Trump didn't chicken out. So what's Canada's next move?
Despite putting decidedly lower tariffs than he'd threatened on dozens of countries around the globe and giving Mexico a 90-day reprieve from his threat to raise its tariff rate, Trump singled out Canada for an increase.
While there's no way that Canada can characterize what happened as a win, there's plenty of evidence that it's not a reason for Prime Minister Mark Carney's government to panic and do something that jeopardizes what really matters for the Canadian economy: tariff-free access to the U.S. for the vast majority of exports.
The key evidence backing this perspective comes in the economic number-crunching showing the actual impact of Trump's tariffs on the whole of Canada's exports to the U.S, what's called the effective tariff rate. Think of it as an average, weighted by the value of Canadian goods going across the border.
Different economists have slightly different estimates, but even with the increase Trump announced Thursday night, there's consensus the effective tariff rate for Canada is down in the single digits, noticeably lower than the rate for any other major trading partner.
That's because despite Trump's bluster, he's allowing the vast majority of Canada's exports into the country with zero tariff under the terms of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA).
WATCH | Canada's talks with Trump administration will continue, says minister of US trade:
Experts and business leaders say Canada's trade negotiators and federal government need to be laser focused on maintaining that tariff-free access through CUSMA, especially since the deal is soon up for review.
Goldy Hyder, president and CEO of the Business Council of Canada, says a bigger issue than Trump's incremental increase of the tariffs is the way Canada is struggling to "find a way forward" in its negotiations with the U.S.
'The conversation that we should be having'
"I am hoping this is an opportunity to reassess and to some extent reset where we are and where we need to get to for the longer haul," Hyder told CBC's Katie Simpson in an interview Friday.
While Hyder says he has empathy for Carney's government as it tries to navigate the uncharted waters of dealing with Trump 2.0 on trade, he's questioning whether its negotiating strategy has been aimed at the correct target.
Canada must assess what it needs to do "to get into the conversation that we should be having, which is first and foremost: how are we going to review and renew the USMCA?" Hyder said, using the U.S. government's preferred acronym for the trade deal.
The text of CUSMA calls for a formal review starting in July 2026, but consultations between the three countries are expected to begin this fall.
As Trump levies blanket tariffs on nearly every other major trading partner, observers are increasingly pointing to the big tariff exemptions Canada is getting from CUSMA as a major competitive advantage.
That creates a rather hefty source of motivation for the Carney government to make solidifying CUSMA the long-term goal of its talks with the Trump administration.
The eternal question: Trump's real motivation for the tariffs
On the other side of the border, there's a view that a significant driving force behind Trump's tariff tactics with Canada is gaining leverage in those CUSMA renewal talks.
Although Department of Justice lawyers have been arguing in court that stopping the flow of fentanyl from Canada — as minimal as it is — justifies the tariffs, trade policy expert Inu Manak of the Council for Foreign Relations in Washington, D.C., says she believes there's no way that's really what's motivating Trump.
"I do think a lot of this has to do with some sort of renegotiation of parts of the CUSMA deal that the Trump administration is not happy with," Manak told CBC News Network on Friday.
Although Trump hit Canada with a tariff increase, Manak isn't criticizing Canada's negotiating tactics.
"There's no really good way to go about doing this," she said. "We've seen variation in approaches and no matter what, everyone seems to be getting hit with tariffs."
WATCH | Breaking down the winners and loser in Trump's tariff gambit:
CUSMA and its tariff-free access must remain the focus for Canada, says John Manley, a former Liberal deputy prime minister, now chair of chair of Jefferies Securities, a global investment banking firm.
"The big game is the 93 per cent of Canadian goods that cross the border currently tariff-free under USMCA," Manley told CBC News. "That is what we need to protect."
To retaliate or not?
Even if the CUSMA renegotiation is what matters most in the long term for Canada, the Carney government also has to think about what its immediate next steps should be.
Perhaps the most immediate question along those lines for Ottawa is whether to retaliate or not.
Brian Clow, who served as former prime minister Justin Trudeau's deputy chief of staff and led his "war room" on Canada-U.S. trade relations, describes himself as a fan of retaliation, but is not advocating for Carney to fire back at Trump in this instance.
"I do think [Carney and his team] need to stop and consider whether to further retaliate right now, given Canada is standing on its own, and the rest of the world is not standing with us," Clow said Friday in an interview with CBC News.
