Business
Trump says US to start sending out tariff letters to trade partners
The US government is to start sending out letters to countries with details of higher US tariff rates that will begin on 1 August, President Donald Trump has said.
Between 10 to 12 letters will go out on Friday, with more over the coming days, the president told reporters.
The import duties will range from “60% or 70% tariffs to 10 to 20% tariffs,” he said, the top end of which is higher than he had previously outlined.
Trump has set a deadline of 9 July for negotiations over import tax rates as countries scramble to reach deals.
He has previously said there would be a baseline tariff of 10% on many economies up to a 50% maximum.
Trump did not say which countries’ goods would face the US taxes, or whether the rates would only apply to certain goods.
“My inclination is to send a letter out and say what tariff they’re going to be paying,” he told reporters on Thursday. “It’s just much easier.”
He added: “We’re going to be sending some letters out, starting probably tomorrow.”
Tariffs are taxes imposed on goods coming into a country, paid by the importer.
Those firms may choose to swallow the higher costs, but ultimately are likely to pass them on to US consumers.
The idea is to have more money flowing into the US government, and also to make foreign goods more expensive, so boosting demand for US-made goods.
The world’s largest economies, China and the US, initially engaged in a tit-for-tat trade war that imposed massive “reciprocal” tariff increases in April.
The US imposed 145% tariffs on Chinese imports, while China put 125% tariffs on some goods.
After negotiations the countries agreed to drop the taxes to 30% and 10% respectively while they negotiate. Last month, the two said they had agreed details over matters such as the export of rare earth materials and the easing of tech restrictions.
Business
Yorkshire Water announces hosepipe ban after driest spring in 132 years | Water industry
Yorkshire Water has introduced hosepipe restrictions after the region recorded its driest spring in 132 years.
Yorkshire received just 15cm of rainfall between February and June, less than half of what is expected in an average year, pushing the region to an official drought status.
Its reservoirs are 55.8% full, which is 26.1 percentage points lower than what they would normally be at this time of year.
Dave Kaye, the director of water at Yorkshire Water, said action was necessary now to “help conserve water and protect Yorkshire’s environment”.
“From Friday this week, people across Yorkshire will need to stop using their hosepipes to water their gardens, wash their cars or for any other activities. Introducing these restrictions is not a decision we have taken lightly, and we’ve been doing everything we can to avoid having to put them in place,” he said.
The restrictions will come into force on 11 July. They will stop people from using a hosepipe to water gardens, wash private vehicles, fill domestic pools or clean outdoor surfaces.
People can still wash their car and water their gardens using tap water from a bucket or watering can. Businesses can use a hosepipe if it is directly related to a commercial purpose.
Mark Lloyd, the chief executive of the charity the Rivers Trust, said further hosepipe restrictions are likely to come in other areas of the country.
“Sadly, the measures will also probably include drought permits that allow the company to take more water from rivers than normal, which will have severe impacts on river wildlife which is already struggling,” he said. “It will be very surprising if other companies don’t have to follow suit unless the weather changes dramatically.”
The supplier, which serves 5 million customers across Yorkshire and parts of north Lincolnshire and Derbyshire, is owned by Kelda Group.
Yorkshire Water paid £37.5m dividends for the six months to 30 September 2024 to its parent, up from £17.7m during the same period in 2023. The company paid £84.1m in dividends within its group structure in its latest full financial year. The dividends were not distributed to external shareholders.
Last year the chief executive and chief financial officers at Yorkshire Water were handed a combined £616,000 in bonuses for a year in which thousands of its customers were affected for weeks by a burst water pipe.
Under new powers in Labour’s Water (Special Measures) Act 2025, the regulator, Ofwat, can ban bonuses for water executives where a company fails to meet key standards on environmental and financial performance, or is convicted of a criminal offence.
Under the rules, six water providers – including Thames Water, Southern Water, United Utilities, Wessex Water, Anglian Water and Yorkshire Water – were banned from paying “unfair” bonuses to their executives this year.
