuesday's 0.6% jump. New Zealand's kiwi dollar traded at $0.5993 , down 0.1%.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
7 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Morning Mail: fears aged care reform to price out poorest, action on antisemitism, Maroons glory
Morning everyone. One of Labor's big pledges has been to fix the aged care system, but an industry big-hitter says in our top story that the government's reforms risk leaving poorer retirees squeezed out of care options. Elsewhere, the prime minister is set to announce a suite of measures to tackle antisemitism today, there's some relief for tenants as rents show signs of topping out – and why Queensland's Origin triumph was a matter of life and death. Backpacker missing | Fears are mounting for the safety of 26-year-old German backpacker Carolina Wilga (pictured) who has been missing for more than a week in rural Western Australia. Aged care squeeze | Labor's changes to the aged care system risk squeezing out poorer elderly people, the head of Uniting has warned, because government support isn't enough to compete with self-funded care home residents. Antisemitism attack | Victoria police are investigating a video of a person claiming credit for the vandalism of three cars outside a defence industry business linked to Israel while clad in a black balaclava and standing in front of a Palestinian flag. Meanwhile, the prime minister is expected to announce a package of measures today to tackle the problem, including education and online safety. Rental 'easing' | Rents are showing signs of maxing out in Australia capital cities because landlords cannot squeeze any more out of hard-pressed tenants, new data shows. Domestic emergency | A Queensland court has dismissed charges against a woman for driving while disqualified because it judged she faced an 'extraordinary emergency' due to the threat of domestic violence. Ukraine reshuffle | Russia has committed flagrant and unprecedented abuses of human rights since it invaded Ukraine in 2014, including extrajudicial killings, sexual violence and forced labour, the European court of human rights has found. Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who met the pope yesterday for talks, is replacing Ukraine's ambassador to the US, who has been heavily criticised by leading Republicans, as part a diplomatic reshuffle designed to strengthen ties with the Trump administration. Our diplomatic editor asks whether the bromance between Donald Trump and Putin is finally over. More tariffs | Donald Trump continued to fire off letters threatening steep US tariffs on foreign exports from six more countries, including Iraq, Libya and Moldova. 'Shoot them in the legs' | Kenya's president, William Ruto, has ordered police to shoot protesters targeting businesses in the legs amid continued unrest that has seen dozens killed in demonstrations. Chips all round | The chipmaker Nvidia has become the first public company in history to reach $4tn in market value, while elsewhere in the tech world the chief executive of X, Linda Yaccarino, has quit Elon Musk's social network after two 'incredible' years in the job. Operation robot | Automated surgery could be trialled on humans within a decade, say researchers, after an AI-trained robot armed with tools to cut, clip and grab soft tissue successfully removed gall bladders from pigs without human help. Kumanjayi Walker inquest findings: racism, reform and reckoning Lorena Allam, an Indigenous media professor at UTS and former Guardian Indigenous affairs editor, and our justice and courts reporter, Nino Bucci, tell Nour Haydar what the coroner's findings mean for truth-telling in the Northern Territory. Sorry your browser does not support audio - but you can download here and listen $ After finding itself at the centre of the media spotlight for more than 10 weeks, Gippslanders might have to get used to more visitors as the Erin Patterson case spawns a ghoulish sightseeing trade – and a stream of filmmakers for the inevitable true crime dramas and documentaries. Benita Kolovos and Stephanie Convery explore why so many are drawn to so-called dark tourism. The school holidays provide a tough test for parents in keeping kids amused – and fed. So this week's supermarket taste test sees Sarah Ayoub wrangle a group of under-10s (and a rogue adult connoisseur) to find the best – and worst – chicken nuggets on the market. Sign up to Morning Mail Our Australian morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion Rugby league | Tagged underdogs and beset by off-field dramas, Queensland delivered one of the great State of Origin performances to beat the NSW Blues 24-12 on their home patch in Sydney to secure the shield for 2025. For the recently bereaved Cameron Munster, new father Josh Papalii and under-pressure coach Billy Slater it was an especially sweet triumph, writes Jack Snape. Rugby union | Fielding close to their best team, the British & Irish Lions prevailed over the Brumbies by 36-24 last night but a watching Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt