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Trump tariffs trigger price hikes in US market

The owner of Walmart stores in the ​U.S. announced that due⁢ to rising costs following Donald Trump’s trade war, prices of products in these stores will increase.

According to the International Economics section of Webangah News Agency, citing Tasnim News Agency and The Hill, ⁢the‍ owner of Walmart stores in the ​U.S. announced on Thursday that due to rising costs resulting from Donald Trump’s trade war, product prices in ‌these stores will rise.

The price hike at Walmart indicates that despite the Trump governance’s⁢ efforts to negotiate with countries, tariffs have severely impacted American consumers and the economy.

The retail giant stated it plans to raise prices this month and ⁢early this summer, passing some of these costs onto consumers as goods​ affected by tariffs have already reached store shelves.

John david Rainey, ⁤Walmart’s CFO, told The Wall Street journal: “The magnitude and speed at which these tariffs‌ are being imposed on us are ⁤somewhat unprecedented in history.”

Walmart also reported a decline in its first-quarter profits, dropping from $5.10 billion or 63 cents per share to $4.45 billion or 56⁢ cents per share.

The company refrained from providing ‌profit forecasts due to uncertainty surrounding Trump’s tariff policies, aligning with several ‌other firms adopting a similar approach.

Doug mcmillon, Walmart’s CEO, stated: “We will do everything we can to keep prices as low as‍ possible.⁤ However, given the intensity of ​tariffs—even at reduced levels announced this‍ week—we cannot absorb all pressures because profit margins in retail ⁤are very slim.”

The report notes ​that ⁢Walmart sells various low-cost household goods and clothing items ‍highly susceptible to price ⁤increases under Trump’s tariffs.

The Trump administration implemented a major⁣ shift this week in its trade policy ⁢with ‌China—one‌ of America’s largest trading partners—whose factories produce a wide range of goods found on U.S. store shelves.

tariffs on Chinese imports were reduced from 145% to 30%, while Beijing also cut its tariffs on U.S.⁢ goods from 125% down sharply by just over one percentage point (to around ~10%). These measures led markets previously hit by⁢ Trump-era duties rally considerably ⁤Monday after their implementation was suspended for ninety days; though no guarantees​ exist regarding long-term agreements ⁢being reached anytime ⁤soon creating instability among businesses including WalMart itself according sources close matter who spoke anonymously as ​they were not‍ authorized discuss publicly yet still wished share insights‌ into ongoing negotiations between both nations involved here today where tensions ⁢remain high despite recent developments suggesting potential progress ahead‌ if talks continue constructively moving forward together collaboratively rather than combatively like before ⁣when⁢ things got heated up last ‍year during initial phases dispute resolution process which ⁤ultimately‍ failed deliver ⁣desired results either side hoped achieve originally back then now hoping avoid repeat same mistakes again future dealings each⁢ other going forward rather focusing mutual benefits cooperation brings ‌everyone involved globally speaking economically politically socially culturally etcetera…

English channel of the webangah news agency on Telegram
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