Category: Business

  • O’Leary rips Costco for bucking DEI trend: ‘Bad for business’

    O’Leary rips Costco for bucking DEI trend: ‘Bad for business’

    As more companies turn their backs and rescind DEI policies, Costco’s move to stand firm puzzled O’Leary Ventures Chairman Kevin O’Leary.

    The “Shark Tank” investor declared Costco is “nuts” during Wednesday’s “The Big Money Show” for doubling down on DEI.

    During his first week in office, President Donald Trump issued an executive order directing the termination of discriminatory practices in the federal government and encouraged termination in the private sector. Following the order, attorneys general from 19 states urged Costco to turn away from its DEI policies. 

    STATE AGS WARN RETAIL GIANT COSTCO FOR DOUBLING DOWN ON ‘DISCRIMINATORY’ DEI

    While big companies like Target, McDonald’s and Walmart backed off from their DEI policies, Costco shareholders voted last week to reject an anti-DEI proposal brought by activist shareholder group National Center for Public Policy Research. The measure would have required the wholesale grocery chain to issue a report on the risks associated with their DEI policies. 

    O’Leary, who is also a Costco shareholder, weighed in on the wholesaler’s resistance.

    “They’re nuts if they think I want them fighting the federal government on policy.”

    “I don’t care who took that poll when there’s no way you’d get that result today,” he continued. “You don’t fight the attorney general in multiple states, you got to be out of your mind.”

    “Shark Tank” investor Kevin O’Leary remarked how Costco fighting the government over DEI is “bad for business.” (Getty Images)

    He also believes that it is “bad for business” and urged the retail company to find a resolution. 

    “Chop chop, guys. Figure this out,” O’Leary instructed. “You’re breaking the law. Get compliant. I mean, hire for merit and advance people that deserve it.”

    “You will find every race, color, gender, everybody will come to the fore,” he added. 

    The businessman also commented on hiring practices, arguing that diversity can be achieved through a merit-based approach.

    “[If] you just hire on merit as we do, you get tremendous diversity.”

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    O’Leary expanded, arguing that it comes down to how capable a person is at doing their job.

    “We don’t care if you’re gay or transvestite, or you have tattoos or fishhooks in your eyelids. We couldn’t give a damn. ‘Can you do the job, can you execute on the mandate?’ Those are the people we advance,” he stressed. 

    “If you can do it, I don’t care what planet you came from, you got a job, and that actually solves this whole problem.”

    “We should have never got ourselves in this place,” O’Leary concluded. 

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    Fox News Digital’s Jamie Joseph contributed to this report.

  • EPA workers receive termination warning letter

    EPA workers receive termination warning letter

    Some workers at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) have received a letter from the agency warning them that they may face termination amid the Trump administration’s efforts to scale back the government, FOX Business has learned.

    The email, which was sent to 1,100 EPA employees on Wednesday according to the email reviewed by FOX Business, notifies workers that they were deemed to be on probationary status or are in a trial period as an employee and could be terminated immediately.

    It instructs recipients to respond to an EPA email address only if they have one or more years of previous civilian service or are a veteran – though it warns that “confirming that one or more of these categories applies to you is not determinative of your probationary/trial period status. Each employee’s status will be determined individually.”

    “As a probationary/trial employee, the agency has the right to immediately terminate you pursuant to 5 CFR § 315.804,” the email explained. “The process for probationary removal is that you receive a notice of termination, and your employment is ended immediately.”

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION OFFERS BUYOUTS TO FEDERAL EMPLOYEES, INCLUDING REMOTE WORKERS: ‘DEFERRED RESIGNATION’

    WASHINGTON, DC – AUGUST 21: The United States Environmental Protection Agency building is seen on August 21, 2024 in Washington, DC.  (Tierney L. Cross/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The email notes that EPA workers who are considered to be on probationary status or in a trial period may have the right to appeal their termination to the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) based on Office of Personnel Management (OPM) rules.

    Whether or not EPA employees have a right to appeal their removal “will depend on whether you meet the definition of an ’employee’ under the law… and whether you meet the requirements of any OPM regulation that grants appeal rights,” the email explained.