will have seen enough to take heart for next week's first Test. Formula One | Christian Horner has been sacked as Red Bull's team principal after 20 years in post and will be replaced by Laurent Mekies, the principal of sister team Racing Bulls SpA. Tennis | Iga Swiatek will play Belinda Bencic in the Wimbledon semi-finals after she beat Liudmila Samsonova and the Swiss veteran won through after a thrilling match against Mirra Andreeva. Jannik Sinner eased past Ben Shelton into the semis where he will play Novak Djokovic. Sydney train drivers are set for a big pay bump to end months of industrial action, according to the Telegraph. Coastal areas of South Australia are cleaning up after being battered by heavy rain, high winds and even thunderstorms, the Advertiser reports. The Australian claims that the defence ministry's guided missile section has spent taxpayers' money on a cookbook to promote Harmony Week. It might have been a good night for Maroons fans but the Courier Mail says they couldn't celebrate their Origin win at the Star casino in Brisbane after workers staged a strike for better conditions. Energy | Western Australia's premier, Roger Cook, will speak about the energy transition at a CEDA conference in Perth. Dubbo| There is a mention for a woman accused of killing her two grandsons in Coonabarabran. Victoria | There is a mention in Dandenong court for man charged with antisemitic abuse against a federal MP. If you would like to receive this Morning Mail update to your email inbox every weekday, sign up here, or finish your day with our Afternoon Update newsletter. You can follow the latest in US politics by signing up for This Week in Trumpland. And finally, here are the Guardian's crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword


The Independent
7 minutes ago
- The Independent
More than 70% of Black voters disapprove of Trump - erasing gains he made that helped win the 2024 race
Donald Trump appears to have lost of goodwill he had among Black voters during the 2024 presidential campaign, according to a new poll. Among African-Americans, 71.5 percent disapprove of Trump's presidency so far, while just 24.1 percent approve, according to a Decision Desk HQ average of polls current through July 7. The president hasn't gotten majority approval from Black voters since the end of his first week back in office, according to the aggregator, but the latest numbers represent a notable increase in discontent, after Trump had a 63.7 percent average approval rating among the voting demographic in mid-June. 'We've seen his overall approval rating go down. And that's got to come from somewhere. The African-American vote is his newest vote, and that's probably going to be the first to go,' Scott Tranter, the director of data science for Decision Desk, told The Hill. The findings are in contrast to the president's surprising gains with voters of color during the 2024 race, where Trump won 15 percent of Black voters, up from 8 percent in 2020, and drew nearly even with Kamala Harris among Hispanic voters. The decline in support from Black voters could have a variety of causes. Many 2024 voters were inspired to cast their choice based on economic conditions and the record inflation under the Biden administration. So far, the Trump presidency has been marked with a sense of economic uncertainty and numerous revised and suspended deadlines for global tariffs. Trump's recently signed Big, Beautiful Bill spending package could be a mixed bag economically for Black voters, cutting taxes for the wealthy and likely causing millions to be ineligible for Medicaid, a low-income government health plan that disproportionately serves Black people. The Trump administration has also sought to end diversity and inclusion programs and funding across the federal government, ended race-conscious affirmative action at the US Naval Academy, scrubbed government websites and libraries of materials mentioning prominent Black figures in history, and renamed military bases for Confederate soldiers who fought to defend slavery in the U.S. Civil War, defending the move as 'important for morale.'


The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
Anti-Trump acronym returns to Wall Street
Donald Trump's repeated delays on trade tariff deadlines have led investors to nickname him "TACOs" (Trump Always Chickens Out). Initially, markets largely disregarded Trump's latest tariff delay to August 1, with experts suggesting his credibility on such threats has diminished. However, some economists, including Trump's former Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, argue that market uncertainty due to these delays is deeply troubling and unsustainable. Trump has since asserted that the August 1 deadline is a definitive "hard stop" for tariffs ranging from 20-40 per cent on countries without trade deals, sending warning letters. Experts anticipate renewed market volatility as the August 1 deadline approaches, with concerns that tariffs, if implemented, would primarily harm American consumers through higher prices.