WATCH | Should Carney hit back? Here's what a former PMO insider thinks:
Carney's government also needs to think about what it can do about the tariffs that are actually having the biggest impact on Canada right now: the sectoral tariffs of 50 per cent on steel and aluminum and 25 per cent on the non-U.S. content of assembled automobiles.
"Maybe there's one more step towards the American ask that we can take — that we can live with — that can close this deal," Clow said.
The signals from Carney's team suggest the plan is to keep on keeping on.
Dominic LeBlanc, the minister responsible for Canada-U.S. trade, said Friday that he and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Trump's point man on tariffs, agreed to speak by phone next week and arrange for a meeting later in August.
"We'll continue to talk to the Americans," LeBlanc told reporters in Washington. "The United States will continue to be our neighbour, continue to be our most important economic and security partner."
Both LeBlanc in his scrum and Carney in his statement acknowledged the need for the government to help the steel, aluminum and auto sectors. Getting carve-outs or reductions of those tariffs will no doubt be an objective as the talks with Team Trump progress.
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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq mixed as Wall Street eyes earnings, trade tensions
US stocks wavered on Tuesday as investors digested the latest wave of corporate earnings and various tariff updates. The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) slid 0.2%, while the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose about 0.1%. The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) was down around 0.3%. Palantir (PLTR) stock jumped about 7% in late morning trading after the company's earnings report beat expectations and revealed its revenue had topped $1 billion in a quarter for the first time. On Monday, stocks sharply rebounded after tanking on Friday in the aftermath of a number of market-shaking events, including a weak jobs report, fresh tariffs, new signs of rising prices, and President Trump's firing of the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Meanwhile, Trump continued to amp up pressure on trade Monday, threatening to hike tariffs on India. Separately, in a Tuesday morning interview with CNBC, Trump said pharmaceutical imports could see tariffs of up to 250%. Trump also ruled out Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent as a potential incoming Fed chair, but noted that Jerome Powell's successor could be named "soon." Read more: The latest on Trump's tariffs Wall Street is now focused on the continuation of earnings season. On Tuesday, AMD (AMD) and Rivian (RIVN) are set to report their results. McDonald's (MCD) and Disney (DIS) earnings land Wednesday. However, another trade blow looms later in the week, with Trump's latest iteration of global tariffs set to take effect. AI is the clear risk to the upside for the stock market in 2025 Another Wall Street strategist has boosted their year-end S&P 500 target. In a note to clients on Tuesday, HSBC head of equity strategy for the Americas Nicole Inui boosted her year-end S&P 500 target to 6,400 from 5,600. Inui also detailed a bull-case scenario in which an "AI fueled rally" brings the benchmark index to 7,000 by year-end and a bear-case scenario in which tariff impacts drag the S&P 500 down to 5,700. 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The bull case for stocks isn't backed by a call for US economic growth to suddenly inflect higher or interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve to suddenly spark a broad market rally. As we wrote in Tuesday's Yahoo Finance Morning Brief newsletter, the bull case in stocks is still being driven by AI investment and its ability to push corporate profits higher. "For our bull case scenario to play out, tariff costs would shift mostly to the supplier having a negligible impact on US corporate profits," Inui wrote. "At the same time, AI adoption accelerates and starts to have a real impact on profitability through efficiency gains." Another Wall Street strategist has boosted their year-end S&P 500 target. In a note to clients on Tuesday, HSBC head of equity strategy for the Americas Nicole Inui boosted her year-end S&P 500 target to 6,400 from 5,600. Inui also detailed a bull-case scenario in which an "AI fueled rally" brings the benchmark index to 7,000 by year-end and a bear-case scenario in which tariff impacts drag the S&P 500 down to 5,700. "We have more confidence in the sustainability of the AI trade than further easing on policy uncertainty," Inui wrote. In other words, the risks are more heavily weighted to the bull case outcome. This reveals a key takeaway from how Wall Street is talking about the potential path higher for an S&P 500 that's already near record highs. The bull case for stocks isn't backed by a call for US economic growth to suddenly inflect higher or interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve to suddenly spark a broad market rally. As we wrote in Tuesday's Yahoo Finance Morning Brief newsletter, the bull case in stocks is still being driven by AI investment and its ability to push corporate profits higher. "For our bull case scenario to play out, tariff costs would shift mostly to the supplier having a negligible impact on US corporate profits," Inui wrote. "At the same time, AI adoption accelerates and starts to have a real impact on profitability through efficiency gains." Countries push for last-minute deals as Thursday tariff deadline looms Yahoo Finance's Ben Wersckul reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Ben Wersckul reports: Read more here. Hims & Hers stock slides 6% after second quarter revenue misses