Bitcoin rises by 4% past $109,000, reversing earlier losses; Donald Trump meme coin price tanks after wife Melania also launches token
TikTok is restoring services in the US after Donald Trump pledged over the weekend to give the video app a reprieve on its US ban.
When asked about this, China’s foreign ministry told a regular news briefing that it believed companies should “decide independently” about their operations and deals, Reuters reported.
TikTok has operated in the US for many years and is deeply loved by American users. We hope that the US can earnestly listen to the voice of reason and provide an open, fair, just and non-discriminatory business environment for firms operating there.
The big day has finally arrived. Financial markets are on tenterhooks to see what executive orders newly elected US President Donald Trump will enact on his first day. There’s a lot of focus on immigration controls and declaring a national energy emergency to allow more US oil and gas production. Currency markets are most interested in what he has to say about tariffs and what kind of pain the Oval Office plans to inflict on major trade partners. At last week’s nomination hearings, incoming Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that tariffs would be needed to address unfair trade practices, support government revenue, and to be used as a negotiating tool.
In terms of what is currently priced for tariffs by financial markets, we find the online prediction websites quite useful, such as Polymarket and Kalshi. Polymarket is running a book on which countries will receive US tariffs in Trump’s first week. China is priced at 56%, Mexico at 54%, Canada at 45% and the European Union at just 7%. There is also the case – using Scott Bessent’s remarks about tariffs as negotiating tools – that the new administration goes in on tariffs hard at the outset. That is why after a near 10% rally from late September, the dollar today is less than one percent off its recent high.
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