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Trump tariffs live: stock markets fall after US announces new rates on 92 countries | Trump tariffs

Opening summary

Welcome to our live coverage of Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff regime.

The US president signed an executive order on Thursday imposing reciprocal tariffs from 10% to 41% on US imports from dozens of countries and foreign locations. Rates were set at 25% for India, 20% for Taiwan and 30% for South Africa ahead of Trump’s self-imposed deadline of 1 August for striking trade deals with countries worldwide.

He extended the deadline for a tariff agreement with Mexico by another 90 days.

Brazil’s tariff rate was set at 10%, but a previous order signed by Trump placed a 40% tariff on some Brazilian goods, to punish the country for prosecuting its former president Jair Bolsonaro over an alleged coup attempt after the 2022 election.

Cargo containers line a shipping terminal at the port of Oakland, California
Cargo containers line a shipping terminal at the port of Oakland, California, on Thursday. Photograph: Noah Berger/AP

In other key news:

  • Canadian imports will face tariffs of 35%, not the current 25%, the White House announced. Trump had threatened on Wednesday that Ottawa’s move to recognise a Palestinian state would make agreeing a trade deal “very hard”.

  • Some of the world’s poorest and most war-torn countries were hit with punitive rates, including Syria, which faces a levy of 41%; Laos and Myanmar with rates of 40%; Libya with a rate of 30%; Iraq with 35% and Sri Lanka with 20%. Switzerland faces a rate of 39%. The rates are set to go into effect in seven days, according to the order.

  • Thailand’s finance minister said on Friday that a 19% tariff rate had been agreed – significantly lower than the 36% level announced in April and better aligned with other countries in the region. Vietnam and Indonesia reportedly negotiated tariffs of 20% and 19% respectively.

  • China faces a separate deadline for its higher tariffs of 12 August, with an extension to the truce agreed in principle but yet to be approved by the White House.

  • By 31 July just eight countries or economic blocs had reached formal agreements with the White House: the UK, Vietnam, Indonesia, Philippines, South Korea, Japan, Pakistan and the EU.
    – With Helen Livingstone, Lisa O’Carroll and agencies

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Key events

The US trade war has been hampering UK and eurozone manufacturers, new data shows.

The latest poll of purchasing managers at British factories, just released, highlights that new orders at UK manufacturers fell in July.

Data provider S&P Global says:

New export orders have now decreased throughout the past three-and-a-half years, with the latest decline reflecting global tariff uncertainties, ongoing administrative issues postBrexit and rising competition.

There were reports of lower demand from North America, mainland Europe, the Middle East, India and mainland China.

A survey of eurozone factories, also released this morning, found that their supply chains remained strained in July, with delivery times lengthening.

Dr. Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank, explains:

“Given the fragility of the recovery, it is not demand that is causing customers to wait longer for their goods. Volatile U.S. tariff policies and uncertainty stemming from geopolitical tensions may play a key role here. We expect that companies will continue to face sudden supply chain disruptions for the foreseeable future.”

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