The boss of Yorkshire Water said she had decided to turn her bonus down this year, before the legislation was introduced. Nicola Shaw, who accepted a £371,000 bonus last year, said it would “not be appropriate” to accept the payment this year, acknowledging that the supplier needed to “do better” on tackling pollution.
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It comes as customers must pay higher water bills until the end of the decade, to help fund investment in better water and sewage infrastructure. The average annual bill for Yorkshire Water is £430, according to Ofwat, and is expected to rise by 35% by 2030.
Last month Yorkshire officially moved to drought status after a prolonged period of low rainfall. In May, north-west England also entered drought status, as reservoir levels fell to half their capacity. Much of the rest of the country is in prolonged dry status, which is the step before drought.
Consumers across England have been asked to conserve water as summer begins amid low river flows, groundwater levels and reservoir levels.
The regions at most risk of running out of water at the moment are those which rely largely on reservoirs rather than groundwater.
This is because the wet autumn and winter of 2024-25 allowed for the aquifers – the water below ground – to recharge. This means southeastern areas, which have good aquifers, are in a better position now than those in the Midlands and north of the country.
However, more dry weather could cause the aquifer levels to begin to dwindle as well.
When water supplies run dry, companies often apply for river abstraction licences. But rivers across the country, except in parts of the north-west, are at exceptionally low levels, so any further abstraction would pose a risk of great ecological harm.
Water companies have been criticised in past droughts for not implementing hosepipe bans quickly enough, and accused of not doing so because bosses were too concerned about affecting customer satisfaction scores, which influence their rating with the regulator. As of this year, this rating now dictates whether chief executives can get a bonus.
Business
Stock markets shrug off tariff letters after Trump says August 1 tariff deadline ‘not 100% firm’ – business live | Business
Introduction: Asia-Pacific markets shrug off new Trump tariff threats
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
The TACO trade is back! Many Asia-Pacific stock markets are rising today, despite Donald Trump’s decision to ramp up his trade war by announcing new tariffs on 14 US trading partners.
There’s relief that Trump has announced a new pause before these new levies kick in – a new three-week reprieve kicks the can down the road to 1 August, rather than tomorrow.
This delay will give countries to negotiate trade deals with the US.
Asked if 1 August deadline was firm, Trump indicated it wasn’t exactly concrete, saying last night:
“I would say firm, but not 100% firm. If they call up and they say we’d like to do something a different way, we’re going to be open to that.”
That has encouraged traders to conclude that Trump Always Chickens Out (TACO).
So while there were losses on Wall Street last night after the first tariff letters were released, markets across Asia are taking the news in their stride.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei 2225 has risen by 0.3%, up 118 points to 39,705 points, even though Japan has been threatened with a new 25% tariff from 1 August (slightly higher than the 24% rate announced back in April, before Trump’s 90-day pause which expires tomorrow).
South Korea’s KOSPI has gained nearly 2%, even though Seoul has also received a letter announcing a new 25% tariff.
China’s CSI300 index has climbed by 0.8%. European markets are expected to open flat.
More letters are expected to be sent later this week.
Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, says traders are pricing in “delay, maybe even dysfunction”, rather than a resolution of the trade war. But that’s enough to keep them bidding.
Innes writes:
Markets didn’t lurch because they’ve seen this show before. Tariff hike, rhetoric spikes, and then—like clockwork—comes the sudden pivot: “We’re still open to talks.” This is policy by poker tell. And by now, investors are familiar enough with the bluff to call it and fade the fear.
However…Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank, fears there is too much “unexplained optimism”, adding:
The deadline extension is not good news, per se. It simply adds to the uncertainty. It’s yet another sign that the deadline won’t be a line in the sand, and that tariffs set in the coming days and weeks won’t be carved in stone, either.
They will be constantly changed — raised, lowered — and used as a go-to threat in every situation.
The agenda
-
9.30am BST: UK’s Office for Budget Responsibility to release its latest Fiscal risks and sustainability report
-
10am BST: Marks & Spencer chair Archie Norman to face business and trade committee to discuss M&S’s cyber attack
-
11am BST: Office for Budget Responsibility press conference
-
12pm BST: Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry to release Volume 1 of its Final Report
Key events
European stock markets have also opened higher, led by Germany.
