Business
FedEx sues US government for refund of President Donald Trump tariffs
FOX Business host Larry Kudlow discusses the ramifications of the Supreme Court striking down the president’s tariffs on ‘Kudlow.’
FedEx sued the U.S. government Monday, seeking a full refund of tariffs assessed under President Donald Trump’s order targeting imports.
The lawsuit is one of the highest-profile moves by a major American company following the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling Friday, which determined that the president did not have the authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose such tariffs.
The complaint, filed against the government and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in the Court of International Trade, alleges FedEx incurred costs to expedite shipments through customs and is entitled to a refund of duties with interest, as well as compensation for the financial harm it suffered.
“Plaintiffs seek for themselves a full refund from Defendants of all IEEPA duties Plaintiffs have paid to the United States,” FedEx said in the lawsuit.
SUPREME COURT DEALS BLOW TO TRUMP’S TRADE AGENDA IN LANDMARK TARIFF CASE

The lawsuit does not disclose how much FedEx has paid in tariffs. (FedEx)
“Supporting our customers as they navigate regulatory changes remains our priority,” the company told FOX Business.
“FedEx has taken necessary action to protect the company’s rights as an importer of record to seek duty refunds from U.S. Customs and Border Protection following the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that the tariffs issued under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) are unlawful.”
The lawsuit does not disclose how much FedEx has paid in tariffs. However, in September, the shipping giant said it expected a $1 billion hit to fiscal-year earnings from U.S. trade policies, only part of which involved IEEPA duties.
US TARIFF REVENUE UP 300% UNDER TRUMP AS SUPREME COURT BATTLE LOOMS

FedEx sued the U.S. government, seeking a full refund of tariffs assessed under President Donald Trump’s emergency order targeting imports. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images / Getty Images)
“While the Supreme Court did not address the issue of refunds, FedEx has taken necessary action to protect the company’s rights as an importer of record to seek duty refunds from U.S. Customs and Border Protection,” the company said on its website.
“At this time, however, no refund process has been established by regulators or the courts,” it added. “We will communicate any relevant information and updates in a timely manner, and we appreciate your patience as we wait for additional guidance and clarity from the U.S. government and the courts.”
The suit names CBP Commissioner Rodney S. Scott and the U.S. as defendants.
FedEx is represented by Washington, D.C.–based Crowell & Moring, which also represents Costco and Revlon in IEEPA tariff refund cases filed before the Supreme Court’s ruling Friday.
WILL REFUNDS BE ISSUED AFTER SUPREME COURT RULING ON TRUMP TARIFFS?
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FDX | FEDEX CORP. | 383.71 | -4.77 | -1.23% |
In February 2025, Donald Trump invoked the IEEPA to impose duties on imports from China, Canada and Mexico, citing national security concerns and unfair trade practices. Then in April, he expanded the measures into reciprocal tariffs targeting 57 countries.
In effect, U.S. businesses and consumers paid more than $175 billion in duties.
On Friday, the Supreme Court ruled in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump that IEEPA does not authorize Trump to impose tariffs, confirming that the Court of International Trade has exclusive jurisdiction over the IEEPA tariffs.

FedEx alleges it incurred costs to expedite shipments through customs and is entitled to a refund of duties with interest. (Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images / Getty Images)
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While CBP continued collecting the duties during the pending litigation, it announced that IEEPA duty collection would cease Tuesday.
The White House and CBP did not immediately respond to FOX Business’ request for comment.
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Robinhood Stock Surges 10% as Q1 2026 Earnings Approach and Crypto Momentum Builds
NEW YORK — Shares of Robinhood Markets Inc. jumped more than 10% in early trading Tuesday as investors positioned for the company’s upcoming first-quarter 2026 earnings and bet on continued strength in cryptocurrency trading volumes and expanding product offerings.

Robinhood Markets (NASDAQ: HOOD) stock was trading at $78.90, up $7.23 or 10.09%, shortly after the market open on April 14, 2026. The sharp rally came on elevated volume, reflecting renewed enthusiasm for the retail brokerage platform amid recovering crypto markets and anticipation ahead of its April 28 earnings release.
