Business
Ford Motor (F) earnings Q4 2025
2026 Ford Mustang Dark Horse SC on display during the Media Preview of the 2026 Chicago Auto Show at McCormick Place on February 6, 2026, in Chicago, Illinois.
Jacek Boczarski | Anadolu | Getty Images
DETROIT – Ford Motor reported its largest quarterly earnings miss in four years in its fourth-quarter results released Tuesday, while guiding for 2026 to be a rebound year for the automaker.
Ford’s 2026 guidance includes adjusted EBIT of between $8 billion and $10 billion, up from $6.8 billion last year; adjusted free cash flow of between $5 billion and $6 billion, up from $3.5 billion in 2025; and capital expenditures of $9.5 billion to $10.5 billion, up from $8.8 billion.
Here’s how the company performed in the fourth quarter compared with average estimates compiled by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: 13 cents adjusted vs. 19 cents expected
- Automotive revenue: $42.4 billion vs. $41.83 billion expected
The EPS coming in 32% below consensus was the company’s first quarterly miss since 2024 and its worst since a 42% difference when reporting its 2021 fourth-quarter results, according to LSEG.
The earnings miss was largely due to unexpected tariff costs of roughly $900 million related to credits for auto parts not taking effect as early as expected, the company said. Ford, as of Dec. 15, had confirmed $7.7 billion in earnings before interest and taxes for the fourth quarter, but the additional costs dropped that to $6.8 billion.
Ford CFO Sherry House said the lower-than-expected earnings were also related to additional impacts from fires at a Novelis aluminum supplier plant last year in New York, which now isn’t expected to be fully operational until the middle of this year. The plant supplies Ford’s lucrative F-Series pickup trucks.
“We will see a billion-dollar benefit roughly in 2026; however, this year, due to the Novelis impact, we’re going to have tariffs increasing in order to secure aluminum that is roughly the same amount of that savings,” House told reporters.
Ford’s net tariff impact is expected to be roughly flat year-over-year at $2 billion in 2026, she said. The Novelis fire had an impact of $2 billion during the second half of the year for Ford, she added.
House and Ford CEO Jim Farley said the company’s 2025 results continue to demonstrate the company’s underlying business is improving despite the special items impacting results.
The company’s 2025 revenue was a record $187.3 billion, up 1% from $185 billion a year earlier. That includes $45.9 billion during the fourth quarter, down 5% from a year before.
On a business unit level, the automaker’s traditional and fleet operations are expected to offset an expected $4 billion to $4.5 billion in losses this year for its “Model e” electric vehicle unit. Pre-tax earnings from its “Ford Pro” fleet business are expected to be between $6.5 billion to $7.5 billion, followed by $4 billion to $4.5 billion for its traditional “Blue” business.
On an unadjusted basis, the company’s net loss of $8.2 billion last year was its largest since the Great Recession in 2008, according to FactSet. That included $15.5 billion in special charges during the fourth quarter largely related to a pre-announced pullback in its all-electric vehicle plans.
Automakers commonly exclude “special items” or one-time charges from their adjusted financial results to provide investors with a clearer picture of their core, ongoing business operations.
Ford reported a fourth-quarter net loss of $11.1 billion, or a loss of $2.77 per share, compared with net income of $1.8 billion, or 45 cents per share, in the same period in 2024. Adjusted for the one-time charges, the company reported earnings of 13 cents per share.
Business
SGH says rebuffed BlueScope offer full and fair
The Stokes family-controlled SGH says it has delivered a strong first-half result, and signalled its not for turning on its rejected BlueScope takeover bid.
Business
The Defining AI Software Development Trends Shaping 2026
As we move deeper into the second half of the decade, businesses across every industry are recalibrating their digital strategies around artificial intelligence.
Whether you’re a startup founder, CTO, or part of an AI software development company, the accelerating pace of innovation is reshaping how systems are built, deployed, and maintained. 2026 is proving to be the most transformative year yet, with breakthroughs not only in model capabilities but also in the frameworks, ethics, infrastructure, and methodologies that support them. Below are the defining trends that are shaping this rapidly evolving landscape—and why they matter for the next generation of intelligent software.