The German DAX index rose by 50 points, or 0.2%, to 24,125, in early trading, amid some relief that European negotiators have another three weeks to reach a trade deal with Washington.
France’s CAC has inched up by 0.1%, with Spain’s IBEX gaining 0.14%.
Jochen Stanzl, chief market analyst at CMC Markets, says:
Donald Trump has once again retreated from imposing tariffs, allowing the DAX to rise above the 24,000-point mark. It appears that investors are eager to test the previous week’s highs once more, but the success of this endeavor will depend on the daily news regarding trade policy, which is expected to remain volatile. The trade issue continues to be a source of uncertainty for the stock market, and without a trade agreement with the U.S., a sustainable continuation of the rally could prove challenging.
This morning, the European Union faces both positive and negative news. On the positive side, the pause on tariffs has been extended until August. Trump seems to be sticking to his pattern of initially making threats before showing a willingness to negotiate. He likely understands that implementing reciprocal tariffs would be more harmful than beneficial to the ongoing discussions.
However, the negative aspect is that sector-specific tariffs on cars, auto parts, aluminum, and steel will remain in effect until August 1. This latest development is not cause for great celebration, as the EU has struggled to effectively counter the already high tariffs that are currently in place during the negotiations.”
The London stock market has opened slightly higher.
The FTSE 100 share index has risen by 12 points, or 0.14%, to 8819 points, with mining companies among the risers.
Malaysia’s trade ministry has said it will press ahead with talks towards a “comprehensive” trade agreement with the US, after receiving its letter from Donald Trump announcing a new 25% tariff.
In a statement today, Malaysia’s Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry (MITI) said the country was committed to “continued engagement with the US towards a balanced, mutually beneficial and comprehensive trade agreement”, adding:
“Specifically, MITI will continue discussions with its US counterparts in good faith to address outstanding issues, clarify the scope and impact of the announced tariffs, and pursue avenues for the timely conclusion of our negotiations.”
Not every stock market is taking Trump’s new tariffs in their stride.
Malaysia’s major share index has dropped by 0.55% so far today, while Thailand’s SET 50 has lost 0.5%.
Malaysia is now facing a 25% tariff on US exports, while Thailand’s new tariff rate was set at 36%.
EU still hopes to conclude trade agreement in principle this week
Lisa O’Carroll
The EU still hopes to conclude an agreement in principle this week with Donald Trump over tariffs, after it was granted an extension of three weeks for talks.
Ireland’s deputy prime minister Simon Harris revealed the bloc had been given until 1 August to conclude talks or face tariffs on imports of up to 50%.
In exchange for accepting a 10% baseline tariff, the EU is looking for a series of concessions, my colleague Lisa O’Carroll in Brussels reports.
This includes a reduced tariff quota for car imports and steel, currently attracting import duties of 27.5% and 50% respectively.
This addresses Germany’s critical demand for concessions for its beleaguered car industry. The compromise would centre on manufacturers with plants in the US including major German brands Mercedes Benz, BMW and Volkswagen.
And the EU is looking for concessions on medical devices and wine and spirits, which currently attract a 10% tariff.
The EU also wants the tariff relief to kick in immediately an agreement is signed, and not have to wait weeks, as the UK did for formal text to be registered by the White House.
Uncertainty remains over Trump’s threatened tariffs on pharma, Harris said, warning “This is obviously an area of significant concern to Ireland.”
In a statement issued last night he added:
“My understanding is that we can now expect an extension of the current status quo until August 1 to give further time for the EU and the US to reach an agreement in principle on a mutually beneficial agreement that works for both sides.
“However, it remains the position of the EU and the Irish government that we would like to conclude discussions on a trade agreement before August 1. I remain cautiously optimistic about reaching agreement in principle on a Framework Agreement.
“I want to be clear that while it is likely there will be some form of tariffs going forward, their imposition even at a lower rate is bad for consumers, jobs, economic growth and investment.”
