Major US trading partners scrambled over the weekend to finalise trade deals or lobby for extra time as President Donald Trump said he is notifying about a dozen countries on Monday of the new tariff level on their shipments to the US.
“I signed some letters and they’ll go out on Monday – probably 12,” Trump told reporters over the Fourth of July weekend, adding that the missives involve “different amounts of money, different amounts of tariffs and somewhat different statements.”
Asked to identify the countries, he said, “I have to announce it on Monday.”
Trump’s latest remarks suggest talks remain fluid and deals elusive, three days before the July 9 deadline announced by the US administration.
The letters initially were supposed to go out on July 4 with a tariff imposition date of August 1, based on Trump’s earlier comments. But US officials were busily negotiating through the holiday weekend, including with Japan, South Korea, the European Union, India and Vietnam.
South Korean President Lee Jae-myung delivers a speech on the second supplementary budget proposal for 2025 at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, on June 26. Photo: Reuters
One of Trump’s signature moves in deal making is a unilateral threat when negotiations reach critical stages, so it’s unclear whether the letters he describes are real or merely meant to strike fear into trading partners still reluctant to offer last-minute concessions.