Top 10 AI Trends to Watch in 2026
As artificial intelligence matures at an unprecedented rate, 2026 is emerging as a pivotal year for software development innovation. From agentic systems that can autonomously build and optimize applications to multimodal models capable of understanding the world across text, visuals, and sound, AI is reshaping how digital products are conceived and delivered. These trends are not just influencing technical workflows—they’re redefining business strategy, product design, security standards, and user experience across every industry. Below are the ten most significant AI shifts shaping the future of software development and what they mean for organizations preparing for the next era of intelligent systems.
1. The Rise of Agentic AI Systems
Preview: AI shifts from passive assistants to fully autonomous agents capable of handling complex tasks, analyzing workflows, and self-correcting without human intervention.
In 2026, AI is moving toward agentic systems that can independently execute tasks, collaborate with other agents, and optimize their own performance. These agents are capable of generating production-quality code, debugging applications, orchestrating cloud resources, and monitoring system behavior. This transformation is redefining software development by reducing manual involvement and amplifying engineering productivity.
2. Multimodal AI Becomes a Standard Development Tool
Preview: Models that understand text, images, audio, video, and sensor data simultaneously become foundational to modern apps.
Multimodal AI—once considered experimental—has become essential. Developers now build systems that interpret real-time video, analyze medical imaging, manage robotics, and generate highly creative visual and auditory content. By merging modalities, AI gains near-human perception, unlocking new technical and creative applications across industries.
3. AI-Native Application Architecture
Preview: Software is increasingly designed from the ground up with AI at its core, not as an add-on feature.
Just as cloud-native design transformed development a decade ago, AI-native architecture is now the new gold standard. These applications incorporate continuous learning, real-time inference pipelines, multi-model orchestration, and rigorous model lifecycle management. AI becomes the heart of the system, enabling applications that evolve alongside business needs.
4. The Maturation of Synthetic Data Pipelines
Preview: Companies turn to fully developed synthetic data ecosystems to overcome privacy, scarcity, and cost challenges.
Synthetic data has become a necessity rather than an optional enhancement. In 2026, hyperrealistic simulations power robotics and autonomous systems, while synthetic tabular data supports finance, healthcare, and government AI. AI-to-AI data generation accelerates training, lowers risk, and boosts accuracy—especially in domains where data collection is limited or regulated.
5. Privacy-Preserving AI and Secure Model Development
Preview: Stricter regulations push companies to adopt secure AI practices like federated learning, encrypted computation, and differential privacy.
AI governance laws worldwide are compelling teams to rethink how data and models are handled. Techniques like encrypted computation (FHE), zero-knowledge proofs, federated learning, and differential privacy have become integral to modern AI development. This ensures that models remain powerful while meeting global compliance standards.
6. The Expansion of Low-Code / No-Code AI Development
Preview: AI-augmented platforms enable non-engineers to build functional applications using natural language and visual tools.
Low-code platforms have evolved dramatically thanks to agentic AI. Anyone can generate apps through natural language, connect datasets, automate workflows, and deploy AI services without writing extensive code. While traditional development remains essential, low-code dramatically accelerates prototyping and empowers business teams to innovate independently.
7. Micro-Models and Domain-Specific AI
Preview: Specialized lightweight models replace one-size-fits-all giants, enabling faster, cheaper, and more accurate task performance.
Micro-models are optimized for specific industries or tasks—legal work, materials science, edge computing, and embedded robotics. They run faster, require fewer resources, and deliver higher accuracy within their domains. This shift toward modularity is making AI more scalable, efficient, and industry-specific.
8. Generative UI and Adaptive User Experience
Preview: Software interfaces become dynamic, adjusting in real time based on user behavior, experience level, and preferences.
Generative UI allows applications to rewrite their own interfaces based on user interactions. Dashboards rearrange automatically, workflows adapt to user proficiency, and customized visualizations are generated on demand. This creates ultra-personalized user experiences that enhance productivity and reduce friction.
