President Trump on Monday said he was increasing tariffs on goods from South Korea, accusing the country of “not living up to its Deal” with the US. Tariffs on goods from South Korea will jump back to 25%, from 15%.

“Because the Korean Legislature hasn’t enacted our Historic Trade Agreement, which is their prerogative, I am hereby increasing South Korean TARIFFS on Autos, Lumber, Pharma, and all other Reciprocal TARIFFS, from 15% to 25%,” he wrote on Truth Social.

Trump’s latest tariff salvo at a US ally came days after he threatened to impose 100% tariffs on Canada over that nation’s trade deal with China, even though he had previously called the agreement “a good thing.”

In a social media post, Trump said of Canadian Prime Minster Mark Carney that if he “thinks he is going to make Canada a ‘Drop Off Port’ for China to send goods and products into the United States, he is sorely mistaken.”

Canada has negotiated a deal to lower tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, in return for lower import taxes on Canadian farm products. But the Trump administration claims the agreement may run afoul the United States-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement (USMCA) that is scheduled to be renegotiated this summer.

On Sunday, Carney said his country was rectifying some issues that had developed over the past several years, and that Canada was “going back to the future.” He reiterated Canada’s commitment to the USMCA, which includes not pursuing free trade agreements with non-market economies.

The actions continue a string of renewed tariff-based threats from the president. Last week, Trump called off planned tariffs on European nations over his pursuit of Greenland. Trump cited the “framework of a future deal” reached with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.

NATO Chief Mark Rutte said a deal with Trump was secured after discussing the security of the Arctic region. Trump has said the framework deal would give the US “total access” to Greenland, though he has provided few details. Just days earlier, Trump had said the US would implement 10% tariffs on eight European countries that he says are getting in the way of a US purchase of Greenland.

Read more: What Trump promised with his ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs — and what he delivered

LIVE 80 updates

Brett LoGiurato

Trump says he’s increasing tariffs on South Korean goods with country ‘not living up to its Deal’

President Trump on Monday said he was increasing tariffs on goods from South Korea, accusing the country of “not living up to its Deal” with the US.

Trump specifically blamed the South Korean legislature, which he said has been delaying the enactment of the deal. The countries agreed to the deal over the summer and announced key details in November.

“Because the Korean Legislature hasn’t enacted our Historic Trade Agreement, which is their prerogative, I am hereby increasing South Korean TARIFFS on Autos, Lumber, Pharma, and all other Reciprocal TARIFFS, from 15% to 25%,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

South Korea-based Hyundai (005380.KS) is the largest importer of new vehicles from South Korea into the US.

G-7 finance ministers to discuss rare rarths

Rare earths will be a key talking point this week at the meeting of Group of Seven finance officials, which will take place in France on Tuesday.

Discussions will focus on supplies of critical raw materials.

The G-7 meeting will include the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.

Volkswagen may halt plans for Audi plant in the US unless tariffs are reduced

Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume told a German newspaper the company will not move forward with an Audi factory planned in the US unless automotive tariffs are reduced, Bloomberg reported Sunday:

Read more here.

Bessent says Carney ‘trying to virtue-signal to his globalist friends at Davos’

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday accused Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney of an “about face” when the country negotiated a trade deal with China. Bessent reiterated President Trump’s threat to impose 100% tariffs on Canada over the China agreement.

Last week, Carney spoke at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on the need for middle powers to join together against aggressive coercion by superpowers. He did not mention any countries by name, but many interpreted his remarks to be a reference to the US, Bloomberg reports.

Bessent also took aim at Carney for his Davos speech: “I’m not sure what Prime Minister Carney is doing here, other than trying to virtue-signal to his globalist friends at Davos,” Bessent said on Sunday.

Read more here.

Carney emphasizes Canada’s commitment to the USMCA

Prime Minister Mark Carney on Sunday reiterated Canada’s commitment to the United States Mexico Canada trade agreement, Reuters reports, which includes not pursuing free trade agreements with non-market economies.

Carney’s remarks came a day after President Trump’s threat to impose 100% tariffs on Canadian goods because of Canada’s pending trade agreement with China,

Read more here

Trump threatens 100% Canada tariffs over trade deal with China

President Trump threatened to levy 100% tariffs on goods from Canada over that nation’s new trade deal with China, Bloomberg reports. In a social media post, he referred to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney as “Governor Carney” — a likely reference to Trump’s stated desire to make Canada the 51st US state.

Read more here.

Brett LoGiurato

EU to suspend retaliatory trade package against US for 6 months

Jenny McCall

Taiwan president: We looks forward to more chip investment in Arizona

Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te said on Friday that his country is looking forward to even more semiconductor investment in Arizona. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM), the world’s largest chipmaker and producer of advanced chips, has already invested $165 billion in Arizona’s Phoenix factories.

Reuters reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

In Davos debut, Musk says US tariffs make solar power a challenge

Elon Musk hit back at President Trump’s tariffs during his Davos appearance on Thursday by saying that tariffs make solar power a challenge.

The Tesla (TSLA) CEO explained that “tariff barriers for solar are extremely high.”

