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US dollar and European stock markets drop after Trump announces 15% global tariff – business live | Business

Introduction: Dollar and stocks decline after US Supreme Court hits Trump’s tariffs

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

We’re in a new phase of trade war uncertainty, after the supreme court blocked Donald Trump’s sweeping global tariffs last Friday.

With the president hitting back over the weekend, announcing a new temporary global tariff of 10%, then 15%, its clear that the White House is persisting with its policy of using trade levies to gain leverage over other countries.

So, as ING economists warn:

double quotation markAnnouncements since the Supreme Court’s ruling strongly confirm that Trump has no intention of removing his “most beautiful word” from the English dictionary.

Uncertainty is back, and given the latest muscle-flexing by European leaders, the risk of escalation is now higher than it was a year ago.

The market reaction has been to sell the US dollar – it has fallen by 0.4% against a basket of other currencies today, adding to losses on Friday after the supreme court declared tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to be illegal.

US stock market futures are lower too, indicating we’ll see losses on Wall Street, while bitcoin has also weakened.

Last night, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer insisted that deals made with other countries are still intact, and should be honoured.

Greer told CBS’s Face the Nation:

double quotation mark“We want them to understand these deals are going to be good deals.

“We’re going to stand by them. We expect our partners to stand by them.”

Greer also pledged that the new 15% global tariff was distinct from the bilateral agreements struck in the last nine months with about 20 countries.

That indicates that the deal announced by Trump and the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, in May last year will continue to stand, rather than the UK’s tariff rising to 15%.

Although, as education secretary, Bridget Phillipson admitted on Sunday, UK businesses faced “uncertainty” after the latest developments.

The agenda

  • 9am GMT: German IFO business confidence survey

  • 11am GMT: Bank of England policymaker Alan Taylor giving a Fireside chat at Deutsche Bank

  • Noon GMT: Mexico’s Q4 2025 GDP report

  • 1.30pm GMT: The Chicago Fed National Activity Index

  • 3pm GMT: US factory orders for December

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Key events

Doug Gurr selected as preferred candidate to chair CMA

Former Amazon boss Doug Gurr has been named as the preferred candidate to chair Britain’s competition watchdog, despite criticism of his appointment as interim chair a year ago.

Business secretary Peter Kyle has announced that Gurr is his choice of candidate to continue as chair of the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), “following an open competition for the role”.

Kyle said the CMA has been playing a key role delivering the government’s pro-growth agenda under Gurr’s leadership since last January. He was appointed interim chair in early 2025, after the government grew frustrated that the CMA was not doing enough to support growth, and forced out its chair, Marcus Bokkerink.

Gurr’s appointment as interim chair was controversial, though; it was called a “slap in the face to workers” by trade unions and Trumpian by consumer activists. It prompted fears that the CMA would wave through business deals without the necessary scrutiny, if bosses could claim they’d be good for growth.

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