9. AI-Optimized DevOps and Autonomous CI/CD
Preview: DevOps evolves into a largely automated ecosystem where AI predicts issues, resolves failures, and optimizes deployments.
In 2026, AI-driven DevOps systems detect integration risks before they occur, identify root causes instantly, automate code rollbacks, optimize cloud spending, and manage deployment pipelines without manual oversight. These self-healing systems reduce downtime dramatically and free developers to focus on high-impact work.
10. Ethical, Transparent, and Responsible AI Becomes Non-Negotiable
Preview: Regulations and public expectations require detailed transparency, explainability, bias detection, and auditability in AI systems.
As AI powers critical systems globally, ethical development is now mandatory. Responsible AI frameworks ensure transparency, explainability, fairness, and accountability. Companies that embed responsible practices gain trust, avoid legal consequences, and ensure long-term sustainability of their AI strategies.
Looking Ahead
2026 marks a defining moment for AI-driven software development. With agentic AI, multimodal intelligence, synthetic data, privacy-preserving methods, and autonomous DevOps, the future of software is adaptive, self-evolving, and deeply integrated with intelligent systems. Organizations that embrace these trends early will lead innovation, deliver superior products, and achieve a competitive advantage in a rapidly shifting digital world.
Business
Gold, silver climb as US yields fall on softer retail sales
FUNDAMENTALS
Spot gold edged 0.3% higher to $5,038.73 per ounce by 0059 GMT.
U.S. gold futures for April delivery gained 0.6% to $5,060.60 per ounce.
Spot silver was up 1% at $81.49/oz, after falling more than 3% in the previous session.
U.S. yields fell on Tuesday after a raft of data suggested the economy may be softening, giving the U.S. Federal Reserve more cushion to cut interest rates. [US/]
Falling yields reduce the cost of holding metals and often come with macro signals that favour them.U.S. retail sales were unexpectedly unchanged in December as households scaled back spending on motor vehicles and other big-ticket items, potentially setting consumer spending and the economy on a slower growth path heading into the new year.
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack, however, said on Tuesday that the U.S. central bank faces no urgency to change the setting of interest rates this year amid a “cautiously optimistic” outlook for economic activity.
Investors expect at least two 25-basis-point rate cuts in 2026, with the first one expected in June. Non-yielding bullion tends to do well in low-interest-rate environments. [FEDWATCH]
Investors await the non-farm payrolls report for January, due later in the day, and inflation data on Friday for more cues on the Fed’s monetary policy path.
Indian investors piled into gold exchange-traded funds in January as prices soared amid rising geopolitical risks, surpassing flows into equity funds for the first time, industry data showed on Tuesday.
Spot platinum added 0.6% to $2,098.78 per ounce, while palladium rose 0.2% to $1,712.25.
DATA/EVENTS (GMT)
0130 China PPI, CPI YY January
1330 US Non-Farm Payrolls January
1330 US Unemployment Rate January
1330 US Average Earnings YY January
Business
Hartford Floating Rate Fund Q4 2025 Commentary (HFLAX)
Peach_iStock/iStock via Getty Images
Market Overview
Global fixed-income markets delivered positive total returns in the fourth quarter of 2025 as policy uncertainty, fiscal developments, and divergent central-bank actions shaped the investment landscape. The US began the quarter with its longest government shutdown
Business
Upexi, Inc. (UPXI) Q2 2026 Earnings Call Transcript
Operator
Good day. Welcome to Upexi Inc. Fiscal Second Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference Call. Please note this event is being recorded.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Valter Pinto, Managing Director at KCSA Strategic Communications. Please go ahead.
Valter Pinto
Kanan, Corbin, Schupak & Aronow, Inc.
Thank you, operator. Good evening, and welcome, everyone, to the Upexi Fiscal Second Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference Call. I’m joined today by Allan Marshall, Chief Executive Officer; Andrew Norstrud, Chief Financial Officer; and Brian Rudick, Chief Strategy Officer.