Bangladesh to hold further trade talks
Bangladesh will hold further negotiations with the United States to push for deeper tariff cuts, even as US President Donald Trump slapped a 35% levy on goods from the South Asian nation.
Officials are scheduled to hold crucial trade negotiations with the Trump administration from July 9-10 to seek a solution, Commerce Adviser to the interim government Sk. Bashir Uddin said in an interview from Washington.
“We will give and try our best to find mutually win-win proposition,” he said, adding that the goal is to find a “common ground,” Bloomberg reports.
Bangladesh will hold further negotiations with the United States to push for deeper tariff cuts, even as Trump slapped a 35% levy on goods from the South Asian nation https://t.co/Cg06ZRJebr
— Bloomberg (@business) July 8, 2025
German exports to US tumble as tariffs frontloading ends
German exports fell sharply in May, new data shows, as the surge in demand to beat Donald Trump’s tariffs earlier this year faded.
Exports to the US from Germany fell by 7.7% on monthly basis in May, statistics body Destatis reports. On an annual basis, German exports to the US were 13.8% lower than in May 2024.
Overall, German exports fell by 1.4% in May compared to the previous month, while imports dropped by 3.8%.
Exports to China fell by 2.9% month-on-month, but sales to the UK jumped by 15.1% compared with April.
Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING, explains that the frontloading reversal continued in May, fully wiping out the surge seen in February and March, saying:
Today’s data suggest that the boost to exports was almost exclusively driven by US frontloading. However, this effect has now dissipated.
Looking ahead, German exports are still facing rough headwinds. While the EU did not receive a new tariff letter from the White House yesterday, the risk of (more) tariffs hangs like a sword of Damocles over German and European exporters. And there is more: the strengthening of the euro, not only vis-à-vis the US dollar but also in nominal effective terms, is adding to exporters’ concerns.
China warns Trump on tariffs, and threatens retaliation on supply chain deals
China has fired a warning shot at the US over the Trump trade wars.
An editorial in the People’s Daily newspaper warned Washington not to reignite trade tension by restoring tariffs on its goods next month (when the deadline for a US-China trade deal expires)
It declared:
“One conclusion is abundantly clear: dialogue and cooperation are the only correct path.”
Reiterating Beijing’s view that Trump’s tariffs amount to “bullying”, the paper added:
“Practice has proven that only by firmly upholding principled positions can one truly safeguard one’s legitimate rights and interests.”
The article was signed “Zhong Sheng”, or “Voice of China”, a term the paper uses to express views on foreign policy.
It also threatened retaliation against nations that strike deals with the United States to cut China out of supply chains.
Japan and South Korea to continue trade talks with the US
Japan and South Korea have both said they will continue talks with the US to agree trade deals.
Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said today that Japan would continue negotiations with the United States to seek a bilateral trade deal that benefits both countries.
Japan has received a proposal from the United States to continue trade discussions until the newly set August 1 deadline, Ishiba said in a meeting with cabinet ministers to discuss Japan’s strategy in dealing with U.S. tariffs.
South Korea said it planned to intensify trade talks with the United States and considered U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan for a 25% tariff from August 1 as effectively extending a grace period on implementing the levies.
President Lee Jae Myung’s office said U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio had indicated the new deadline, which extends a previous July 9 date, meant there was still time to reach an agreement. Reuters reports.
South Korea’s Industry Ministry said Seoul would “step up negotiations during the remaining period to reach a mutually beneficial result,” adding”:
“We also plan to use it as an opportunity to improve domestic systems and regulations to resolve the trade deficit that is a major interest of the United States.”
Donald Trump’s new tariff rates
If you missed it last night, here are the new tariffs which Donald Trump announced in a flurry of letters to world leaders:
Reminder: These rates will be charged on imports into the US from these countries, and paid by the importer.
Michael Brown, senior research strategist at bokerage Pepperstone, says “President Trump got his random number generator out again yesterday”, adding:
I won’t even waste time in trying to find the logic behind those levels because, frankly, I’m not sure there is any. Some sit higher than the 2nd April original levy, and some are marginally lower.
