Trump delays tariffs for goods covered under trade deal

Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum speaks during a press conference after holding a phone call...
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum speaks during a press conference after holding a phone call with US President Donald Trump. Photo: Reuters

President Donald Trump has exempted goods from both Canada and Mexico under a North American trade pact for a month from the 25% tariffs that he had imposed earlier this week, the latest twist in fast-shifting trade policy that has whipsawed financial markets and business leaders.

The exemption, which will expire on April 2, covers both of the two largest US trading partners.

Trump had earlier only mentioned an exemption for Mexico, but the amendment he signed to his order for 25% levies on imports from both - which went into effect on Tuesday - covers Canada as well.

For Canada, the amended order also excludes duties on potash, a critical fertiliser for US farmers, but does not fully cover energy products, on which Trump has imposed a separate 10% levy.

A White House official said that is because not all energy products imported from Canada are covered under the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade that Trump negotiated in his first term as president.

Trump imposed the tariffs after declaring a national emergency due to deaths from fentanyl overdoses, asserting that the deadly opioid and its precursor chemicals make their way from China to the US via Canada and Mexico. Trump has also imposed tariffs of 20% on all imports from China as a result.

The exemptions will expire on April 2, when Trump has threatened to impose a global regime of reciprocal tariffs on all US trading partners.

The development comes a day after Trump exempted automotive goods from the 25% tariffs he imposed on imports from Canada and Mexico as of Tuesday, levies that economists saw as threatening to stoke inflation and stall growth across all three economies.

US stock markets resumed their recent sell-off on Thursday, with investors citing the rapid-fire, back-and-forth developments on tariffs as a concern due to the uncertainty they are fanning. Economists have warned that the levies may rekindle inflation that has already proven difficult to bring fully to heel, and slow demand and growth in its wake.