dollar, Trump and Tariff
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The U.S. dollar rose against major currencies including the yen and euro as President Donald Trump rekindled trade tensions with new tariffs on Canada and other trading partners.
The Department of Health and Human Services has asked some laid-off staff if they could return to work temporarily, as the department grapples with a backlog of grants that has swelled to more than a billion dollars in the wake of hurdles set up by DOGE.
JP Morgan CEO banker Jamie Dimon says the stock market, holder of many 401(k) accounts, is ignoring red flags about tariffs and the higher interest rates they may bring. Consumers have only begun to feel the pain as more tariff-laden products come on to the market.
The Canadian dollar edged higher against its U.S. counterpart on Thursday but the move was modest as the greenback notched broad-based gains and after new U.S. trade tariffs cast doubt about prospects of a trade deal this month between Canada and the United States.
Chinese traders are pulling back from the dollar, helping ease a shortage that has rattled the banking system and setting the yuan up for further gains.
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A man who stabbed the manager of an Adams County Family Dollar Store to death over an argument at the shop has been convicted of first-degree murder nearly a decade after the crime, according to a
A troubling shift in the dollar’s trading relationship with U.S. stocks has eased somewhat over the past few weeks.
The Center Point Fire District responded to a commercial fire that occured at a Dollar General at 6880 Deerfoot Parkway on Wednesday.
The U.S. Department of Justice's Antitrust Division and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission cleared three deals that were together worth $63 billion in June, illustrating how FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson and DOJ antitrust head Gail Slater are taking a different tack from their predecessors.
NPR reported that Harvard University economics professor Kenneth Rogoff said the dollar hasn't weakened this much since then-President Richard Nixon canceled the convertibility of the dollar to gold in the 1970s.
Americans traveling overseas face higher costs as the U.S. dollar weakens against foreign currencies, squeezing budgets for hotels, food and transportation abroad.