The Menlo Park, California-based company, known for democratizing access to stocks, options and cryptocurrencies, has transformed from a commission-free trading app into a broader financial ecosystem. Its growth has been fueled by rising user engagement, premium Robinhood Gold subscriptions and strategic moves into crypto and prediction markets.
Robinhood is scheduled to report first-quarter 2026 results after the market close on April 28, with a video webcast featuring Chairman and CEO Vlad Tenev and CFO Shiv Verma set for 5 p.m. ET. Analysts expect the report to highlight sustained momentum in funded accounts, assets under custody and transaction-based revenues, particularly from crypto.
Recent monthly metrics have shown resilience. In March 2026, Robinhood reported strong trading volumes, with notional equity and options activity remaining elevated. Crypto trading has been a standout performer, with January 2026 volumes reaching $22.9 billion, up 8% sequentially and 12% year-over-year. The company’s acquisition of Bitstamp has expanded its international crypto footprint and added institutional capabilities.
Robinhood has also deepened ties to the crypto ecosystem. In early April 2026, the U.S. Treasury selected Robinhood alongside BNY Mellon to serve as brokerage and trustee for the Trump Accounts program, a government-backed initiative providing investment accounts for newborns. The designation underscores Robinhood’s growing role as infrastructure in the financial system and could open new avenues for user acquisition and long-term asset growth.
The company has expanded its prediction markets business through a joint venture with Susquehanna International Group. The venture, which closed its acquisition of MIAXdx in January 2026, plans to launch a derivatives exchange offering futures and event contracts in 2026. Customer demand for prediction markets has been robust, with hundreds of millions of event contract trades executed in recent months.
Robinhood Gold, the company’s premium subscription service, continues to drive recurring revenue. Gold subscribers grew significantly in 2025, and management has highlighted higher engagement among paid users who benefit from enhanced margin rates, interest on uninvested cash and advanced research tools.
Broader diversification efforts include retirement accounts, Robinhood Strategies for managed portfolios and international expansion. The company launched a public testnet for Robinhood Chain, its Ethereum Layer 2 blockchain built on Arbitrum, aimed at enabling faster and cheaper on-chain transactions for users.
Despite the positive momentum, Robinhood has faced periods of volatility in 2026. The stock experienced a pullback earlier in the year amid broader fintech sector rotation and concerns over trading volume normalization after the 2025 crypto surge. However, analysts remain largely bullish, with consensus price targets suggesting meaningful upside. Wall Street has cited Robinhood’s ability to monetize its large user base, expand into wealth management and capitalize on crypto cycles as key drivers.
First-quarter earnings expectations center on revenue growth in the mid-teens range, with contributions from transaction fees, net interest income and Gold subscriptions. Consensus estimates project earnings per share around $0.45 to $0.49. Investors will scrutinize guidance for the remainder of 2026, particularly any commentary on crypto market trends and expense discipline.
Robinhood ended 2025 with strong financials, reporting full-year revenue up more than 50% year-over-year and generating substantial free cash flow. The company has been active in share repurchases, buying back millions of shares in recent quarters as a signal of confidence in its undervaluation.
Operational highlights include continued account growth and rising assets under custody, which approached or exceeded $300 billion in recent periods. The platform’s user-friendly interface and social features have helped it maintain appeal among younger retail investors while attracting more sophisticated traders through tools like advanced charting and futures access.
Challenges persist. Regulatory scrutiny of payment for order flow, a core part of Robinhood’s revenue model, remains a long-term risk. Competition from traditional brokers and other fintech platforms has intensified, while crypto volatility can create lumpy quarterly results. The company has also navigated macroeconomic factors, including interest rate fluctuations that affect net interest margins.
CEO Vlad Tenev has emphasized Robinhood’s evolution into a comprehensive financial services provider. In recent interviews and earnings calls, he highlighted plans to deepen crypto integration, expand internationally and build infrastructure that serves both retail and institutional clients.
Tuesday’s trading surge placed HOOD among the top percentage gainers on the Nasdaq, underscoring its high-beta nature tied to equity and crypto market sentiment. The rally appeared driven by a combination of short covering, positive sector rotation and pre-earnings positioning rather than any single new announcement.
