Trump Extends ‘Liberation Day’ Tariff Delay As He Rolls Out New Rates On 14 Countries

The White House announced Monday that President Donald Trump is slated to sign an order delaying his 90-day tariff pause by another month, as the president began announcing a suite of new tariff rates on foreign goods, sending letters to countries including Japan, South Korea and Malaysia that impose tariff rates of 25% or higher.

How Did Stocks React To The Tariffs?

Stocks slightly fell Monday in response to Trump sharing his letters to Japan and South Korea, with losses steepening immediately after the announcement. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite were all down about 1% as of early Monday afternoon, while stocks of Japanese automakers Toyota and Honda had bigger slides, dropping by 4%.

Crucial Quote

“These Tariffs may be modified, upward or downward, depending on our relationship with your Country,” Trump said in his letters Monday.

The Trump administration has not given any specifics on which countries it will prioritize for sending letters to or reaching trade deals with before the Wednesday deadline. The European Union has expressed confidence in recent days it will reach some sort of trade agreement with the U.S. before the deadline, with EU trade spokesperson Olof Gill saying Monday, “We’re fully geared up to get an agreement in principle by Wednesday, and we’re firing on all cylinders to that effect.” Thailand has also offered concessions to the U.S. in order to avoid a 36% tariff rate, Bloomberg reported Sunday, and negotiations reportedly still remain ongoing with countries including India, Indonesia and Switzerland.

Key Background

Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs have been a major source of controversy since the president first imposed them in early April, over concerns from economists that doing so would raise prices for U.S. consumers and harm the economy. The president imposed sweeping tariffs on nearly all countries that ranged from 10% to 50%, but paused the worst of the tariffs a week later, after the tariff announcement caused the stock market to plunge and sparked fears of a recession. Trump officials vowed to use the 90-day pause to aggressively reach trade deals with foreign countries—predicting they’d make “90 deals in 90 days”—but as of Monday morning, the U.S. had so far only reached formal agreements with the U.K., Vietnam and China. Trump’s letters to South Korea and Japan come after he has now been teasing for weeks that his administration would simply send out letters imposing new tariff rates if formal deals can’t be reached. The president previously suggested letters would start being sent last Friday, but when that date passed without any notices being announced, Trump then said Sunday evening the letters would begin rolling out Monday afternoon.

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Founder

Madhur Maini

Madhur Maini has a track record in transformation as an advisor, financier, and professional entrepreneur. He has a Bachelor’s in Economics from the Wharton School, and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania’s prestigious Management and Technology Program.

Over his professional career spanning more than 20 years, Madhur has built up a USD $100mn office into a $3bn consumer company as a CEO, advised the leading entrepreneurs and governments in Asia-Pacific on strategy and capital raising, and served as an adjunct professor in a leading school of Public Policy.

He is currently focused on the intersections of science, tech and creativity.

– CEO of Vietnam’s Masan Group

Madhur Maini

founder

Catalyst for Consumer & Transformation

 Madhur Maini was the CEO of Vietnam’s Masan Group and instrumental in transforming it from a US$100m family office to a US$3bn+ market cap listed private sector conglomerate. Masan Group is a leader in consumer, banking, mining and agri businesses in Vietnam. He drove the group’s rapid growth with a three-pillar strategy that involved scaling existing businesses, attracting best-in-class long-term global capital and overseeing successful entry into new growth sectors. Through his tenor the company consumer business revenues grew from approximately usd 40 m to usd 750 m and the company owned 5 of the top 50 consumer brands in the country.

Prior to joining Masan Group, Madhur spent 12+ years in various leadership positions in investment banking in Asia Pacific at Merrill Lynch and Deutsche Bank. 

He scaled up various regional and product businesses in Southeast Asia.  He was also advisor to a number of regional governments for capital raising.

Madhur was an adjunct professor in the Lee Kwan Yew School of Public Policy from 2015-16 and contributed to the Data Analytics Program (Global Analytics and Behavioural Insights Network ‘GABIN’) at the LKY School.

Madhur graduated in the prestigious Management and Technology Program from University of Pennsylvania. He graduated from Wharton School with a degree in Bachelor of Economics.