forecasts Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports: Read more here. PMI data points to 'encouragingly robust' economic activity to start the third quarter Activity in the services continued to expand during the month of July, according to two data releases on Tuesday morning. The Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) services PMI registered a reading of 50.1 in July, down from June's reading of 50.8, and below the 51.5 economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected. Readings above 50 for this index indicate an expansion in activity, while readings below 50 indicate contraction. The manufacturing sector has been in contraction for most of the past two years. "July's PMI level continues to reflect slow growth, and survey respondents indicated that seasonal and weather factors had negative impacts on business," Steve Miller, the chair of the Institute for Supply Management Services Business Survey committee, said in the release. "The most common topic among survey panelists remained tariff-related impacts, with a noticeable increase in commodities listed as up in price." Elsewhere on Tuesday, S&P Global's composite PMI, which combines both activity in the services and manufacturing sectors, registered a reading of 55.1 in July, up from 52.9 the month prior. S&P Global chief business economist Chris Williamson said the data signals "encouragingly robust economic growth at the start of the third quarter." Williamson added that the July PMI data points to the US economy growing at a 2.5% annualized pace in the third quarter, above the 1.25% pace seen in the first half. Activity in the services continued to expand during the month of July, according to two data releases on Tuesday morning. The Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) services PMI registered a reading of 50.1 in July, down from June's reading of 50.8, and below the 51.5 economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected. Readings above 50 for this index indicate an expansion in activity, while readings below 50 indicate contraction. The manufacturing sector has been in contraction for most of the past two years. "July's PMI level continues to reflect slow growth, and survey respondents indicated that seasonal and weather factors had negative impacts on business," Steve Miller, the chair of the Institute for Supply Management Services Business Survey committee, said in the release. "The most common topic among survey panelists remained tariff-related impacts, with a noticeable increase in commodities listed as up in price." Elsewhere on Tuesday, S&P Global's composite PMI, which combines both activity in the services and manufacturing sectors, registered a reading of 55.1 in July, up from 52.9 the month prior. S&P Global chief business economist Chris Williamson said the data signals "encouragingly robust economic growth at the start of the third quarter." Williamson added that the July PMI data points to the US economy growing at a 2.5% annualized pace in the third quarter, above the 1.25% pace seen in the first half. Trump rules out Bessent as next Fed chair, says may name Powell replacement soon Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger and Myles Udland report: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger and Myles Udland report: Read more here. Trending tickers in premarket trading: Pfizer, Palantir, Caterpillar Companies reporting earnings topped Yahoo Finance's trending tickers list on Tuesday. Here's a look at how they're trading 30 minutes before the opening bell: Read more live coverage of corporate earnings here. Companies reporting earnings topped Yahoo Finance's trending tickers list on Tuesday. Here's a look at how they're trading 30 minutes before the opening bell: Read more live coverage of corporate earnings here. Palantir stock surges on Q2 beat and raise Palantir (PLTR) stock climbed 7% higher in premarket trading on Tuesday following the AI software company's blowout second quarter earnings report on Monday afternoon. Palantir's revenue topped $1 billion in a quarter for the first time as the company dodged government contract spending cuts and reported beat-and-raise results. Year to date, Palantir stock is up 112%. Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports: Read more here. Palantir (PLTR) stock climbed 7% higher in premarket trading on Tuesday following the AI software company's blowout second quarter earnings report on Monday afternoon. Palantir's revenue topped $1 billion in a quarter for the first time as the company dodged government contract spending cuts and reported beat-and-raise results. Year to date, Palantir stock is up 112%. Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports: Read more here. Wall Street 2025 bonuses: Winners and losers so far Yahoo Finance's David Hollerith reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's David Hollerith reports: Read more here. Good morning. Here's what's happening today. Economic data: S&P Global US Services PMI (July final) S&P Global US Composite, (July final); ISM services index (July) Earnings: AMD (AMD), BP (BP), Caterpillar (CAT), Duke Energy (DUK), Lucid Group (LCID), Opendoor (OPEN), Pfizer (PFE), Rivian (RIVN), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), Snap (SNAP), Upstart (UPST) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning: One key reason a slowing economy isn't shaking stock market bulls Wall Street 2025 bonuses: Winners and losers so far Big Tech is power-hungry, and America's aging grid can't keep up Pfizer beats in Q2 earnings, reaffirms 2025 outlook Trump's Fed pick could face resistance from colleagues on rates Intel struggles with key manufacturing process for next chip EU says it expects turbulence in trade relations with US Jefferies sees crowded