Analysts have noted Robinhood’s improving profitability and scale as reasons for optimism. Some forecasts project continued double-digit revenue growth in 2026, supported by favorable trading conditions and market share gains. However, others caution that elevated valuations leave limited room for error if trading volumes soften or regulatory hurdles arise.
Robinhood operates in a highly competitive landscape but benefits from a large and engaged user base. Features such as 24/7 trading for certain assets, fractional shares and educational resources have helped retain customers through market cycles.
As the April 28 earnings date approaches, focus will turn to specific metrics: funded account growth, average revenue per user, crypto notional volumes and any updates on the prediction markets exchange launch. Management may also provide color on banking initiatives and potential new product rollouts.
The stock’s performance in 2026 has been mixed following a strong 2025 run, but Tuesday’s double-digit gain signals fresh investor interest. With crypto markets showing signs of stabilization and new government-backed opportunities on the horizon, Robinhood appears well-positioned to capitalize on retail participation in financial markets.
Longer-term, the company’s success will depend on executing its diversification strategy while maintaining its core strength in accessible trading. If Robinhood can sustain user growth and convert more customers to paid tiers, it could deliver consistent earnings expansion.
For now, shareholders are celebrating the morning’s momentum as the brokerage prepares to showcase its progress in two weeks. The upcoming report could serve as a pivotal moment, either reinforcing the bull case or prompting renewed caution depending on the details.
Robinhood Markets continues to redefine retail investing, blending technology, community and expanding financial products. Its ability to navigate volatility while scaling operations will determine whether the current rally marks the start of sustained gains or another chapter in its high-volatility journey.
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HSBC Warns Iran War Hits Global Confidence as UK Firms Face Rising Costs
Britain’s biggest bank has issued a stark warning that the war in Iran is already corroding global business confidence, as a growing chorus of UK company bosses sound the alarm over spiralling costs, supply chain disruption and the threat of renewed inflation.
Speaking at HSBC’s Global Investment Summit in Hong Kong, chief executive Georges Elhedery told Bloomberg Television that the Lebanese-born banker was “saddened and concerned” by events in the Middle East, and increasingly worried about how long the conflict will drag on. He cautioned that uncertainty had begun to weigh on sentiment and warned the ripple effects would be felt well beyond the region, pushing up the price of oil, refined fuels, fertilisers and metals.
The comments came as Brent crude, which had breached the $100 (£74) a barrel mark on Monday, slipped 0.9% to $98.50 on Tuesday morning, even as an American blockade of Iran’s ports took effect. US and Iranian negotiators are understood to be preparing to return to Islamabad this week after 21 hours of weekend talks in the Pakistani capital closed without a breakthrough.
In London, the FTSE 100 edged 22 points higher, up 0.21% to 10,605. Imperial Brands, owner of the Davidoff and West cigarette labels and a growing stable of vaping products, was among the biggest fallers after it flagged a “more uncertain geopolitical and macro environment”.
Recruiter PageGroup added to the gloom, describing conditions across Britain, Europe, the Middle East and Asia as “tough” and warning that the Middle East crisis was driving an increasingly murky outlook for the remainder of the year. The firm noted that salaries had slipped below levels seen in 2022 and 2023.
HSBC itself is among the European lenders most exposed to the region, thanks to its 31% holding in Saudi Awwal Bank. Analysts at JP Morgan Chase estimate the Middle East generates roughly 4% of the group’s pre-tax profits. However, Mr Elhedery insisted the bank had so far seen only “very benign movement” of capital out of the region, even as some wealthy Gulf-based investors have begun scouting relocation options in Singapore and Hong Kong since Washington and Israel launched strikes on Iran on 28 February.
HSBC chair Brendan Nelson, speaking alongside his chief executive, was blunter still. A peace settlement, he argued, was essential to restoring the flow of global energy supplies, with oil-driven inflation now shaping up as one of the most serious threats facing the world economy. “The longer the disruption continues, the more the indirect effects from higher energy costs will lift inflation and depress growth,” he said.
The warnings are landing hard on Britain’s small and mid-sized manufacturers, particularly those dependent on petroleum-derived inputs. Tom Beahon, co-founder and co-chief executive of sportswear firm Castore, which kits out Premier League football sides and the England cricket team, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that input costs had already jumped by 10% to 15%. If the conflict rumbled on for another couple of months, he said, some of that pain would have to be passed on to consumers.
