Home
Notification
Profile
Trending Articles
News
Bookmarked and Liked
History
Creator Center
Settings
Safi-ud-din
--
Follow
sell trade
entry point 1.0150
TP 1 0.9550
TP 2 0.8580
Disclaimer: Includes third-party opinions. No financial advice. May include sponsored content.
See T&Cs.
285
0
Explore the latest crypto news
⚡️ Be a part of the latests discussions in crypto
💬 Interact with your favorite creators
👍 Enjoy content that interests you
Email / Phone number
Sign Up
Login
Relevant Creator
Safi-ud-din
@Square-Creator-0019
Follow
Explore More From Creator
target TP 2 also got hit
--
TP 1 successfully hit
--
TP 1 successfully done
--
short position entry point 104500 TP 1 104000 TP 2 103500 SL 104800
--
#TrumpTariffs The resumption of the global trade war by Donald Trump comes after a period of relative calm. But the US president's threat of a 50% tariff on all goods from the European Union in a week's time suggests the trade war tensions were merely on hold. They have now resumed in earnest, alongside market uncertainty, and social media diplomacy. It indicates significant volatility in the coming weeks, ahead of a crucial G7 summit in Canada next month. The crux of what is happening right now is that after the US opted to row back on its trade-stopping tariff conflict with China, most of the rest of the world, especially key US allies, slowed up on their own negotiations with the US. Allies would not expect to be treated worse by the US than China. Friday's intervention by President Trump is much worse that what was considered the worst-case scenario - a 20% tariff rate on the EU in early July at the end of the 90-day pause. As his Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent openly admitted, these threats are designed to "light a fire" under such stalled talks. Many in the EU, and other countries such as Japan, believe the US administration is bluffing, and that it backed down against China in the face of rising inflation and market volatility, and will inevitably do so again. So the scene is now set for an impasse or perhaps the EU to reinstate its own paused retaliation, while the rest of the world, apart from China and the UK, watches on. The UK's trade deals with both sides insulate the British economy to some extent, but full resumption of a transatlantic tariff war would cause a trade shock that would be difficult to escape.
--
Latest News
XRP News: XRP Price Breakout Likely Between July and September, Analysts Say
--
U.S. Senator Lummis Advocates for Legislative Progress on Market Structure and GENIUS Bills
--
U.S. Commerce Secretary Criticizes Federal Reserve Chair's Stance on Tariffs and Inflation
--
Trader AguilaTrades Sees Gains After Large Bitcoin Investment
--
Grove to Invest $1 Billion in RWA Asset Strategy
--
View More
Trending Articles
$BTC pumped after clearing the lower side liquidity and now
DeCrypto TokenTalks
As of today, I can confidently say that even if we have 10 b
Farrah Depetris qTix
THE FINAL BOUNCE BEFORE THE BLOODBATH.
Xmeta4
Learn this simplest method of trading cryptocurrencies, and
Santa Becera HqBq
XRP Insiders Dump $68M Daily—Smart Money Exit from the Dust
Saloocrypto
View More
Sitemap
Cookie Preferences
Platform T&Cs