Trade deal on US tariffs within reach, says EU, as 1 August deadline nears

Paul Kirby

Europe digital editor

Bloomberg via Getty Images Ship-to-shore cranes at a container terminal at the Port of Rotterdam, in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on Monday, April 14, 2025Bloomberg via Getty Images

Failure to reach a deal would lead to 30% US tariffs and EU countermeasures targeting US exports

The European Union has said it believes a deal on trade tariffs with the US is “within reach”, ahead of a 1 August deadline when President Donald Trump has threatened to impose a sweeping 30% levy on EU imports.

Hopes were raised after EU diplomats suggested the US had proposed a broad 15% tariff on most European imports.

A European Commission spokesman refused to speculate on the latest talks on Thursday, but said EU negotiators were working “might and main” to deliver a deal for Europe’s consumers and companies.

White House spokesman Kush Desai said earlier that any talk about deals should be seen as “speculation” unless it was confirmed by the president.

Trump said on Wednesday that his condition for withdrawing the threatened 30% levy on EU imports was “if they agree to open up the [European] Union to American businesses”.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested good progress with the EU was being made.

The European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged at 2% on Thursday, after a series of rate cuts in recent months, and ECB President Christine Lagarde said “the sooner this trade uncertainty is resolved… the less uncertainty we’ll have to deal with”.

DANIEL ROLAND/AFP Dressed in a dark blue top and a lighter-coloured scarf, Christine Lagarde addresses a press conference with the EU flag behind herDANIEL ROLAND/AFP

ECB President Christine Lagarde said it was time to bring an end to uncertainty in transatlantic trade

The chief executive of French luxury group LVMH, Bernard Arnault, said an accord similar to the one Japan reached with the US had to be reached amicably.

“We cannot afford to fall out with the United States and engage in a trade war with our companies’ main market,” he told Le Figaro newspaper in France.

The EU had initially hoped for a 10% baseline in US import tariffs, along the lines of a deal the US agreed with the UK, until Trump sent a letter threatening a 30% tariff.

Until now, the EU has refrained from imposing counter-tariffs on the US, even though European companies have faced an extra 10% levy on exports, on top of an average duty of 4.8% they faced before the Trump presidency.

However, if President Trump does not approve an EU accord, then member states have agreed to hit back with a list of countermeasures on US goods worth a total of €93bn (£81bn; $109bn) that would kick in days after the US tariffs.

“These countermeasures will automatically click into force on 7 August should a negotiated outcome not happen before then,” European Commission spokesman Olof Gill told reporters.

“Right now the EU is focused on finding a negotiated outcome with the US,” he said, while stressing that a “twin-tracks” approach meant that it was prepared to react without a deal.

The €93bn in countermeasures are made up of an initial list of €21bn – drawn up in retaliation for 25% US tariffs imposed last March on imports of European steel and aluminium – and a new list of €72bn.

The first tariffs, thought to target imports such as Harley-Davidson motorcycles, poultry and jeans, have been repeatedly suspended in recent months in the hope of reaching a deal.

The new €72bn in countermeasures are said to include proposed tariffs on bourbon whiskey, chemicals, cars, aircraft and aircraft parts.

Another option in the EU’s armoury, described as its nuclear option or trade “bazooka”, is to impose restrictions on America’s powerful service sector as well as intellectual property rights.

The anti-coercion instrument (ACI), to give its formal name, was drawn up two years ago to act as a powerful deterrent when a non-EU country resorted to unfair coercion to affect European trade or investment.

At the moment there is little support across the EU for this level of retaliation to be on the table, but earlier this week French Industry Minister Marc Ferracci suggested Europe should adopt a firmer approach and deploy new tools.

Warning that 30% tariffs would have dramatic consequences for French industry and place some sectors in “mortal danger”, Ferracci said various responses would need to be deployed in the event of a failure to reach a deal by 1 August.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

SignalPlus Macro Analysis Special Edition: Indomitable

SignalPlus Macro Analysis Special Edition: Indomitable

It’s a new week, and a new historical high. The S&P 500 index reached a new all-time high on Friday, marking the third time this week and the sixth time in July that the record has been broken. The market continues to ignore the ongoing tariff escalations (30% tariffs on Mexico and the EU), the

Buffett Indicator Surpasses 212% GDP Record as Market Hits Unprecedented Valuations

Buffett Indicator Surpasses 212% GDP Record as Market Hits Unprecedented Valuations

The U.S. stock market has reached unprecedented valuations, with the Buffett Indicator—a gauge of stock market capitalization relative to GDP—surpassing 212% of GDP in July 2025, marking a record high. This metric, calculated using the Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index, now reflects a market cap more than double the nation’s GDP. Warren Buffett himself has

Historic Short Squeeze Drives Latest Meme Stock Rally, Goldman Sachs Says

Historic Short Squeeze Drives Latest Meme Stock Rally, Goldman Sachs Says

Bullish exuberance among retail traders drove a new meme stock rally this week. According to Goldman Sachs, it’s just the latest episode in “one of the sharpest short squeezes on record.” And while it’s got room to run, it also raises the risk of a downturn, the bank said. Analysts said this week’s rally in

Speculative frenzy raises risk of stock market downturn: Goldman Sachs

Investors beware. With the S&P 500 (^GSPC) at all-time highs, some on Wall Street are warning that a rise in speculative trades could increase the risk of a market pullback. Goldman Sachs analysts said their Speculative Trading Indicator has risen sharply during the past few months. The gauge now sits at its highest level on

Meme-Stock Roar Fades on Wall Street as Retail Finds New Thrills

(Bloomberg) — It was once a symbol of rebellion against the well-heeled Wall Street establishment. Today, it’s just another day in markets. Most Read from Bloomberg This week proved the point. Opendoor surged 43% in a single day. Krispy Kreme rallied 39% in a matter of hours. GoPro briefly spiked 73%. Reddit message boards lit

Container ships are seen at the container terminal at Lianyungang port, in China's eastern Jiangsu province in the early morning on July 24, 2025.

There’s a sweet spot for tariffs. Markets could revolt if Trump is way off

New York CNN  —  US stocks are floating near all-time highs as Wall Street maintains cautious optimism that Washington might ink more trade deals, avoiding a worst-case scenario of extraordinarily high tariffs and enabling the resilient economy to continue chugging along. Stocks were higher on Friday. The Dow rose 70 points, or 0.15%. The broader

Two engineers stand in front of a data center.

4 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks That Could Help Make You a Fortune

Artificial intelligence (AI) investing has been a key market theme over the past two and a half years, and it’s slated to remain a significant part of investing for the next few years as well. The reality is that massive AI infrastructure is still needed, and the build-out isn’t slated to slow anytime soon. Even