For Mr Beahon, the volatility has been even more corrosive than the headline rises. Polyester and other synthetic fabric prices, he said, had at times leapt by as much as 40% in a single day before tumbling back, making it all but impossible to plan. Logistics has proved just as fraught, with carriers thinning out flight schedules and vessels still stuck in the Strait of Hormuz, though he expressed cautious optimism that a swift resolution could spare customers the worst of it.
Virgin Atlantic chief executive Corneel Koster struck a similar note in comments to the Financial Times, revealing that jet fuel prices were now running at more than double their pre-war levels. Whatever the outcome in the Gulf, he argued, a portion of the energy price shock was likely to prove permanent.
The political temperature is also rising. As chancellor Rachel Reeves flew into Washington for the spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, she called for a coordinated international response, declaring that the Iran conflict “must be a line in the sand on how we deal with global crisis and instability”.
For Britain’s SME community, already navigating sticky inflation, a sluggish recovery and a tight labour market, the message from boardrooms and bank chiefs alike is unambiguous: the longer the guns sound in the Gulf, the harder it will be to shield balance sheets, margins and, ultimately, customers from the fallout.
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OpenAI Rolls Out GPT-5.3 Instant Mini and $100 Pro Plan Amid Growing Backlash
NEW YORK — OpenAI has released its latest ChatGPT update on April 9, 2026, introducing GPT-5.3 Instant Mini as a smarter fallback model and launching a new $100-per-month Pro subscription tier, even as the company faces mounting public criticism, subscription cancellations and security concerns.

The incremental but meaningful improvements aim to enhance everyday conversations and give power users more capacity for advanced coding tasks through the Codex tool. GPT-5.3 Instant Mini replaces the previous fallback model and delivers more natural dialogue, stronger writing and better contextual awareness without appearing in the main model picker.
Users who hit rate limits on the primary GPT-5.3 Instant model will now encounter this refined mini version, which OpenAI says outperforms its predecessor across multiple use cases. The update also expands support for shared Outlook mailboxes and calendars in the Outlook Email and Calendar apps, allowing delegated access for reading, organizing, sending mail and managing events.
Simultaneously, OpenAI introduced a new $100 monthly Pro plan positioned as a direct challenge to rival Anthropic’s Claude offerings. The tier provides five times more Codex usage than the existing $20 Plus plan and includes higher overall limits for demanding professional workflows. Existing Plus and Pro users received adjustments to how Codex credits are allocated.
The April 9 rollout comes just days after OpenAI added ChatGPT integration with Apple CarPlay on April 2, enabling hands-free voice conversations while driving. Enterprise and education customers will receive the CarPlay feature in coming weeks.
These technical enhancements arrive against a backdrop of significant controversy. Reports indicate that more than 2.5 million users have either canceled their ChatGPT subscriptions or publicly pledged to stop using the service following OpenAI’s decision to integrate its models with U.S. military systems. App uninstalls reportedly spiked nearly 300% in a single day, and rival Anthropic’s Claude briefly topped the App Store charts.
Protests erupted outside OpenAI’s offices in San Francisco, reflecting broader unease about the rapid commercialization and military applications of AI technology. Some users expressed discomfort with the perceived shift from a helpful consumer tool to a platform entangled in defense contracts and aggressive monetization.
On April 10, authorities arrested 20-year-old Daniel Moreno-Gama after he allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s San Francisco home. Investigators said the suspect believed AI posed an existential risk to humanity. The incident heightened security concerns around the company and its leadership.
OpenAI also disclosed a security issue involving a third-party developer tool called Axios that affected the code-signing process for its macOS applications. The company stated it found no evidence of user data access, system compromise or intellectual property theft, but it has taken steps to strengthen the certification process.
European Union regulators are examining whether ChatGPT should face tighter oversight under the Digital Services Act after OpenAI reported user numbers exceeding the 45 million threshold for designation as a large online platform. The potential reclassification could impose stricter content moderation and transparency requirements.
Despite the turbulence, OpenAI continues to push forward with product improvements. Recent updates to the Projects feature include deep research capabilities, voice mode support, better memory that references past chats within a project, easier sharing of project conversations and mobile enhancements such as file uploads and model selection.