Before we begin, I’m going to remind everyone that statements made during today’s conference call may be deemed forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially due to a variety of risks, uncertainties and other factors. For a detailed discussion of some of the ongoing risks and uncertainties in the company’s business, I’ll refer you to the press release issued this evening and filed with the SEC on Form 8-K as well as the company’s reports filed periodically with the SEC. The company disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, unless otherwise required by law.
In addition, during the course of the call, we may refer to non-GAAP financial measures that are not prepared in accordance
Business
Jaguar Land Rover recalls 2,300 electric SUVs over battery fire risk concerns
Check out what’s clicking on FoxBusiness.com.
Jaguar Land Rover is recalling nearly 2,300 electric SUVs in the U.S. over concerns that a high-voltage battery may overheat, increasing the risk of fire, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) announced on Tuesday.
The recall impacts 2,278 Jaguar I-Pace vehicles from the 2020–2021 model years.
“As an interim repair, the battery software will be updated by a dealer, or through an over-the-air (OTA) update to limit the state of charge to 90%” the NHTSA said, according to Reuters, adding that the final remedy is currently under development.
BMW RECALLS NEARLY 90,000 VEHICLES OVER ENGINE STARTER FIRE RISK

Jaguar Land Rover is recalling nearly 2,300 electric SUVs in the U.S. over concerns that a high voltage battery may overheat, increasing the risk of a fire. (Sjoerd van der Wal/Getty Images / Getty Images)
There will be no charge to vehicle owners for the interim repair, the recall report said.
Customers can monitor their vehicle’s charging with the latest version of the Jaguar Remote App or inside the vehicle, according to the report, which says owners should physically stop charging by unplugging the cable when it reaches a 90% state of charge.
Vehicle owners are urged to park outside and away from structures and to charge outside if possible.

The recall impacts 2,278 Jaguar I-Pace vehicles of the 2020-2021 model year. (Aly Song/Reuters / Reuters Photos)
“Vehicles have experienced thermal overload, which may show as smoke or fire, that may occur in the high voltage traction battery pack. The investigation is ongoing,” the report reads.
Investigations pointed to a “folded anode tab” in battery cells produced at an LG Energy Solution facility in Poland, which can lead to short-circuiting.
CHRYSLER RECALLS MORE THAN 450,000 VEHICLES OVER BRAKE LIGHT FAILURE

Investigations pointed to a “folded anode tab” in battery cells produced at an LG Energy Solution facility in Poland. (Anna Barclay/Getty Images / Getty Images)
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
“Modules that were identified by the remedy software as having characteristics of a folded anode tab, which may contribute to a risk of thermal overload, are still being inspected by the supplier,” it added.
Notification letters are expected to be mailed to affected owners starting April 3.
Business
Inside Trump’s AI plan to modernize the federal government
Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor joins ‘Varney & Co.’ to discuss President Donald Trump’s plan to expand AI throughout government.
A top official involved in the Trump administration’s new AI “Tech Force” initiative offered a glimpse inside the White House’s push to place AI engineers inside federal agencies and overhaul how the federal government uses technology.
“This is a public-private partnership where we’re going to bring a thousand great engineers into government to help us complete the modernization that is so important to our American people and so important to making sure that technology is a first-class citizen inside of government,” Scott Kupor, Office of Personnel Management director, said Tuesday on “Varney & Co.“
With help from companies such as Microsoft, Palantir, Salesforce and Snowflake, Kupor said the initiative is designed to embed engineers across major federal agencies rather than centralizing them in a single office, allowing technologists to work directly on modernization efforts at departments including the Treasury Department, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of War.
TRUMP ADMIN REUNITES WITH ELON MUSK IN PURSUIT OF AI DOMINANCE: ‘BENEFIT OF THE COUNTRY’

President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office at the White House on October 06, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images / Getty Images)
Palantir, for one, already plays a key role in integrating artificial intelligence into the Department of War, Kupor noted, pointing to the company as an example of how advanced technology can be deployed effectively inside government.