    SEN. KAINE CLAIMS TRUMP WILL ‘STIFF’ FEDERAL EMPLOYEES WHO TAKE BUYOUT OFFER: ‘DO NOT BE FOOLED’

    President Donald Trump speaks about the mid-air crash between American Airlines flight 5342 and a military helicopter

    President Donald Trump’s administration is moving to scale back the federal workforce as part of a cost-cutting push.  (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The EPA’s email warning probationary and trial period employees of their potential termination comes as the Trump administration is seeking to shrink the federal workforce as part of a cost-cutting push spearheaded by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) while also bringing workers on telework programs back into the office.

    On Tuesday, OPM sent a government-wide email offering buyouts to certain federal employees as part of a program that’s scheduled to run from Jan. 28 until Feb. 6. As part of the initiative, federal workers can choose to resign under the program while retaining all pay and benefits, regardless of workload, and be exempt from in-person work requirements until Sep. 30, 2025.

    TOP DOGE LAWMAKER SAYS TRUMP ‘ALREADY RACKING UP WINS FOR TAXPAYERS’ WITH EFFICIENCY INITIATIVES

    Elon Musk

    SpaceX and Tesla founder Elon Musk is serving as the leader of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). (Samuel Corum/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Federal workers who choose to take the buyout and deferred resignation will also continue to accrue personal leave and vacation days that will be paid out at their final resignation date, even though the workers won’t be required to work during the deferral period. They may continue to accrue federal retirement benefits during that period and can also get a second job.

    The buyouts don’t apply to military personnel of the armed forces, the U.S. Postal Services, positions related to immigration enforcement and national security, and any other positions specifically excluded by the agency the federal workers are employed by.

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    “The federal workforce is expected to undergo significant near-term changes,” OPM explained in a frequently asked questions document linked to the letter. “As a result of these changes (or for other reasons), you may wish to depart the federal government on terms that provide you with sufficient time and economic security to plan for your future – and have a nice vacation.”

  • Trump’s tariffs, American Airlines and the U.S.-China AI race

    Trump’s tariffs, American Airlines and the U.S.-China AI race

    -Stocks wrapped up a winning January, despite ending the Friday session lower as investors digested a fresh inflation report 

    -President Trump dialed up his tariff plan, promising some weekend action against Canada and Mexico

    -The FAA and NTSB continue the probe of the tragic American Airlines jet crash with a Black Hawk helicopter in Washington, D.C. 

    -Chinese AI firm DeepSeek roiled the U.S. markets and big player Nvidia on Monday; by Friday, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was at the White House

    -Costco digs in on DEI, investors and shoppers don’t get it 

    -A game-changer pain drug wins FDA approval and is billed as nonaddictive 

    -Breaking the sound barrier is a success!

    -Tax Season 2025 is underway 

    STOCK CHECK: U.S. stocks ended sharply lower on Friday but closed up for the month of January, usually a bullish sign for the year, with the S&P 500 clocking on 2.7%more on the markets here. Bitcoin was volatile but remained above $100,000…LIVE cryptocurrency prices here. 

    TRUMP TARIFFS GET REAL: Trump is forging ahead with plans to slap tariffs on Canada and Mexico, for starters. Here’s what it means…continue reading here. He also put another suite of countries on notice…continue reading here.

    ECONOMIC SNAPSHOT: Investors took in a fresh report on inflation…continue reading here. This came after the Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged, a move that did not please Trump…continue reading here. 

    VIDEO: Fed Chair Jerome Powell isn’t finding a friend in Trump.

    TRAGEDY IN THE SKY: An American Airlines flight and the government’s Black Hawk helicopter crashed, killing 67, many of whom were young, promising U.S. figure skaters, and leaving more questions than answers …LIVE updates here. American Airlines CEO deploys over 100 to assist families and those impacted by the tragedycontinue reading here.

    VIDEO: NTSB details search and recovery, investigation status into horror crash

    AI SHAKE-UP: Chinese AI startup rocked the world with reports of cheaper production, Silicon Valley is calling it bogus …continue reading here. Trump’s AI czar also questions whether the hype is all that…continue reading here.