ChatGPT’s model lineup in 2026 centers on the GPT-5 family. GPT-5.3 Instant serves as the default for free and paid users alike, while higher tiers gain access to more advanced “Thinking” and Pro variants with superior reasoning and coding performance. Older models, including GPT-4o and earlier GPT-5 snapshots, were retired from the consumer interface in February 2026, though many remain available via the API.
The company has been rolling out incremental refinements to tone and response quality. A March 16 update to GPT-5.3 Instant reduced overly promotional or teaser-style phrasing, aiming for more straightforward interactions. GPT-5.4 Thinking, launched in early March, combines enhanced reasoning, coding and agentic workflows for complex professional tasks.
OpenAI reported strong financial momentum earlier in 2026, announcing a massive $122 billion funding round in March to fuel the next phase of development. The company claimed revenue had reached $2 billion per month, a dramatic acceleration from $1 billion per quarter at the end of 2024.
Yet user sentiment remains mixed. Some longtime subscribers lament the retirement of favored older models like GPT-4o, which had developed a reputation for being particularly engaging or affirming. Others worry that the push toward higher-priced tiers and enterprise deals is turning ChatGPT into a less accessible tool for casual users.
OpenAI has also experimented with product discovery features that once allowed direct purchases through ChatGPT, though the company has since scaled back Instant Checkout ambitions. Advertising tests continue in the free and lower-tier plans, another point of friction for users accustomed to an ad-free experience.
On the positive side, initiatives like “ChatGPT 26” celebrate student innovators from the Class of 2026 — the first college cohort to experience higher education alongside widespread AI access. The program highlights creative and responsible uses of the technology by young people.
ChatGPT integration into everyday tools continues to expand. Beyond CarPlay, recent additions include improved support for productivity apps such as Box, Notion, Linear and Dropbox, with new actions and writing capabilities.
Speculation about GPT-6, internally referenced in some discussions as “Spud,” continues to swirl. Leaks and analyst commentary suggest it could feature a massive 2 million token context window and advanced persistent memory, though OpenAI has not confirmed a release timeline.
As competition intensifies from Anthropic, Google and open-source alternatives, OpenAI is betting that deeper integration into professional workflows, faster fallback models and premium tiers will sustain its leadership. The company maintains that its models remain the most capable for complex reasoning and coding tasks.
For millions of daily users, the April 2026 updates represent steady progress rather than revolutionary change. GPT-5.3 Instant Mini should make rate-limited sessions feel less jarring, while the new Pro plan caters to heavy users who need substantial Codex capacity for software development.
OpenAI’s release notes emphasize that these changes are designed to deliver more reliable, natural interactions while supporting focused work through enhanced Projects. Memory improvements allow chats within a project to reference previous context more effectively.
Security and ethical considerations loom large. The Axios incident and the Molotov attack underscore the intense scrutiny and real-world risks facing AI companies. OpenAI has reiterated its commitment to responsible development, though critics argue that military partnerships and rapid commercialization conflict with earlier safety-focused rhetoric.
The European Commission’s review under the Digital Services Act could force additional transparency around recommendation systems, content moderation and risk assessments for ChatGPT.
As the AI landscape evolves, ChatGPT remains the most widely used conversational interface, but its dominance is no longer unquestioned. User protests, rival gains and regulatory pressure signal a maturing market where trust, pricing and alignment with public values matter as much as raw capability.
For now, the April 9 update offers incremental reliability improvements and a new premium option for power users. Whether these steps can offset growing backlash and restore momentum will likely shape OpenAI’s trajectory through the remainder of 2026.
ChatGPT users are encouraged to check their settings for the latest model availability and subscription options. OpenAI typically rolls out updates gradually, so some features may appear over the coming days.
The company has not commented publicly on the subscription cancellation reports or protest activity beyond its standard safety and security statements. Sam Altman and other executives continue to emphasize the transformative potential of AI while acknowledging societal challenges.
With GPT-5 family models now firmly established and further advances on the horizon, ChatGPT’s evolution reflects both the promise of increasingly capable AI and the growing pains of its widespread adoption.
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