GOOD MORNING. | | THE LEAD | Last month, the Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 that the Trump administration did not have legal authority to impose sweeping global tariffs under a law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Those tariffs had been bringing in an estimated $175 billion since 2025. The court's ruling struck them down. | The administration moved quickly. Within days of the ruling, President Trump announced a temporary 10% global tariff under a different law called Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974. He later said he would raise that to 15%, though the White House has not yet made that increase official. The catch with Section 122 is that it expires after 150 days unless Congress votes to extend it. That clock runs out in July. | So this week, the administration took the next step. On Wednesday, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced formal trade investigations into 16 major economies under a third law called Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. The countries under investigation are China, the European Union, Singapore, Switzerland, Norway, Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, South Korea, Vietnam, Taiwan, Bangladesh, Mexico, Japan, and India. | Jeff Brown: "I Warned You About Elon Musk…" | | While everyone said Tesla was finished… | On June 11, I predicted that we were on the cusp of one of the most shocking comebacks in Wall Street history. | Sure enough, Tesla is now up 25% and recovered all 2025 losses. | But this is just the beginning of Elon's $25 trillion breakthrough. | Click here to see what's coming next | The investigations will examine whether those countries are producing more goods than their own markets can absorb and then flooding the United States with the excess, suppressing American manufacturing and wages. Greer said the probe will look at evidence including large trade surpluses, government subsidies, state-owned enterprises, and suppressed wages. "The United States will no longer sacrifice its industrial base to other countries," Greer said in the official announcement. | That same day, Greer also announced a separate set of Section 301 investigations into 60 countries over whether they allow goods made with forced labor to enter the United States market. |
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| The difference between Section 301 and the previous IEEPA tariffs matters. Section 301 has been used successfully for decades. During his first term, President Trump used it to impose tariffs on China. The Biden administration extended and increased those tariffs in 2024. The law has survived thousands of legal challenges. However, Section 301 comes with a mandatory process: public comments, hearings, and a formal finding. Greer says he wants to conclude the investigations before the Section 122 tariffs expire in July. A public comment period opens March 17, and a hearing is set for May 5. | For you, the bottom line is straightforward. Tariffs raise the cost of imported goods. Companies that import products almost always pass those costs to consumers. The last major tariff cycle contributed to the inflation spike of 2022 and 2023. If new tariffs arrive in July, they land on top of an inflation rate that is already running at 3.1% and an oil price that has surged due to the Iran war. That combination could make the cost-of-living pressure worse before it gets better. | | | THE NUMBER THAT MATTERS | 150 days | Temporary Tariff Duration | That is how long the current 10% temporary tariff can legally stay in place under Section 122 without an act of Congress. The clock started when President Trump signed the tariff order after the Supreme Court ruling in late February. That puts the expiration date in late July 2026. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said publicly that his goal is for tariff rates to be back to their pre-ruling levels by August. Trade Representative Greer has said he is aiming to finish the Section 301 investigations before that July deadline, so new permanent tariffs can replace the temporary ones without a gap. Whether that timeline holds depends on how quickly the investigation process moves, whether trading partners negotiate deals, and whether courts intervene. For now, that 150-day window is the single most important deadline in the trade story. |
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| | | WHAT WE'RE WATCHING THIS WEEK | | INFLATION DATA | TRADE: China and the EU Are Already Pushing Back | The European Union reached a trade framework agreement with the United States last summer, announced in Scotland. This week's investigations have put that deal in doubt. The EU has said it would "respond firmly and proportionately" if the U.S. imposes tariffs that exceed what was agreed to in that deal. China, the largest target of the Section 301 probe, faces the most severe potential tariffs. Greer said consultations with all 16 economies would begin immediately. Separately, U.S. and Chinese officials are scheduled to hold talks ahead of a potential summit between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping this month. How that relationship develops in the weeks ahead will have a direct bearing on the prices Americans pay on clothing, electronics, and household goods. | | SMART MONEY SIGNAL | TRADE: What the Section 301 Process Means for Your Timeline | The Section 301 process is more deliberate than the IEEPA tariffs were. A public comment docket opens March 17, 2026. Written comments are due by April 15. A formal public hearing begins May 5. After that, the USTR must review findings and propose a response, which can include tariffs, fees on services, or other measures. Greer has said he wants to complete the process within roughly five months, well inside the 12-to-18-month maximum the law allows. If the investigation concludes on time and tariffs are imposed, they could arrive just as the temporary Section 122 tariffs expire in July. For consumers and businesses, the practical effect would be little-to-no gap in higher import costs. Companies are already beginning to plan around the July deadline. | | WORTH KNOWING | RETIREMENT INCOME: Elevated Rates Are Still Working in Your Favor | While the trade and inflation news creates headwinds, one corner of the market continues to benefit retirees. Because the Federal Reserve is holding interest rates steady at 3.50% to 3.75%, short-term savings products are still paying meaningful yields. The Fed meets next Wednesday and is widely expected to hold. With inflation at 3.1% and oil prices elevated due to the Iran conflict, rate cuts are off the table for the foreseeable future. If you have cash sitting in low-yield savings accounts, this remains a good time to talk to your bank or advisor about moving it into higher-yielding alternatives. Rates will not stay this high forever, and locking in a competitive CD rate before the Fed eventually pivots is worth considering. | | | | | The Trump administration is rebuilding its tariff program on legally stronger footing after the Supreme Court struck down the original approach. The new Section 301 investigations cover 16 major trading partners and could result in permanent tariffs by July. That matters to retirees because tariffs tend to raise consumer prices, and this wave would arrive at a moment when inflation is already elevated and household budgets are already feeling pressure from higher energy costs. Stay focused on income quality and make sure your short-term savings are earning a competitive rate while rates remain elevated. |
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