“Palantir is no doubt a leader in that area, and what we want to do is make sure that other parts of technology, other parts of AI get into government,” he explained.
CHEVRON CEO DETAILS STRATEGY TO SHIELD CONSUMERS FROM SOARING AI POWER COSTS

Palantir is one of the major tech companies behind the Trump administration’s AI push. (Rafael Henrique/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)
“Today, what happens is we have a very heavy reliance on contractors and consultants, as you may know. We don’t have as much homegrown talent in core AI, modern software development, and Tech Force is really intended to make sure that the government can be a first-class citizen and attract those types of individuals, just like Palantir has done in the government, but we also want to make sure that talent is resident in government long-term.”
Kupor said the engineers brought in through Tech Force will be placed directly inside agencies and supported through a structured program that includes professional development, a speaker series and engagement with private-sector partners.
He said applications for the initiative are already coming in, with the administration expecting to begin making offers within the next 30–45 days.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
‘The Pebble Project’ CEO John Shively explains the importance of the push for access to Alaska’s copper deposit on ‘Maria Bartiromo’s Wall Street.’
At the end of the program, many workers are expected to move into private sector roles, taking with them experience gained working inside the federal government.
“The whole goal is, agency by agency, [to] figure out what are all the major modernization efforts and how do we make technology, how do we make AI really important to the American people?” he said.
Business
Robinhood Markets, Inc. (HOOD) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Operator
Thank you to everyone for joining Robinhood’s Q4 and Full Year 2025 Earnings Call, whether you’re tuning into the live stream or here with us in person. With us today are Chairman and CEO, Vlad Tenev; CFO, Shiv Verma; and VP of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations, Chris Koegel.
Vlad and Shiv will offer opening remarks and then open the call to Q&A. During the Q&A portion of the call, we will answer questions from the audience, which includes institutional research analysts, finance content creators, who may hold an ownership position in Robinhood and both institutional and retail shareholders.
As a reminder, today’s call will contain forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from our current expectations, and we may not provide updates unless legally required. Potential risk factors that could cause differences, including regulatory developments that we continue to monitor are described in the press release we issued today, the earnings presentation and our SEC filings, all of which can
Business
Target to boost frontline staff while cutting 500 office, supply chain jobs
The Big Money Show analyzes the latest earnings from major retailers like Target, TJ Maxx and Lowes.
Target on Monday took steps toward streamlining its retail model by putting more money toward frontline store employees while cutting about 500 office and supply chain jobs.
The retail giant indicated in an internal memo seen by FOX Business that it will reduce the number of store districts – which are regions that Target stores are grouped into – to facilitate payroll for more workers and hours, as well as guest experience training for store staff. The news was first reported by CNBC.
Target’s layoff plans are expected to impact about 100 people at the store district level and about 400 across the company’s supply chain sites, according to the internal email sent to employees by Chief Stores Officer Adrienne Costanzo and Chief Supply Chain and Logistics Officer Gretchen McCarthy.
“We have already shared the news with team members directly impacted, and we’ll be supporting them through this transition with a range of resources and benefits,” the memo said.
TARGET’S NEW CEO TAKES OVER AMID SLUMPING SALES, UNREST IN MINNEAPOLIS

Target has suffered from sluggish sales in recent years and is aiming to reverse that trend. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The change “fuels our ability to put significantly more payroll in our stores – primarily in additional labor and hours where needed most, but also in new guest experience training for every team member at every store,” the executives wrote.
The announcement does not change the starting pay for workers, according to a Target spokesperson, who declined to specify the amount of money being invested in the stores.
Target CEO Michael Fiddelke, who moved into the top job earlier this month, indicated in October that the company would cut about 1,800 corporate roles as the big box retailer undergoes its first major layoff in nearly a decade.
TARGET BETS ON $5B STORE REVAMP PLAN TO REVIVE SALES
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TGT | TARGET CORP. | 113.23 | -2.29 | -1.98% |
Fiddelke is hoping to lead a successful turnaround effort that will drive growth at Target, as the retailer’s sales have slumped over the last several years.
