President Trump said that his patience with Russian President Putin was “running out fast” and threatened Moscow with new economic sanctions as efforts to mediate ceasefire talks with Ukraine have fallen flat.

“It’ll be hitting very hard on with sanctions to banks and having to do with oil and tariffs also,” Trump said Friday in an interview on Fox News.

Elsewhere, The US Treasury called on G7 countries to hit China and India with what it called “meaningful tariffs” for buying Russian oil. This follows Trump’s request that the EU impose 100% tariffs on New Delhi and Beijing to squeeze Russia over its war in Ukraine, the Financial Times reported.

At the same time, Trump said the US and India have agreed to resume trade negotiations after weeks of back and forth over India’s purchase of Russian oil.

China urged Mexico on Friday to “think twice” before levying tariffs, a warning that could signal Beijing’s readiness to retaliate over a move it sees as giving in to demands from President Trump.

Mexico said on Wednesday it will raise tariffs on automobiles from China and other Asian countries to 50%.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court said Tuesday it would quickly review a high-stakes legal challenge to President Trump’s tariffs, setting up a resolution as early as this fall.

The high court put the case on track for oral arguments in early November. That puts the case on an unusually quick track to resolution.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has warned in recent days that the US would have to refund around “half” the tariff revenue it has collected if the Supreme Court rules the president overstepped his authority, which has been the determination of a federal appeals court and the Court of International Trade.

Trump has suggested that the US may have to “unwind” existing trade deals, including with the European Union, Japan, and South Korea, if the Supreme Court doesn’t uphold his tariffs.

The tariffs at stake are the sweeping “reciprocal,” country-specific duties Trump has outlined in various steps this year (which you can see in the graphic below). Those duties range from 10% to 50%. Trump has used a 1977 law known as “IEEPA” — the International Emergency Economic Powers Act — to justify imposing the tariffs.

The appeals court allowed the tariffs to stay in place while the case moves through the legal process.

Read more: What Trump’s tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet

Here are the latest updates as the policy reverberates around the world.

LIVE 1853 updates

Trump tariffs facing legal threat that could erode US financial footing

Bloomberg reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

Trump says losing patience with Putin, eying bank, oil sanctions

President Trump’s tolerance with Russian President Putin is wearing thin. In a Fox News interview on Friday, Trump made the comment that his patience with Putin was “running out fast” and threatened Moscow with new economic sanctions over the war in Ukraine.

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

Swatch sells watch lampooning Trump’s 39% tariffs on Switzerland

Swiss watchmaker Swatch (UHR.SW, UHRZ.XC) has started selling a special edition watch with the numbers 3 and 9 reversed on its dial, a tongue-in-cheek reference to President Trump’s 39% tariffs imposed on US imports from Switzerland last month.

Reuters reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

US, Japan reaffirm FX commitments, leave room for interventions

Jenny McCall

China gives Mexico stiff warning over tariffs seen appeasing US

China has sent a warning to Mexico telling them to “think twice” before levying tariffs, a sign that could signal Beijing’s willingness to retaliate over a move it sees as giving in to demands from President Trump.

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

US to urge G7 to impose high tariffs on China and India over Russian oil purchases

Tariffs revenue neared $30 billion this August — the first month of Trump’s full ‘reciprocal’ tariff regime

Yahoo Finance’s Ben Werschkul reports:

Read more here.

US will sort out trade with India, Commerce Secretary Lutnick says in CNBC interview

From Reuters:

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Where tariffs showed up in August’s CPI report

Inflation in August picked up again, according to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, as signs of President Trump’s tariffs appeared to be trickling through to consumer prices.

Overall inflation rose 0.4% month over month and 2.9% year over year, driven by higher costs for food, gas, and shelter. Notably, fruit and vegetable prices rose 1.6%, meat prices rose 1%, apparel prices rose 0.5%, new vehicle prices rose 0.3%, and airfares surged 5.9% on a monthly basis.

“When I see apparel prices jump by half a percent, you know, those are tariffs,” RSM chief economist Joe Brusuelas told Yahoo Finance. “When I see food prices jump, given the composition of the North American food supply chain, that’s tariffs.”

Jenny McCall

Trump’s tariffs could push nearly 1 million Americans into poverty: Report

A new analysis shows that 1 million Americans could be pushed into poverty as a result of President Trump’s sweeping tariffs.

CNN reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

Swiss add luster to Trump trade deal with gold refining plan: Report

In a bid to reduce President Trump’s tariffs, Switzerland is proposing that its gold industry builds a refinery in the US or increases its processing capacity there as part of a trade deal.

Reuters reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

China drugmaker stocks drop on report of potential Trump curbs

Jenny McCall

Mexico to raise tariffs on cars from China to 50% in major overhaul

Mexico has announced that it will raise tariffs on automobiles from China and other Asian countries to 50%, in a broad overhaul of import levies that the government said will help protect jobs. However, some analysts believe that this is simply a move to appease the US.

Reuters reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

South Korea warns US immigration raid may hit investment

Keith Reid-Cleveland

Carney says major projects coming to combat trade war ‘crisis’

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is planning to announce a series of projects that will aim to improve Canada’s infrastructure amid an ongoing trade war.

Bloomberg reports:

Read more here.

Keith Reid-Cleveland

Mexico to raise tariffs on cars from China to 50%

Mexico has raised its tariffs on cars coming out of China in a move that is being touted as a way to save jobs.

Reuters reports:

Read more from Reuters.

Jenny McCall

Synopsys falls most in 3 decades as trade war hampers sales

Synopsys Inc. (SNPS) shares fell 34% on Wednesday after the chip-design software maker warned that US export restrictions are contributing to a slowdown in China, one of the largest markets for semiconductors.

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

Trump, Modi agree to talk in bid to resolve trade impasse

Trump pushes EU to join in tariff discussions against Russia

President Trump has urged the EU to impose 100% tariffs on India and China to raise pressure on Russia over the war in Ukraine, the Financial Times reported.

Trump made the appeal in a call with US and EU officials in Washington on Tuesday. A US official said Washington would match any tariffs the EU imposed, adding:

“We’re ready to go, ready to go right now, but we’re only going to do this if our European partners step up with us,” one US official said.

This comes at the same time Trump posted on Truth Social that negotiations with India were “continuing” and will reach a “successful conclusion.”

Bloomberg reports:

Read more here.

Brett LoGiurato

Supreme Court agrees to fast-track Trump tariff case

The Supreme Court said Tuesday it would quickly review a high-stakes legal challenge to President Trump’s tariffs, setting up a resolution as early as November.

In an order released Tuesday, the high court put the case on track for oral arguments in early November. It sets the stage for a quick, likely final ruling on a key pillar of the president’s second-term agenda.

Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs — the duties at issue in the case — are set to remain in place until the high court makes its decision.