
Trump extends tariff deadline to August as he unveils new rates
PRESIDENT Donald Trump unveiled the first in a wave of promised letters that threaten to impose higher tariff rates on key trading partners, including levies of 25% on goods from Japan and South Korea, and signed an executive order holding off the new duties until Aug. 1.
Trump also announced 25% rates on Malaysia, Kazakhstan and Tunisia, while South Africa would see a 30% tariff and Laos and Myanmar would face a 40% levy. Other nations hit with levies included Indonesia with a 32% rate, Bangladesh with 35%, and Thailand and Cambodia with duties of 36%. Bosnia received a 30% levy, while Serbia faces a 35% rate.
The nations were the first in what the president promised would be a flurry of unilateral warnings and trade deals announced on Monday, two days before agreements are due from trading partners facing his April 2 so-called reciprocal levies.
'Our relationship has been, unfortunately, far from Reciprocal,' Trump wrote in the letters.
On Monday, he signed an executive order that delays the new rates until Aug. 1 for all nations facing the reciprocal tariffs, effectively buying each affected nation an extra three weeks to cut a deal with the White House.
His second-term rush to overhaul US trade policies has served as a steady source of uncertainty for markets, central bankers and executives trying to game out the effect on production, inventories, hiring, inflation and consumer demand — routine planning that's hard enough without costs like tariffs that are on one day, off the next.
The letters so far appeared to largely be a novel method of once again punting a looming July 9 deadline for his so-called 'reciprocal' tariffs until at least the beginning of August. Most of the tariff rates, shared on his Truth Social platform, were largely in line with what Trump had already announced nations were likely to face.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said there would be about a dozen countries that receive notifications about their tariffs Monday directly from the president. Additional letters will arrive in the coming days, she said.
The episode was the latest turn of the screw for a program that has roiled markets and trade across the globe. One week after announcing the tariffs at a Rose Garden event, Trump offered a 90-day reprieve, lowering duties to 10% to allow time for negotiations.
Few nations successfully negotiated deals in the short time given. In the interim, Trump announced framework agreements with the United Kingdom and Vietnam and a trade truce with China.
At the same time, Trump warned nations against retaliation over his latest gambit.
'If for any reason you decide to raise your Tariffs, then, whatever the number you choose to raise them by will be added' to the threatened levels, Trump wrote.
He also said that the rates did not include any sectoral-specific tariffs that the administration had or would separately implement on goods imported in key industries. Both Japan and South Korea are major auto exporters, and are also facing US tariffs on steel.
Other nations in Trump's early barrage have less significant trading relationships. US imports from Myanmar — where relations have been strained by the 2021 military coup — totaled just over $656 million in 2024, according to the US Trade Representative.
The US imports crude oil from Kazakhstan occasionally. The most recent purchase, according to government data, was in April, when the US shipped in about 33,000 barrels a day. Last year, cargoes from Kazakhstan averaged about 38,000 barrels a day, the highest in at least two decades of intermittent buying.
Asked why Trump had chosen to hit Japan and South Korea first, Leavitt said it was 'the president's prerogative.'
'Those are the countries he chose,' she added.
Leavitt said the administration is 'close' to securing agreements with some other trading partners, adding that Trump 'wants to ensure these are the best deals possible.'
Following a rally to all-time highs last week, the S&P 500 fell 0.8% as of 4 p.m. New York time, while the Nasdaq 100 Index was down 0.8%. Treasuries dropped, with longer-dated bonds underperforming.
The dollar extended gains after Trump's announcement, hitting the highest level in more than a week against a basket of peers. The currencies of South Korea, South Africa and Japan all fell more than 1% against the greenback.
Japanese automakers' American depository receipts fell to session lows after Trump's announcement. Toyota ADRs fell 4.3% to session lows, while Honda's fell 3.9% to session lows. The South African rand fell 1.5% to a session low.
For many of the nations, engaging Trump in trade negotiations on his accelerated timeline has proved difficult.
Even though Japan and Korea are two of the US's closest allies in Asia, they're both dealing with domestic situations where cutting trade deals might be risky politically. South Korea President Lee Jae-myung only took office on June 4, and elections in Japan's upper house later this month made the government of Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba reluctant to offer too much in concessions.
The European Union is not expecting to receive a letter setting tariff rates today, according to a person familiar with those discussions, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Trump has also threatened to slap an additional 10% levy on 'any country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS,' targeting the bloc of developing nations led by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa as they gathered for a meeting in Rio de Janeiro.
Leavitt on Monday said Trump would 'take any action necessary to prevent countries from taking advantage of the United States and our people.'
Trump's levies will help fill the Treasury's coffers at a time when investors are worried about the nation's mounting debt, particularly after Congress passed much of the president's economic agenda in a $3.4 trillion tax cut and spending package last week. The dollar has slumped and longer-term borrowing costs remain elevated.
