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European exporters see Supreme Court tariff ruling as new uncertainty phase
European companies are reading the U.S. Supreme Court’s tariff ruling less as a clean victory and more as the beginning of a new compliance and planning problem. ,
The Court’s decision knocked down a large share of President Donald Trump’s emergency-based tariffs, but many exporters in Europe immediately concluded that the practical benefit may be limited because Washington can still pursue alternative tariff routes and has already signaled that it will.
February 23, 2026 -
Supreme Court tariff ruling cuts one tool, not global trade uncertainty
The Supreme Court’s decision to strike down a large part of President Donald Trump’s emergency-based tariff regime looks dramatic in legal and political terms, but it does not amount to a clean de-escalation for the global economy. What it has done, at least in the near term, is replace one harmful certainty with a different kind of risk: policy instability.
Markets, companies, and governments now face a new phase in which the old tariff structure is partially invalidated, the administration is moving quickly to rebuild tariffs through alternative legal channels, and no one yet knows which parts of the previous trade settlement landscape will stick. Analysts see little immediate macroeconomic relief because uncertainty itself is now the main transmission channel.
February 23, 2026 -
Trump to arrive in Beijing with tariff leverage weakened by Supreme Court
The planned trip by President Donald Trump to China at the end of March was already shaping up to be one of the most consequential diplomatic meetings of his second term, but the timing has now become far more complicated after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a large part of his tariff regime.
Trump is scheduled to travel to China from March 31 to April 2 for meetings with President Xi Jinping, with a White House official confirming the trip even as the court ruling landed. The decision invalidated many tariffs Trump had imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), including a set of China-related duties that had been justified on grounds tied to fentanyl and trade imbalances.
February 23, 2026 -
India deepens Brazil mining ties to secure steel and critical inputs
India’s move to sign a mining and minerals cooperation pact with Brazil is best understood as part of a larger strategic shift in Indian industrial policy: New Delhi is trying to secure long-term access to raw materials before supply competition tightens further.
The immediate trigger is domestic steel demand, which is rising alongside India’s infrastructure buildout and industrial expansion, but the agreement also fits into a broader pattern in which India is building mineral partnerships with multiple countries to reduce supply vulnerability in a world where critical inputs are increasingly politicized.
February 23, 2026 -
Rare earth independence still runs through China’s price benchmarks
The recent rise in rare earth prices has created an early stress test for one of Washington’s most novel industrial-policy tools, and for the moment the mechanism is working in the U.S. government’s favor. Prices for neodymium-praseodymium, the combined rare earth product known as NdPr and essential for permanent magnets, have moved above the $110 per kilogram floor embedded in the Pentagon’s 2025 agreement with MP Materials.
That means the Department of Defense does not currently need to make support payments under the price-floor arrangement, while the contract structure also gives the government a share of upside if prices stay elevated after the relevant production milestones are met.
February 23, 2026 -
U.S. pushes Europe to rewrite energy rules for fossil alignment
The dispute now emerging between Washington and Europe over energy policy is not simply a trade quarrel about liquefied natural gas volumes or market access. It is a broader attempt by the Trump administration to export its domestic energy doctrine into the transatlantic policy architecture.
After dismantling or weakening environmental rules at home in the name of expanding fossil fuel output, the administration is now pressing European institutions, regulators, and even international energy governance bodies to soften climate-linked standards as a condition for deeper energy cooperation.
February 23, 2026 -
US imports from Taiwan overtake China in AI-driven shift
The new US-Taiwan trade data captures not just a bilateral shift, but a structural reordering of global commerce under two simultaneous forces: tariff-driven decoupling from China and the explosive scaling of artificial intelligence hardware demand.
For the first time in decades, US goods imports from Taiwan exceeded those from China, a milestone that would have been difficult to imagine when China dominated American import demand across electronics and industrial supply chains. In December, US imports from China fell sharply to $21.1 billion, down nearly 44% from a year earlier, while imports from Taiwan surged to $24.7 billion, more than double the prior year level.
February 23, 2026 -
Supreme Court kills Trump’s fastest tariff weapon, not tariff strategy
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate a broad set of Trump-era tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) materially changes the mechanics of U.S. trade coercion, but it does not restore predictability to global trade policy. What it does is narrow the president’s fastest and most improvisational tariff tool.
Under the system Trump had been using, tariff threats could be announced and implemented with extraordinary speed, often tied not just to trade disputes but to a wide range of foreign-policy grievances. The ruling interrupts that model by saying IEEPA cannot be used as the legal catch-all for this style of tariff policy, forcing the administration to lean on slower and more procedurally constrained statutes instead.
February 23, 2026
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