Musk, who was interviewed by BlackRock (BLK) CEO Larry Fink, has not always been a fan of the World Economic Forum and, in the past, has called the meeting “elitist.”

Reuters reports:

Read more here.

Cholula sauce maker McCormick forecasts weak annual profit on tariffs, higher input costs

Jenny McCall

Rutte: Trump Greenland plan involved no sovereignty talk

In an interview with Bloomberg News at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Secretary General of NATO, Mark Rutte, said a breakthrough over Greenland was secured after discussing with President Trump regional security in the Arctic region, which led Trump to abruptly drop his threat to impose fresh tariffs on European allies.

The NATO chief added that the territory’s sovereignty was not discussed.

Trump had started to make threats against the EU over the week, stating he would impose 10% tariffs, which would come into force on February 1, if they prevented his takeover of Greenland; that would rise to a further 25% in June.

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.

Japan’s exports rise in 2025 despite drag from US tariffs

Latin America rides out Trump’s trade storm with help from China

President Trump’s tariffs have roiled markets and countries, but Latin America’s exports appear to have remained unscathed.

Argentina reported on Tuesday its second-highest exports for 2025. Brazil and Chile were not far off and reported this month that their own exports hit records in 2025. Mexico and Peru will soon release their figures, and experts believe it too will be a hit.

As Europe deals with renewed tariff threats from Trump, Latin America is heading into 2026 in a better position to withstand any further trade shocks from Washington. Latin American exporters are now benefiting from better logistics, sending shipments to emerging markets and improved relations with China

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.

Brett LoGiurato

Some details of Trump’s ‘framework’ deal on Greenland

President Trump outlined more details of what he said was a “framework” agreement for a future deal with the European Union on Greenland:

Ben Werschkul

Trump backs away from his tariff Greenland tariff threats

President Trump says he is backing away from a threat of 10% tariffs on eight European nations over the Greenland issue, saying a meeting with the NATO secretary general has yielded “the framework of a future deal with respect to Greenland and, in fact, the entire Arctic Region.”

As a result, Trump added, “I will not be imposing the Tariffs that were scheduled to go into effect on February 1st.”

The still-to-be finished Greenland deal, which the president didn’t give any significant details on in his post, means that the tariff threats are now off after days of ups and downs in the market after Trump threatened the tariffs over the weekend and then backed away from military action Wednesday morning in a speech before taking tariffs of the table in the afternoon in his Truth Social post.

The news came after a meeting where Trump told reporters that NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte was doing a “fantastic job” and went out of his way to praise increased NATO-member defense spending.

“Further information will be made available as discussions progress,” Trump added, noting that Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff would head up the talks.

EU freezes US trade deal approval over Greenland threats

Ben Werschkul

‘You all follow us down and you follow us up’: Trump rebuts talk that world can decouple from US

President Trump traveled to Davos on Wednesday and began with a combative message to Europe: You may not like what the US is doing, but you can’t ignore us.

The president opened his speech at the World Economic Forum outlining what he described as an economic miracle in the US and said that it is good news for Europe because the “USA is the economic engine on the planet.”

“When America booms, the entire world booms,” Trump said. “It’s been the history … you all follow us down, and you follow us up.”

The pointed comments came in addition to an extended discussion of Greenland and appeared to be a direct response to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who spoke at Davos on Tuesday with a pointed speech of his own in which he called a rules-based order led by the United States “a pleasant fiction.”

Carney sketched out a future in which Canada, Europe, and other smaller nations could be aligned without the US.

Without calling out Trump by name, Carney called on both companies and countries to make their own path when, as he put it, “great powers abandon even the pretense of rules and values for the unhindered pursuit of their power and interest.”

Trump ripped Carney’s speech, calling it “ungrateful.”

“Canada lives because of the United States,” Trump said. “Remember that, Mark, next time you make your statements.”

Jenny McCall

JPMorgan CEO Dimon on tariffs: ‘I don’t think, in general, it’s a good idea’

JPMorgan (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon spoke out about tariffs at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday.

Dimon said he doesn’t think tariffs in “general are a good idea.”

“I’m not a tariff guy. I don’t think, in general, it’s a good idea,” Dimon said.

The JPMorgan CEO did say there are times when tariffs are acceptable.

“There are three parts to trade, and some require tariffs. One part is national security, and we should do what we have to do around national security, around rare earths, and pharmaceutical ingredients and some that may require policy that is not typical, like tariffs.

Dimon said companies can not succeed if there are no barriers, quotas, tariffs or pay-for-play.

“The second one is unfair trade, and I just don’t think furniture or t-shirts are important trade, but there is unfair trade. If you are subsidizing China in this case, and anyone who tries to compete is gonna get sunk because of subsidies, then you should counter that with quotas or tariffs.”

Watch here.

Jenny McCall

Trump arrives in Davos as Greenland spat continues

President Trump has officially landed in Davos, Switzerland, for the World Economic Forum. Trump’s flight was delayed after Air Force One reported a minor mechanical problem.

Trump plans to have meetings with various parties and will give a speech at Davos today.

The US President’s Davos address comes as markets and some US allies have raised concerns about his pursuit of Greenland.

Jenny McCall

EU ‘fully prepared’ to hit back over Trump’s Greenland tariffs

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.