Trump claims EU is not yet offering a fair trade deal – business live | Business


Trump: EU not yet offering a fair trade deal

US president Donald Trump has said the European Union was not yet offering a fair deal in trade talks between the United States and the 27-nation bloc.

Seaking to reporters on Air Force One, as he returned early from the G7 summit, Trump explained:

“We’re talking, but I don’t feel that they’re offering a fair deal yet. They’re either going to make a good deal or they’ll just pay whatever we say they have to pay.”

Trump also said there was a chance of a trade deal with Japan, but said Tokyo was being “tough”, Reuters reports.

TRUMP SAYS EU NOT YET OFFERING A FAIR DEAL

— CGTN Europe (@CGTNEurope) June 17, 2025

Trump added that pharmaceutical tariffs were coming very soon and noted that Canada would pay to be part of his “golden dome” project.

Trump has also told reporters on the flight that he wants “a real end” to the nuclear problem with Iran.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has posted that the briefing is a sign that Trump is the “most transparent President in history”:

President Trump gaggled with the media aboard Air Force One at 1AM ET. Most transparent President in history.👇 https://t.co/UkUHSXsKCS

— Karoline Leavitt (@PressSec) June 17, 2025

Reminder: The 90-day pause on new tariffs, which Trump announced in April after the markets slumped, ends on 8 July – giving the White House less than a month to strike scores of trade deals.

Europe has been taking a relatively hardball strategy to secure a US trade deal – pitching itself between ‘rollover UK’ (who secured an early deal with the US) and ‘retaliatory China’ (who ended up in a full-blown tit-for-tat tariff war before a peace deal was agreed).

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European fund managers bullish on Europe

Despite trade war uncertainty, global growth pessimism is fading, according to the latest European Fund Manager Survey from Bank of America.

A net 46% of survey participants think that the global economy is set to weaken over the coming year, down from 59% last month and a record 82% in April, on the back of “a fading tariff threat”, BofA reports.

A soft landing for the global economy is once more becoming consensus, with 66% of investors believing this is the most likely outcome, up from 37% in April.

Investors regard a strong US consumer as the biggest upside risk for global growth, while the Trump policy mix is seen as the largest downside risk.

A trade war that triggers a global recession is considered the biggest tail-risk by around half of the respondents and close to two-thirds think only very little of the tariff shock is already in the price, BofA adds.





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