    VIDEO: What is DeepSeek?

    NVIDIA CEO: Jensen Huang, an AI rock star who took a big money hit this week after DeepSeek splash, met with Trump late Friday…continue reading here.

    DEI ROLLBACK: Fortune 500 companies are rapidly dialing back DEI policies as the Trump Administration works to scrub them from the federal government…continue reading here. However, Costco isn’t taking the bait…continue reading here. Costco shoppers are even weighing in…continue reading here.

    VIDEO: Investor Kevin O’Leary calls Costco’s move “head scratching.”

    SUCCESS!: Boom Supersonic broke the sound barrier this week for the first time in what is being dubbed as the “new Concorde”…continue reading here.

    PAIN PLAYER: The FDA approved Vertex’s pain medicine, which is billed as nonaddictive — an industry game changer, say expertscontinue reading here.

    TAX TIPS: WHAT TO KNOW

    TAX SEASON 2025: Do this one thing before filing your taxescontinue reading here.

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  • LARRY KUDLOW: Trump tells Mexico and Canada — America First!

    LARRY KUDLOW: Trump tells Mexico and Canada — America First!

    If President Donald Trump believes that Mexico and Canada are damaging America’s national security by failing to sufficiently help us on the border to prevent illegal crossings and the influx of fentanyl and other drugs, or not helping us defeat the Mexican cartels – then I believe he is absolutely right to use his tough tariff diplomacy by slapping 25% tariffs on both countries.

    And that includes the 10% tariff hike on China, which is supplying the fentanyl drug components that are then manufactured in Mexico and sent across the U.S. line. China is also subverting the USMCA North American free trade deal by building plants in Mexico and then dumping cheap cars into the U.S., without adhering to U.S. domestic content and other rules.

    With today’s announcement by Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt that President Trump has made up his mind and will impose these tariffs tomorrow, it’s very clear that that is the President’s conclusion.

    Whether he has any specific metrics in mind regarding illegal border crossings or drugs, or sex trafficking, remains to be seen. Whether he will engage in additional negotiations with Canada and Mexico remains to be seen.

    But he has laid down the law. Tariffs are a legitimate tool to engage in national security policy as well as economic policy.

    Presumably, if Mexico and Canada meet Mr. Trump’s requirements, then the tariffs could be lifted. But we don’t know that. And we await some sort of statement from the President himself, perhaps tonight or tomorrow.

    By the way, Mexico’s ties to China have become a major problem. Mexican imports from China have increased 50% over the last 5 years. And Chinese investment in Mexico is up the same 50%. USMCA rules must be changed to place explicit limitations on Chinese content.

    Right now, the U.S. is running a $170 billion trade deficit with Mexico, sustained across numerous product groups.

    Canada is a different story. The U.S. is running a $60 to $70 billion trade deficit with them, but if energy is removed we actually have a surplus with Canada – including auto and manufacturing goods. 60% of U.S. oil imports come from Canada.

    But Canadian oil companies provide us with a 20% discount because their heavy crude has to be refined into gasoline and diesel fuels. As some oil experts point out, a 25% tariff wipes out the 20% discount. And they fear that gasoline prices in the Midwest and the northern states could jump by 40 to 75 cents. So, the oil industry is hoping for a carve-out from the 25% tariff.

    On the tariff news announced by Mrs. Leavitt, the Dow Jones fell 330 points. Wall Street continues to believe that tariffs are inflationary.

    As I’ve suggested before, they are not.

    Sure, there might be some minor one-time product price increases. But exporters to the U.S. will bear 50% or more of the tariff increase by lowering their prices in order to sell to American consumers and businesses. That was our experience with China during Trump’s first term.

    The only way inflation is going to pick up in any sustained fashion is if the Federal Reserve keeps the printing presses wide open.

    In Mr. Trump’s Truth Social post on Wednesday, he criticized the Fed for failing to stop the massive Bidenflation that ruined blue-collar affordability with a 20%-plus price hike over the past four years.

    But Mr. Trump’s economic program of lower tax rates, deregulation, unleashing energy production, large reductions in federal spending and the DC bureaucracy, is itself profoundly counter-inflationary and pro-growth. That is why inflation is not the issue.

