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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Anthropic Claims Chinese AI Firms Illegally Copied Claude in Massive ‘Distillation Attacks’
Anthropic has accused several China-based companies of using its AI model Claude without authorization. This immediately re-ignited debates over AI ethics, intellectual property, and competitive control.
Moreover, the allegations center on so-called “distillation attacks,” a practice that can replicate AI capabilities through illicit means.
Understanding Distillation Attacks in AI

Gizmodo explains that distillation is a standard AI process where a “teacher” model provides outputs that a “student” model uses to learn, often producing smaller or more efficient AI systems.
Anthropic distinguishes distillation attacks as attempts to extract model knowledge without permission, bypassing legal and contractual safeguards.
According to Anthropic’s Monday blog post, Shanghai-based companies MiniMax, Moonshot, and DeepSeek conducted such attacks. MiniMax reportedly processed more than 13 million exchanges, while Moonshot and DeepSeek processed 3.4 million and 150,000, respectively.
Undoubtedly, these activities allegedly violated service terms and regional access rules. They also sparked concerns over ethical AI deployment and intellectual property protection.
Legal and Ethical Implications of ‘Distillation’
Anthropic emphasized that these actions are not criminal but constitute breaches of contractual agreements and U.S. export controls. Circumventing restrictions allows foreign labs, including those linked to government influence, to erode competitive advantages intentionally designed to safeguard American AI innovations.
OpenAI has also raised alarms over similar practices, accusing DeepSeek of “free-riding” on U.S.-based AI research.
AI Volatility
DeepSeek is set to launch its new flagship model, DeepSeek V4, imminently. Analysts warn that its release could increase volatility in AI-driven markets, especially on Wall Street, where investor sensitivity to emerging technologies remains high.
With China’s AI sector expected to boom, the AI industry in the country would remain high for the next few years.
Of course, Anthropic should also be consistent in its claims against Chinese AI firms while dealing with Claude’s ethical limits on military use.
Originally published on Tech Times
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Earnings revival set to lift Indian markets in FY27: Manish Gunwani
“From a top-down perspective, FY27 should be better on earnings because of two-three things. One is that the nominal GDP will pick up partly because inflation will go up. So, we kind of bottomed out nominal GDP at 8-9%. It will be 10-11% going forward. And corporate earnings obviously have a decent correlation to nominal GDP,” Gunwani explained in an interview to ET Now.
He highlighted that rupee depreciation against the dollar and other Asian currencies is a key factor supporting earnings, particularly for pharma, IT, refining, and oil and gas companies. “Rupee depreciation is good for earnings. So, whether it is pharma, IT, refining, oil and gas—whatever—all that benefits from rupee depreciation. Overall, basis earnings should do better.”
However, Gunwani cautioned that recent market action has been influenced more by global uncertainty around artificial intelligence than by earnings themselves. “If you see, it is not that earnings have been knocked off in the past two-three weeks, but the terminal value of a lot of businesses is under question. So, to my mind at least in the near term, that is a bigger question rather than earnings honesty,” he said.
When asked about sectoral leaders for the potential earnings uptick, Gunwani noted that both domestic and export-oriented sectors are poised to benefit. “Since nominal GDP domestically is up, I guess the domestic sector should do better—banking and whoever is either an exporter or import substitution or pricing of dollars. So, for example, whether it is pharma, IT, refining, metals, all those sectors should benefit from the fact that they effectively have a lot of dollar earnings, and today you are converting that at, let us say, 90-91 rather than 86-87 one year back. So, it is going to be pretty broad-based to my mind.”
He emphasized that while earnings potential is improving, market sentiment is heavily influenced by AI’s impact on IT services. “I do not think earnings is driving this market right now. The whole global market is trying to grapple with what are the sectoral impacts of AI. If it starts from IT services, does it mean that there will be a broad-based slowdown in India because obviously IT services is the biggest export sector we have?”
