The dollar retreated on Tuesday, extending declines after a soft reading on U.S. consumer confidence and a drop in U.S. yields weighed, while optimism for more spending in Germany helped lift the euro.
This is Jack Blanchard, cracking out the Union Jack bunting for a big day ahead in D.C. THE BRITISH ARE COMING: President Donald Trump is gearing up for part two of a Euro triple-whammy this morning with the arrival of U.
EUR/CAD rose on Tuesday as Euro was buoyed against loonie after U.S. President Donald Trump said tariffs on Mexico and Canada would proceed as planned. On Monday, Trump stated that tariffs on Canadian and
The U.S. dollar rose against a broad range of currencies on Friday including the euro, sterling and those tied to commodities such as the Australian dollar, as investors consolidated positions ahead of the weekend,
President Donald Trump said he has decided to hit the European Union with 25% tariffs, saying EU was formed "to screw the United States." “We have made a decision and we’ll be announcing it very soon,” Trump said during a Cabinet meeting Wednesday.
The Great British Pound has outperformed other leading currencies in February amid positive economic data. The currency rallied by 1.8% against the U.S. dollar this month, making February its best-performing month since September of last year.
The U.S. dollar firmed above an 11-week trough on Thursday as vague pledges from U.S. President Donald Trump to impose tariffs on Europe and further delays to levies planned for Canada and Mexico stoked uncertainty.
London (UKX) -0.24% to 8,713. Germany (DAX:IND) -0.89% to 22,594. France (CAC:IND) -0.57% to 8,097. The Economic Tendency Indicator for Sweden edged down to 97.1 in February. Switzerland’s GDP growth slowed to 0.
The euro’s rebound has been attributed to two fundamental factors – a delayed reciprocal tariff of the US and the Ukraine war peace talks. Last week, US President Donald Trump delayed the proposed reciprocal tariffs while initiating peace talks to end ...
European markets were in the red on Friday morning after China vowed to retaliate as necessary to Donald Trump's extra 10% tariff hike. View on euronews
European markets are heading for a sharply lower open after President Donald Trump on Wednesday threatened to impose 25% tariffs on EU imports.