trade in Big Tech as Fed nears rate cuts US rig decline outpaces efficiency, threatening oil output Autopilot verdict deals Tesla a 'black eye' Economic data: S&P Global US Services PMI (July final) S&P Global US Composite, (July final); ISM services index (July) Earnings: AMD (AMD), BP (BP), Caterpillar (CAT), Duke Energy (DUK), Lucid Group (LCID), Opendoor (OPEN), Pfizer (PFE), Rivian (RIVN), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), Snap (SNAP), Upstart (UPST) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning: One key reason a slowing economy isn't shaking stock market bulls Wall Street 2025 bonuses: Winners and losers so far Big Tech is power-hungry, and America's aging grid can't keep up Pfizer beats in Q2 earnings, reaffirms 2025 outlook Trump's Fed pick could face resistance from colleagues on rates Intel struggles with key manufacturing process for next chip EU says it expects turbulence in trade relations with US Jefferies sees crowded trade in Big Tech as Fed nears rate cuts US rig decline outpaces efficiency, threatening oil output Autopilot verdict deals Tesla a 'black eye' Pfizer stock rises after beating Q2 earnings, reaffirming 2025 outlook Pfizer (PFE) stock rose 2% in premarket trading Tuesday after beating quarterly estimates on the top and bottom lines. The company posted earnings per share of $0.78, versus estimates of $0.58 per share, on revenue of $14.7 billion, compared to Wall Street expectations of $13.5 billion. Yahoo Finance's Anjalee Khemlani reports: Read more here. Pfizer (PFE) stock rose 2% in premarket trading Tuesday after beating quarterly estimates on the top and bottom lines. The company posted earnings per share of $0.78, versus estimates of $0.58 per share, on revenue of $14.7 billion, compared to Wall Street expectations of $13.5 billion. Yahoo Finance's Anjalee Khemlani reports: Read more here. One key reason a slowing economy isn't shaking stock market bulls Yahoo finance's senior reporter Josh Schafer looks at why softening economic data may not be as important for stocks as AI: Read more here. Yahoo finance's senior reporter Josh Schafer looks at why softening economic data may not be as important for stocks as AI: Read more here. Nvidia partner Hon Hai's July sales growth weakened by tariffs Nvidia's (NVDA) main server assembly partner Hon Hai Precision ( saw its Taiwan stock close 2% higher on Tuesday despite reporting a sales slowdown for July. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Nvidia's (NVDA) main server assembly partner Hon Hai Precision ( saw its Taiwan stock close 2% higher on Tuesday despite reporting a sales slowdown for July. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Oil flattened from multi-day drop after Trump's India rebuke Oil prices steadied from a three-day decline following a ramping up of threats from Trump to India over the Asian nation's continued use of Russian crude. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Oil prices steadied from a three-day decline following a ramping up of threats from Trump to India over the Asian nation's continued use of Russian crude. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Sign in to access your portfolio

Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Marjorie Taylor Greene asks Trump to commute George Santos' prison sentence
Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene wants President Donald Trump to commute the prison sentence of her disgraced former colleague George Santos, who's been locked up less than two weeks. Santos was sentenced to 87 months in prison for committing wire fraud and aggravated identity theft in April. He checked into New Jersey's Federal Correctional Fairton, located about 140 miles from Manhattan, on July 25. In her petition to the Office of the U.S. Pardon Attorney, Greene asks for Trump to consider setting the former representative from Queens free sooner than later. 'As a Member of Congress, I worked with Mr. Santos on many issues and can attest to his willingness and dedication to serve the people of New York who elected him to office,' Greene wrote. She conceded that Santos should be punished for his crimes, but believes his 7-year sentence is too severe. 'While his crimes warrant punishment, many of my colleagues who I've serve with have committed far worse offenses than Mr. Santos yet have faced zero criminal charges,' she claimed without offering examples. After lying about nearly all of his academic and professional qualifications to get elected to Congress in 2022, Santos was charged with crimes including a scheme to steal financial information from campaign contributors, then repeatedly charging those accounts without permission. He was expelled from the House of Representatives in December 2023. Greene wrote in her letter that commuting Santos' sentence would be an acknowledgement by the President that Santos had committed crimes, while also allowing him the opportunity to serve his community as a free man. Greene didn't specify when she believes Santos should be released. She concluded her request by using a term often used by the President in social media posts. 'Thank you for your attention to this matter,' Greene wrote. Santos complained in the days leading to his imprisonment that his pardon requests were not getting the President's attention. Trump has used his clemency power to excuse more than 1,500 criminals convicted on the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol and has not ruled out pardoning high-profile sex offender Ghislaine Maxwell, but he hasn't showed an interest in working with Santos. Santos surrendered to prison authorities after bidding a dramatic adieu to supporters. 'Well, darlings… The curtain falls, the spotlight dims, and the rhinestones are packed,' he wrote on X before going to prison.