Despite Trump's contention that foreign countries pay his tariffs directly, the burden actually falls to American importers, which must contend with tighter profit margins, weigh raising prices for consumers or seek discounts from their foreign suppliers.
'All of that new revenue is just a tax on US businesses,' Jonathan Gold, vice president of supply chain and customs policy at the National Retail Federation, wrote in a LinkedIn post Friday.
At the Rose Garden ceremony on April 2, the Trump administration announced steeper levies on more than 50 trading partners ranging as high as 50% – a shock to the economic outlook that sent financial markets into a tailspin. A week later, the president suspended those peak rates.
The negotiating tracks have been different for the US's three largest trading partners — Mexico, Canada and China. Beijing and Washington have negotiated truces that lowered tariffs on Chinese products that soared to 145% and eased export controls on key supplies. As partners in the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, the two US neighbors aren't subject to the reciprocal tariffs and instead are trying to negotiate lower rates on sectoral levies.
Bloomberg Economics' US trade uncertainty index has come off its April peak, but it is still higher than it was when Trump was elected in November.
On top of market jitters and economic headwinds, legal challenges offer a potential check on the reciprocal tariffs, which Trump declared under executive authority known as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA.
The US Court of International Trade ruled on May 28 that the vast majority of Trump's levies were issued illegally under IEEPA and ordered them blocked. A day later, an appeals court gave the administration a temporary reprieve from the ruling and decided that the tariffs can remain in place until it hears the case, scheduling the arguments for July 31.
Yet the Trump administration is using another presidential power to impose tariffs – Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act – on specific sectors so far including autos, steel and aluminum.
Other 232 sectoral cases are in the works, potentially allowing Trump to cover a wide range of US imported raw materials as well as finished consumer goods should the IEEPA levies get struck down by the courts. Trump described the latest levies as 'separate from all Sectoral Tariffs.'
Another friction point for Trump on tariffs is the Federal Reserve. Jerome Powell, the chair of the US central bank, has held off on lowering rates this year — despite intense pressure and name-calling — in part to determine whether tariff-driven price hikes might evolve into more persistent cost-of-living pressures.
Bloomberg Economics estimates that if all reciprocal tariffs are raised to their threatened level on July 9, average duties on all US imports could climb to around 20% from less than 3% before Trump's inauguration in January. That would add to growth and inflation risks for the US economy.
Between higher tariffs, oil prices and immigration restrictions in the US, 'the bottom line is that we should see inflation move higher over the coming months,' Torsten Slok, chief economist with Apollo Global Management, wrote in a note Sunday. –BLOOMBERG

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


Malaysian Reserve
16 minutes ago
- Malaysian Reserve
Trump says he'll set 50% copper tariff, wait year on drug levies
PRESIDENT Donald Trump said he planned to implement a 50% duty on copper imports as part of a set of looming sectoral tariffs, while also indicating he could offer pharmaceutical manufacturers at least a year before applying a crippling 200% tariff on their foreign-made products. Trump told reporters during a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday he was still planning tariffs on select industries, including drugs, semiconductors, and metals. 'I believe the tariff on copper we're going to make it 50%,' Trump said when asked by a reporter what the rate on those products would be. Copper futures in New York surged as much as 17% after Trump's comments, the largest intraday gain in data going back to at least 1988. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, speaking to CNBC shortly after the Cabinet meeting, said his department's investigation into copper had concluded and that he expected the levy 'likely to be put in place end of July — maybe August 1.' 'Copper is finished. We're done with our study,' Lutnick said. 'We've handed the study over to the president. The president knows that he has the ability, since we've studied the market for copper, to set the market tariff for copper.' Trump said he expected to offer pharmaceutical manufacturers some time to bring their operations to the US before slapping tariffs of as much as 200% on their products. An S&P 500 index of drugmakers turned negative after Trump's comments, while shares of Eli Lilly & Co., Merck & Co. and Pfizer Inc. pared earlier gains. 'We're going to give people about a year, a year and a half, to come in,' Trump said. 'And after that they're going to be tariffed if they have to bring the pharmaceuticals into the country, the drugs and other things, into the country. They're going to be tariffed at a very very high rate, like 200%. We'll give them a certain period of time to get their act together.' Trump has already announced investigations under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 on each of those products, arguing that a flood of foreign imports was threatening national security. After those efforts are concluded, Trump is expected to move forward with the levies. That effort is separate from Trump's other move to announce new country-specific tariff rates, which would not apply to products hit under his Section 232 efforts. Trump earlier Tuesday insisted those country-specific tariffs would move forward at the beginning of August. The copper rate, while long telegraphed, threatens to upend an industry that for decades subsisted on a combination of vibrant domestic production and steady imports from some of the US's strongest trade allies. It also comes after Trump during his first term focused his raw materials trade war on steel and aluminum, leaving copper producers, traders and consumers relieved that they