Gunwani expressed caution regarding traditional IT services companies, noting disruption in areas such as BPO, application development, and infrastructure services. “No, obviously on hindsight we will find some companies doing much better. Question is, is it possible to differentiate those companies adjusted for valuation? Some of these companies are obviously growing faster today, but then they are also valued like that. So, as a stock, out of 10 IT services stock, will there be differentiation in next one year? Obviously, there will be. But is it honestly very easy to pick the winner stock? I think it is very difficult when it is such a sectoral disruption that is happening.”On foreign investor flows, Gunwani remains optimistic. “I am a bit more optimistic right now on foreign flows. One is the rupee has taken a fair amount of beating, probably the worst performing major currency in last six months. Even if IT services is disrupted, if you see the monthly data on services which includes GCC and all other things, that still seems quite strong. So, it is not like our current account is under stress. Now, our capital account has been under stress because foreigners have been selling, but also because Indians have been buying a lot of gold and silver.”
He added that recent volatility in gold and silver prices could help stabilize the capital account, alongside potential shifts in global dollar flows. “Whether it is debt, equity, FDI, I do think that the prospects of getting foreign flows look much-much better at this point of time,” he concluded.
With earnings revival on the horizon, domestic sectors poised for growth, and global AI disruption casting a shadow over IT, investors may need to navigate a complex landscape, balancing short-term uncertainty with medium-term opportunity.
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Market volatility to persist amid geopolitical and tariff uncertainty: Amnish Aggarwal
Amnish Aggarwal from Prabhudas Lilladher, noted the volatility in trade relations with the US. “The situation of your trade parameters with the US remains very volatile. Now, we have got some interim arrangement, but as we have seen over the last one year, nothing can be said with certainty because this is not only the India problem, this is a bit of a geopolitical problem as far as your tariffs are concerned. At this point, I would be very cautious on how the deal with the US will pan out. Something like, if we do not lose from the situation we are in, that should be satisfactory for the country. I would be more gung-ho on some of the other deals we have done, which includes the EU, where we are getting much better terms of trade. Based on the tariff policies of the US and other geopolitical factors, I believe that overall market volatility will continue in the near term.”
On the impact of artificial intelligence on IT services, Aggarwal highlighted the uncertainty surrounding business models and profitability. “It is very uncertain because it is not the beginning of AI or the transformation, it is not the end of it, but it has just started getting noticed and having some impact. We are not in a stage where growth rates of companies have started plummeting or there is margin pressure. So, this is a big reset. I do not think it is going to get settled in a quarter or two. One needs to wait and watch how deep and big the impact could be. The market actually hates uncertainty. I do not see any big green shoots for IT in the near term, and that is why we have been underweight on IT services for at least a couple of years.”
Turning to financial services, Aggarwal discussed the value unlock potential in digital lending platforms. “One needs to look at it from three angles. It aims at utilizing the cash flows the company is throwing, and because you are into telecom, we have got the digital platform and tech stack already there. They are extending it to make it bigger than today. The bigger issue is how your screening process is and how you control lending, collections, and delinquencies. Given the money they are allocating and the reach through their mobile network, they have a fair chance to scale it up. As far as value unlocking is concerned, it is too premature to presume. But for a company throwing in so much cash, it is a good extension and usage of cash. This is not going to be the first initiative, as other segments like data centers will also play a major role over time. The impact on financials and value unlocking will take a long period.”
On IDFC First Bank, which recently saw a 16% hit to its stock, Aggarwal emphasized perspective over panic. “We do not have a formal rating on the stock, but the hit of 590 crores is not that big relative to the balance sheet. However, it raises questions on the process and systems prevalent in the organization, which they need to address. Usually, there is initial panic, but if they manage the situation well and the deposit franchise is intact, things should recover over time.”
In the auto sector, Aggarwal observed a mixed but generally positive momentum. “The auto sector changed gears immediately post-GST. The past three to four months have been fairly robust. Two-wheelers were already doing okay, but for PVs, the major push came later. Logically, the momentum should continue, but last month Maruti showed flattish volumes for small cars, while M&M did well in SUVs. Entry-level cars might show some fatigue, but two-wheelers and commercial vehicles continue to do well. The farm sector has been strong, though El Nino may impact the upcoming monsoon and tractor demand. Overall, selectivity is key in the auto space.”
Aggarwal also shared his view on metals. “In the ferrous space, demand is good, and profitability is likely to improve in Q4. From current levels, incremental returns are possible. For non-ferrous, like aluminium, we have already seen the best, with companies like Hindustan Zinc moving up on price action. Ferrous remains the space where we are still positive.”
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