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
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Truss ‘carries quite a lot of blame' for Tory record, Badenoch claims
Truss 'carries quite a lot of blame' for Tory record, Badenoch claims Liz Truss 'carries quite a lot of' responsibility for the Conservatives' record, Kemi Badenoch has said amid a row over the party's direction. The current Tory leader said she was 'very focused on what the Conservatives are going to do now', after former prime minister Ms Truss accused her of 'repeating spurious narratives'. Speaking on a farm near Saffron Walden in her constituency, Mrs Badenoch also described herself as an 'Essex girl', and added that people from the county 'are grafters; they work hard'. The Leader of the Opposition faced questions about Ms Truss's claim that under the Conservatives, 'the economy was wrecked with profligate Covid spending by (Rishi) Sunak' and that 'the huge increase in immigration has been a disaster'. Mrs Badenoch told ITV Anglia: 'I know that, as a former prime minister and a former foreign secretary, (Ms Truss) carries quite a lot of that blame. 'The party's now under new leadership. 'I wasn't in charge during those 14 years; she was. 'That's a criticism she's probably levelling at herself.' The Tory leader also said she was 'telling the truth' about her party's record. 'I'm telling the truth that immigration was too high – that's why we have much tougher policies to fix immigration,' she continued. 'I am telling the truth that taxes were too high, that we were putting a lot of regulation on businesses, and what we're seeing is Labour making every single thing worse. 'They're doing that because they haven't learned many of the lessons that we learned. They haven't learned from our mistakes. They're making worse mistakes.' The Labour Government's mistakes include making 'no cut in spending at all – the books were not balanced', Mrs Badenoch claimed. 'We're spending more on welfare than we are on defence – that cannot continue,' she said. Mrs Badenoch had previously told The Telegraph that 'for all their mocking of Liz Truss, Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have not learnt the lessons of the mini-budget and are making even bigger mistakes'. Ms Truss, who spent 49 days in Number 10, hit back when she said that 'instead of serious thinking', Mrs Badenoch was 'repeating spurious narratives'. She continued: 'I suspect she is doing this to divert from the real failures of 14 years of Conservative government in which her supporters are particularly implicated. 'It was a fatal mistake not to repeal Labour legislation like the Human Rights Act because the modernisers wanted to be the 'heirs to Blair'. 'Huge damage was done to our liberties through draconian lockdowns and enforcement championed by Michael Gove and Dominic Cummings. 'The economy was wrecked with profligate Covid spending by Sunak. The huge increase in immigration has been a disaster.' Mrs Badenoch also took questions about her identity, after she told the Rosebud podcast: 'I have not renewed my Nigerian passport, I think, not since the early 2000s. 'I don't identify with it any more, most of my life has been in the UK and I've just never felt the need to.' The North West Essex MP told ITV Anglia: 'I am definitely an Essex girl, that is a fact.' A London Assembly member before she took her Commons seat in 2017, Mrs Badenoch said: 'I represent an Essex constituency, these are my people. 'I was a Londoner, but Essex people asked me to be their MP, and I want to make sure that I do them proud. And I love this part of the world. 'It's fantastic being here. It's a rural community, and I've been talking to the farmers here. I talked about how my grandfather was a farmer, it's very hard work. 'The people of Essex and East Anglia – they are grafters. 'They work hard, and I want to make sure that we do right by them.' Mrs Badenoch spent Tuesday morning at a farm in Little Walden, where she tried her hand at harvesting wheat using a Claas Lexion combine harvester. She told farmers: 'A lot of farming just feels like constant interference. 'Everything is interfered from the minute you wake up.' Examples of interference included 'chemicals and insecticide, people you're hiring, how much you've got to pay them', plus changes to 'employers' NI (national insurance), then somebody wants to put pylons on, there's compulsory purchase, it's impacting the cost of the land, if you want to add a new farm building, there's planning applications', she said. 'It's just endless constant Government saying, 'You can't do this, you can't do that, you can't move forwards'. 'And the burden in my view has now crossed the threshold.'