What’s most important is that none of them come into effect for another three-and-a-half weeks, giving the Trump Administration plenty of wriggle room to set this all up as another ‘escalate to de-escalate’ manoeuvre. Or, as we more commonly know it in these parts – TACO!!
Introduction: Asia-Pacific markets shrug off new Trump tariff threats
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
The TACO trade is back! Many Asia-Pacific stock markets are rising today, despite Donald Trump’s decision to ramp up his trade war by announcing new tariffs on 14 US trading partners.
There’s relief that Trump has announced a new pause before these new levies kick in – a new three-week reprieve kicks the can down the road to 1 August, rather than tomorrow.
This delay will give countries to negotiate trade deals with the US.
Asked if 1 August deadline was firm, Trump indicated it wasn’t exactly concrete, saying last night:
“I would say firm, but not 100% firm. If they call up and they say we’d like to do something a different way, we’re going to be open to that.”
That has encouraged traders to conclude that Trump Always Chickens Out (TACO).
So while there were losses on Wall Street last night after the first tariff letters were released, markets across Asia are taking the news in their stride.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei 2225 has risen by 0.3%, up 118 points to 39,705 points, even though Japan has been threatened with a new 25% tariff from 1 August (slightly higher than the 24% rate announced back in April, before Trump’s 90-day pause which expires tomorrow).
South Korea’s KOSPI has gained nearly 2%, even though Seoul has also received a letter announcing a new 25% tariff.
China’s CSI300 index has climbed by 0.8%. European markets are expected to open flat.
More letters are expected to be sent later this week.
Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, says traders are pricing in “delay, maybe even dysfunction”, rather than a resolution of the trade war. But that’s enough to keep them bidding.
Innes writes:
Markets didn’t lurch because they’ve seen this show before. Tariff hike, rhetoric spikes, and then—like clockwork—comes the sudden pivot: “We’re still open to talks.” This is policy by poker tell. And by now, investors are familiar enough with the bluff to call it and fade the fear.
However…Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank, fears there is too much “unexplained optimism”, adding:
The deadline extension is not good news, per se. It simply adds to the uncertainty. It’s yet another sign that the deadline won’t be a line in the sand, and that tariffs set in the coming days and weeks won’t be carved in stone, either.
They will be constantly changed — raised, lowered — and used as a go-to threat in every situation.
The agenda
-
9.30am BST: UK’s Office for Budget Responsibility to release its latest Fiscal risks and sustainability report
-
10am BST: Marks & Spencer chair Archie Norman to face business and trade committee to discuss M&S’s cyber attack
-
11am BST: Office for Budget Responsibility press conference
-
12pm BST: Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry to release Volume 1 of its Final Report
Business
CS TECH Ai Marks 27 Years, Expands Global Presence with Focus on AI and Digital Infrastructure
CS TECH Ai (BSE: Ceinsys) has completed 27 years in business, marking its growth from a core engineering firm to a digital technology company with a global footprint.
The company, which operates in India, the US, the UK, and Germany, provides solutions in geospatial intelligence, mobility engineering, digital twins, and AI-powered platforms.
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With over 1,250 engineers and technologists, CS TECH Ai supports key infrastructure projects in water, energy, transport, and urban development.
Its solutions have been deployed in national programmes such as Jal Jeevan Mission, AMRUT, and Smart Cities, helping improve planning, execution, and governance.
The company has designed more than 35,000 miles of water networks, processed over 650,000 miles of high-resolution imagery, and contributed to the planning of over 100,000 miles of electrical networks.
Its engineers have logged more than 7 million hours on infrastructure and mobility projects.
In recent years, CS TECH Ai has strengthened its global delivery capabilities through acquisitions, including AllyGrow Technologies and US-based VTS. The company is now integrating artificial intelligence into sector-specific workflows to offer real-time insights and support decision-making in infrastructure systems.
“Our journey from core engineering to AI-driven platforms continues to be rooted in solving sectoral challenges through scalable and adaptive technology,” said Prashant Kamat, Vice Chairman and CEO of CS TECH Ai.
The company aims to drive automation, resilience, and sustainability through intelligent infrastructure solutions.
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