On Tuesday, the company announced changes at the executive level. Cara Sylvester was named chief merchandising officer and Lisa Roath was appointed chief operating officer.
Fiddelke said in a memo to employees after taking charge that his priorities will include sharpening Target’s merchandise mix while improving stores and the retailer’s website to make shopping easier and more appealing.
TARGET SLASHES PRICES ON THOUSANDS OF ITEMS IN BID TO REVIVE SLIPPING SALES

Target CEO Michael Fiddelke took charge of the retail giant earlier this month. (Elizabeth Flores/The Minnesota Star Tribune via Getty Images)
Fiddelke also said the company plans to use technology to streamline operations and personalize the customer experience, and indicated the company plans to invest more in its employees and strengthen ties to communities where it operates.
“Priority 1 through 10 is accelerating Target’s growth,” Fiddelke said in an emailed statement to FOX Business earlier this month, adding that the company is “moving with urgency and focus.”
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
FOX Business’ Daniella Genovese and Reuters contributed to this report.
Business
President Donald Trump wants ‘lowest interest rates in the world’
President Donald Trump discusses his decision-making for the next Federal Reserve chairman, tariff policy and more on ‘Kudlow.’
President Donald Trump said the U.S. should have the “lowest interest rates in the world” and argued that rate cuts would significantly reduce federal borrowing costs during an interview Tuesday on FOX Business’ “Kudlow.”
“This country should have the lowest interest rates in the world,” Trump told host Larry Kudlow. “We keep the world going.”
Trump tied interest rates to government interest expenses, saying that changes of a few points could significantly alter federal finances.
DOW CLOSES ABOVE 50,000 FOR FIRST TIME

President Trump sat down for a wide-reaching interview with Larry Kudlow on “Kudlow” Tuesday, touting his economic successes in his second term. (FOX Business / FOXBusiness)
“Every point is $600 billion,” Trump said. “All he has to do if we went down two points, we don’t have a deficit anymore,” he claimed.
Market milestone
Trump also pointed to recent market milestones as evidence of economic strength, telling Kudlow he remembers predictions that the Dow Jones Industrial Average reaching 50,000 would be considered a “miracle” by the end of a presidential term.
“I remember when I first won, they said if he gets the Dow up to 50,000 by the end of his fourth year, he will have done miracles,” Trump said. “And we’re at the end of the first year.”
Trump added, “We’ve had a very good run, and we want to keep it going.”
INSIDE THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION’S AI ‘TECH FORCE’ DESIGNED TO MODERNIZE THE GOVERNMENT

President Donald Trump speaks with reporters before departing from the White House in Washington, D.C., Friday, en route to his Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Fla. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Trump credited falling energy prices for easing costs, telling Kudlow he recently saw gas prices as low as $1.85 in Iowa and saying prices in other parts of the country had “broken $2 a gallon.”
“And that’s like a major tax cut,” Trump said.
In the interview, Trump pushed back on the idea that strong growth should automatically prompt tighter monetary policy, arguing that markets and policymakers react negatively to inflation concerns.
“We’re old enough to remember when the stock market, when there was good news, the market went up and was bad news, the market went down,” Trump said. “That’s the way it should be.”
Trump suggested that dynamic has shifted, claiming markets can fall on positive economic news because of inflation fears and expectations about rates.
NAVARRO SAYS TRUMP’S TARIFF BET DEFIED WALL STREET PANIC AS DOW SURGED PAST 50,000
President Donald Trump says 2026 will be a ‘great’ year for the country on ‘Kudlow.’
“They have the yips,” Trump said, comparing the reaction to golfers who “can’t sink a three-foot putt” when they hear the word inflation. “Well, growth doesn’t mean inflation.”
“We have to go back to the old system when we have good news, the market should go up, and we have bad news, the market should go down,” Trump said, adding, “We’ll take care of inflation as it comes.”
