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Philadelphia Fed President Henry Paulson delivers a speech
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President Donald Trump announced Monday that the United States will impose "very severe tariffs" on Russia in 50 days if no deal is reached to end the war in Ukraine.
President Donald Trump announced Monday that the United States will impose "very severe tariffs" on Russia in 50 days if no deal is reached to end the war in Ukraine.
During a meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office, Trump revealed that an agreement had been made to send weapons to Ukraine. "Made deal today to send weapons to Ukraine," Trump stated.
The president added that the U.S. would be "sending the best to NATO" and that the effort "will be coordinated by NATO."
Trump expressed disappointment with Russian President Vladimir Putin during the Oval Office meeting, where he sat side-by-side with Rutte.
The NATO Secretary General emphasized European participation in the initiative, stating, "This is Europeans stepping up" and "European countries want to be part of it." Rutte described the current support as "the first wave," indicating that "there will be more."
Rutte also confirmed that participating countries would "move equipment quickly into Ukraine" as part of this coordinated effort.






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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has asked the U.S. central bank's inspector general to review the costs involved in the renovation of its historic headquarters in Washington, as Trump administration officials intensify their criticism of how the Fed is being run.
The request to Fed Inspector General Michael Horowitz, first reported by Axios, was made over the weekend, according to a source familiar with the matter.
It follows a letter to Powell last week from Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought, who wrote that President Donald Trump was "extremely troubled" by cost overruns in the $2.5 billion project. In material posted to its website on Friday, the Fed described the challenges in a complete rehabilitation of the nearly 100-year-old Marriner S. Eccles building and a neighboring property on Constitution Avenue in the nation's capital.
OMB has no oversight over the Fed, which funds its own operations separately from the appropriations process in Congress. The Federal Reserve Act also gives the central bank's seven-member Board of Governors control over its building and related projects, with oversight by Congress and the Fed's independent IG, which has been reviewing the renovations throughout the process.
But Vought's criticism marked an escalation by the Trump administration against Powell and the Fed more broadly. Trump has been angry over the central bank's refusal to cut interest rates on his timetable. Fed officials, however, have resisted cutting rates until there is clarity on whether Trump'stariffson U.S. trading partners reignite inflation.
Trump has said Powell should resign, but the president does not have the power to fire him over a monetary policy dispute.
Powell, who was nominated by Trump in late 2017 to lead the Fed and then nominated for a second term by then-President Joe Biden four years later, has said he intends to serve out his term as Fed chief, which ends on May 15.
A list of "frequently asked questions" about the project, posted by the Fed on Friday included several raised by Vought and also addressed by Powell during a recent hearing in Congress, when the Fed chief clarified, for example, that contrary to some press reports there were no private elevators being installed to carry Fed officials to a private dining room.
The Eccles building, the Fed's main headquarters, was built during former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's administration.
The neighboring site at 1951 Constitution Avenue, which dates to the administration of Roosevelt's predecessor, Herbert Hoover, had been used by a number of agencies before being turned over to the Fed in 2018 by the first Trump administration "enabling them to renovate this historic property," Trump's General Services Administration said in a press release at the time. "This transfer will put a vacant building back in productive use, allow the Federal Reserve Board to consolidate several leases and result in savings for taxpayers," it said.
The European Union accused the U.S. of resisting efforts to agree a trade deal and warned of countermeasures on Monday if no deal was struck to avoid the "absolutely unacceptable" tariffs President Donald Trump has threatened to impose from August 1.
Trump stepped up his trade war on Saturday, saying he would impose a 30% tariff on most imports from the EU and Mexico from next month, adding to similar warnings for other countries including Asian economic powerhouses Japan and South Korea.
The EU has so far held off on retaliatory measures to avoid a spiralling tit-for-tat escalation in the trade war while there remains a chance of negotiating an improved outcome.
But EU ministers emerging from a meeting in Brussels on Monday appeared closer to striking back.
Speaking at a news conference following the meeting, Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen called the tariff threat "absolutely unacceptable."
EU Trade Chief Maros Sefcovic, at the same press conference, said he believed there was "still a potential to continue the negotiations" but voiced frustration with Washington's failure to agree a deal with its largest trading partner.
"The EU ... never walks away without genuine effort, especially considering the hard work invested, how close we find ourselves to making a deal and the clear benefits of the negotiated solution," he said.
"But as I said before, it takes two hands to clap," he said, adding that EU member states agreed that the 27-nation bloc would need to take countermeasures if the trade negotiations with the U.S. fail.
Italy's Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani earlier said the EU had already prepared a list of tariffs worth 21 billion euros ($24.5 billion) on U.S. goods if the two sides fail to reach a deal.
White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett, meanwhile, said trade talks were still under way with the European Union, Canada and Mexico. Canada is facing a tariff of 35% from next month.
Asked about his expectations of talks with the EU, the White House National Economic Council director said: "We'll see ... we've got a few weeks left."
Hassett had said on Sunday that President Trump wanted to see better deals if the new tariffs are to be avoided.
The threatened duties have sounded alarm bells in Europe, notably in Germany, the EU's biggest economy.
After Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Sunday that a 30% tariff would "hit the German export industry to the core", the head of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry called for swift action.
"The escalating tariff conflict with the USA poses a serious threat to many German companies," Volker Treier said on Monday. "Tough negotiations are now needed to avert a collapse of transatlantic trade."
European industries, meanwhile, are preparing for the worst.
Producers of Italy's renowned Chianti wine in Tuscany, for example, have demanded a new export strategy backed by the EU targeting alternative markets such as South America, Asia and Africa in response.
Since returning to the White House earlier this year, Trump has sought to use an array of tariffs to boost the U.S. economy, push companies to invest in the United States, and revitalise sectors including manufacturing.
His initial "Liberation Day" tariff announcement in April, which set a baseline tariff of 10% on all imports and higher duties on certain products or countries, raised fears of global supply chain disruptions, sending shockwaves through markets.
But subsequent U-turns and delays, including a 90-day pause on most duties aimed at allowing time for trade deal negotiations, have left investors largely inured to Trump's chaotic policy roll-outs.
European stocks fell on Monday, while U.S. futures pointed towards a lower Wall Street open in response to the latest salvo. European autos and alcohol stocks were among those hardest hit.
The looming August 1 deadline has set off a scramble by governments around the world to seal trade agreements.
South Korea's top trade envoy said on Monday it may be possible to strike an "in-principle" deal by the deadline and signalled that Seoul may be open to allowing the U.S. greater access to its agriculture markets, local media reported.
Minister for Trade Yeo Han-koo, who held high-level talks with U.S. officials last week, said South Korea was seeking to avoid "unfair" U.S. tariffs on sectors key to its industrial prowess that would undermine industrial cooperation with its main security ally and trading partner, media reports said.
"I believe it's possible to reach an agreement in principle in the U.S. tariff negotiations, and then take some time to negotiate further," the Newsis news agency quoted Yeo as telling local media reporters.
"Twenty days are not enough to come up with a perfect treaty that contains every detail," he added.
South Korea is in a race to reach a compromise trade pact in the hope of avoiding a 25% tariff slapped on its exports, the same level faced by Japan.
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