avoided market upheaval. Trump's directive also comes as the US and the rest of the world expect a dramatic surge over the coming decade in demand for the industrial metal, with data centers, automobile companies, power companies and others scouring the globe for necessary feedstock to increase electric vehicle output and electric grid capacity. Retooling power and transportation systems to run on renewable energy will require far more copper than the companies that produce it are currently committed to deliver. The US consumed about 1.6 million tons of refined copper in 2024, according to the US Geological Survey. While the US has significant mines, producing some 850,000 tons of primary copper last year, it still relies on imports from key trade allies to fill the need. Chile is the largest import source, accounting for 38% of total import volumes, followed by Canada and Mexico at 28% and 8%, respectively. Net copper imports account for 36% of demand, according to Morgan Stanley research. Trump has been talking about pharmaceuticals since he began rolling out his tariff agenda, despite industry concerns that duties could wreak havoc on supply chains, exacerbate drug shortages and drive up costs for Americans. He has long criticized foreign production of medicine as a threat to national security and raised the specter of tariffs to encourage drugmakers to manufacture domestically. Companies followed with a flurry of announcements about multibillion-dollar manufacturing investments in the US. Any tariffs that are imposed are expected to have an outsize effect on Ireland, where a $54 billion (€47.6 billion) trade surplus with the US helped spur Trump's wrath. The imbalance, heavily driven by pharmaceuticals, stems from the country's favorable tax regime and highly educated workforce. US drug companies, including Lilly and Pfizer, operate nearly two dozen factories in Ireland that ship to the US, according to a TD Cowen analysis. –BLOOMBERG


New Straits Times
22 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
Oil prices ease from two-week highs as investors await tariff clarity
NEW YORK: Oil prices edged slightly lower on Wednesday after rising to two-week highs in the previous session, as investors were watching new developments on US tariffs and trying to gauge their impact. Brent crude futures were down 20 cents, or 0.3 per cent, at US$69.95 a barrel by 0121 GMT. US West Texas Intermediate crude fell 21 cents, or 0.4 per cent, to US$68.12 a barrel. US President Donald Trump's latest tariff delay provided some hope to major trade partners Japan, South Korea and the European Union that deals to ease duties could still be reached, while bewildering some smaller exporters such as South Africa and leaving companies with no clarity on the path forward. Trump pushed back Wednesday's previous deadline to August 1, a date he said on Tuesday was final, declaring: "No extensions will be granted." He also said he would impose a 50 per cent tariff on imported copper and soon introduce long-threatened levies on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals, broadening his trade war that has rattled markets worldwide. While the tariffs have prompted worries of oil demand destruction, strong travel demand for the July 4th weekend buoyed hopes. A record 72.2 million Americans were projected to travel more than 50 miles (80 km) for Fourth of July vacations, data from travel group AAA showed last week. On the supply side, the US will produce less oil in 2025 than previously expected as declining oil prices have prompted US producers to slow activity this year, the Energy Information Administration forecast on Tuesday in a monthly report. The world's largest oil producer is projected to produce 13.37 million barrels per day of oil in 2025, versus last month's forecast of 13.42 million bpd, the EIA said in its short-term energy outlook report. In 2026, the US will produce 13.37 million bpd, in line with the previous forecast. OPEC+ oil producers are, on the other hand, set to approve another big output boost for September as they complete both the unwinding of voluntary production cuts by eight members and the United Arab Emirates' move to a larger quota, five sources said. On Saturday, the group approved a 548,000 bpd jump for August. However, the actual output increase has been smaller than the announced levels so far and most of the supply has been from Saudi Arabia, analysts said. Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions remained, providing a floor for prices. Four seafarers on the Liberian-flagged, Greek-operated bulk carrier Eternity C were killed in a drone and speedboat attack off Yemen, an official with knowledge of the issue said on Tuesday, the second incident in a day after months of calm.


New Straits Times
22 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
Dollar gains against yen as Trump's trade war intensifies
TOKYO: The dollar rose for a third day against the yen on Wednesday as US President Donald Trump pledged more trade-related proclamations after announcing 25 per cent tariffs on Japan and other trade partners. The greenback advanced against major peers on Tuesday after Trump began telling trade counterparts that sharply higher US 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 US 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 US yields and a sharp rise in JGB yields on fiscal concerns ahead of Japanese elections on July 20." The dollar climbed 0.2 per cent to 146.85 yen, after touching a more than two-week high on the previous day. The euro was little changed at US$1.1720. The dollar index, which tracks the US currency against a basket of six major peers, was steady at 97.582 after a two-day climb. Sterling traded at US$1.35795, down 0.1 per cent 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 US baseline rate of 10 per cent, EU sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Monday. Trump on Tuesday said he would impose a 50 per cent tariff on imported copper and will soon introduce long-threatened levies on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals. US 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 US$0.6526, down 0.07 per cent after Tuesday's 0.6 per cent jump. New Zealand's kiwi dollar traded at US$0.5993, down 0.1 per cent.