China, NVIDIA
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Nvidia shares dipped on Wednesday as the fate of its China business hung in the balance, caught up in the trade war between Washington and Beijing.
The targeted and restrained nature of the latest round of tariffs suggests the U.S. and China are unlikely to engage in a full-scale trade war this year. But the situation remains precarious.
China’s flows of rare-earth magnets to the US continued to recover in July — with volumes rising 76% month-on-month — after Beijing agreed to normalize exports as part of its trade truce with Washington.
China's commerce minister urged closer ties in new energy and capital markets in talks with Saudi Arabia's visiting investment minister, the commerce ministry said on Wednesday, as Beijing seeks Riyadh's backing for a Gulf trade deal.
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KSNT Topeka on MSNTrade war threatens Kansas soy industry, despite record yields
The soybean industry is expecting record-breaking yields, but a continued trade war with China threatens profits for farmers in Kansas and across the country. Soybeans are a big deal in Kansas. More than 12,
Despite China ramping up Russian oil imports and India scaling back, the Trump administration continues to exempt Beijing from secondary sanctions.
U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff decisions since he took office in January have shocked financial markets and sent a wave of uncertainty through the global economy. Here is a timeline of the major developments: February 1 - Trump imposes 25% tariffs on Mexican and most Canadian imports and 10% on goods from China,
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World Politics Review on MSNThe United States’ Biggest Vulnerability in the Trade War: Its Knowledge Economy
The more Trump escalates his trade war, the more he risks retaliation against U.S. intellectual property. The post The United States' Biggest Vulnerability in the Trade War: Its Knowledge Economy appeared first on World Politics Review.