Warsh nomination
Trump praised Kevin Warsh, his nominee connected to the Federal Reserve, in the interview’s discussion of monetary policy, saying Warsh would be influential.
“I think he’s somebody that’s going to be a real influencer,” Trump said. “I think he agrees with what I’m saying.”
Trump argued the U.S. has historically maintained comparatively low borrowing costs.
“Let’s go back again. Another 20, 25 years. We were always the lowest interest rate,” Trump said. “We used to pay like almost nothing.”
FED’S POWELL EITHER CORRUPT OR INCOMPETENT WITH BUILDING PROJECT, TRUMP TELLS KUDLOW

President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speak during a tour of the Federal Reserve Board building last summer. The building is currently undergoing renovations in Washington, D.C. (Kent Nishimura/Reuters / Reuters)
He then contrasted that with today, claiming, “Now we’re like number 38 because we have had stupid people running our country.”
Switzerland tariffs
Trump illustrated his view by recounting a dispute with Switzerland, which he said benefited from low tariffs and trade imbalances with the United States.
“We had an incident with a very nice country, Switzerland,” Trump said. “They were paying no tariffs, sending stuff over here like nobody could believe. And we had a $42 billion deficit and we weren’t taking anything.”
“I said, ‘You may be a small country, but we have a $42 billion deficit with you,’” he added.
Trump said he initially imposed a 30% tariff on Swiss imports before later raising it to 39% following pushback from Swiss officials.
The U.S. later agreed to lower tariffs on certain Swiss goods to 15% from 39% under a trade framework announced last year, Reuters reported.
President Donald Trump sits down with FOX Business host Larry Kudlow to discuss ongoing Federal Reserve renovations, scrutiny of Fed Chair Jerome Powell and more on ‘Kudlow.’
In a wide-ranging exchange with Kudlow, Trump sharply criticized Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, arguing rates should be lower.
“He’s so bad that, I mean, interest rates should have been cut. We should be two points lower,” Trump said.
Kudlow closed the interview by thanking the president for his time.
-
Tech7 days agoWikipedia volunteers spent years cataloging AI tells. Now there’s a plugin to avoid them.
-
Politics2 days agoWhy Israel is blocking foreign journalists from entering
-
NewsBeat1 day agoMia Brookes misses out on Winter Olympics medal in snowboard big air
-
Sports4 days agoJD Vance booed as Team USA enters Winter Olympics opening ceremony
-
Tech4 days agoFirst multi-coronavirus vaccine enters human testing, built on UW Medicine technology
-
Business2 days agoLLP registrations cross 10,000 mark for first time in Jan
-
NewsBeat2 days agoWinter Olympics 2026: Team GB’s Mia Brookes through to snowboard big air final, and curling pair beat Italy
-
Sports2 days agoBenjamin Karl strips clothes celebrating snowboard gold medal at Olympics
-
Sports4 days ago
Former Viking Enters Hall of Fame
-
Politics2 days agoThe Health Dangers Of Browning Your Food
-
Sports5 days ago
New and Huge Defender Enter Vikings’ Mock Draft Orbit
-
Business3 days agoJulius Baer CEO calls for Swiss public register of rogue bankers to protect reputation
-
NewsBeat5 days agoSavannah Guthrie’s mother’s blood was found on porch of home, police confirm as search enters sixth day: Live
-
Business5 days agoQuiz enters administration for third time
-
Crypto World11 hours agoBlockchain.com wins UK registration nearly four years after abandoning FCA process
-
Crypto World19 hours agoU.S. BTC ETFs register back-to-back inflows for first time in a month
-
NewsBeat2 days agoResidents say city high street with ‘boarded up’ shops ‘could be better’
-
Sports1 day ago
Kirk Cousins Officially Enters the Vikings’ Offseason Puzzle
-
Crypto World19 hours agoEthereum Enters Capitulation Zone as MVRV Turns Negative: Bottom Near?
-
NewsBeat6 days agoStill time to enter Bolton News’ Best Hairdresser 2026 competition
