Trump, Brazil and Orange juice
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Trump, Brazil and Insider Trading
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Orange juice prices in the U.S. are already high. The suit argues that the tariff would lead to retail price hikes of up to 25 percent.
Brazil's economic growth will stay on track despite the imposition of U.S. tariffs, according to a Reuters poll of economists, but inflation appears at greater risk of worsening if trade negotiations flounder.
Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) issued a stark warning to China, India, and Brazil, indicating that they could face severe economic consequences for continuing to purchase Russian oil.
Brazil is Florida’s biggest international trading partner for buying what the Sunshine State sells, and tariffs might make orange juice prices soar.
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When President Donald Trump announced a 50% tariff on Brazilian imports to the United States, coffee producers from Varre-Sai, a small city in the north of Rio de Janeiro’s state, saw their expectations for this year’s harvest clouded by uncertainty.
F ormer Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, a close ally of President Donald Trump in Latin America and a divisive figure across the region, is facing mounting legal troubles in his home country as Brazil's Supreme Court threatened to order his arrest over alleged violations of a court-imposed social media ban.
Vantage With Palki Sharma | N18G Trump’s tariffs are back — and this time, he’s targeting Brazil. But President Lula da Silva isn’t bowing down. He’s calling Trump an “emperor,” a “gringo,” and refusing to take economic orders from the U.
2don MSN
Trump’s tariff threat pushes Lula’s popularity and worsens legal troubles for Brazil’s ex-leader
U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff threat against Brazil has sparked political turmoil. Trump linked a 50% import tax to the trial of his ally, Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro, calling it a “witch hunt.