    And, yesterday, Mr. Trump posted on Truth Social that he will not tolerate any replacement of the mighty U.S. dollar in international trade. He threatened 100% tariffs on the so-called BRICS countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa. King Dollar is also counter inflationary.

    Instead, Mr. Trump’s tariff diplomacy is geared toward protecting America’s national security – and its economic security.

    And he insists… that America comes first.

  • Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ non-opioid pain medication gets FDA approval

    Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ non-opioid pain medication gets FDA approval

    A non-opioid pain medication made by Vertex Pharmaceuticals has received approval for adults from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

    The company’s “first-in-class” suzetrigine pain pill received the green light for treating moderate to severe acute pain in adults on Thursday, the federal agency said.  

    The medication reduces pain “by targeting a pain-signaling pathway involving sodium channels in the peripheral nervous system, before pain signals reach the brain,” according to the FDA.

    Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ logo on a smartphone. (Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    It will use Journavx as its brand name. 

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    Vertex CEO Reshma Kewalramani touted Journavx as the “first new class of pain medicine approved in more than 20 years,” adding that the company has the “opportunity to change the paradigm of acute pain management and establish a new standard of care.” 

    The medication resulted in a “statistically significant” reduction in pain versus a placebo within two days for patients in a pair of trials who had received abdominoplasties and bunionectomies, according to Vertex. The trials were randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled and active-controlled. 

    “A new non-opioid analgesic therapeutic class for acute pain offers an opportunity to mitigate certain risks associated with using an opioid for pain and provides patients with another treatment option,” FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Acting Director Dr. Jacqueline Corrigan-Curay said. “This action and the agency’s designations to expedite the drug’s development and review underscore FDA’s commitment to approving safe and effective alternatives to opioids for pain management.” 

    FDA HQ sign in Marylnd

    A sign for the Food And Drug Administration outside of the agency’s headquarters in White Oak, Maryland. (Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Vertex said that almost 10% of patients initially given opioids to quell acute pain end up using opioids, which can be addictive, for a prolonged period of time. 

    WEGOVY, THE WEIGHT-LOSS MEDICATION, GETS FDA APPROVAL FOR USE AS HEART DISEASE PREVENTION DRUG

    Journavx’s wholesale per-tablet acquisition cost will be $15.50, according to the company. 

    The FDA said that suzetrigine was “contraindicated” for people using “strong CYP3A inhibitors.” It is also advised that patients taking Vertex’s non-opioid medication not eat or drink anything containing grapefruit.

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    VRTX VERTEX PHARMACEUTICALS INC. 461.68 +23.28 +5.31%

    After the announcement of Journavx’s receipt of FDA approval, Vertex saw gains in its stock price, with its shares posting more than a 5% jump on Friday. Its market capitalization, meanwhile, hovered around $119.81 billion in the afternoon.

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    The company said it was also looking into peripheral neuropathic pain applications for the medication.  

    Vertex has been in business since the late 1980s. Six of the company’s other drugs currently have FDA approval, according to its website.

     

  • Trump’s AI czar flags report indicating DeepSeek’s true cost of developing its AI models

    Trump’s AI czar flags report indicating DeepSeek’s true cost of developing its AI models

    President Donald Trump’s artificial intelligence (AI) czar, David Sacks, is pointing to evidence that China’s DeepSeek AI startup spent a lot more money developing its models than has been reported.

    DeepSeek sent the U.S tech sector into turmoil on Monday after reporting that it had spent only $5.567 million to train its DeepSeek-V3 AI model, which is purportedly competitive with some AI models developed in the United States that cost billions. 

    David Sacks, CEO of Zenefits, speaks during 2016 TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco, California, September 13, 2016.  (Reuters/Beck Diefenbach / Reuters)

    “New report by leading semiconductor analyst Dylan Patel shows that DeepSeek spent over $1 billion on its compute cluster,” Sacks wrote on X on Friday. “The widely reported $6M number is highly misleading, as it excludes capex and R&D, and at best describes the cost of the final training run only.”

    THE DEEPSEEK AI CHATBOT BURST ONTO THE SCENE: ARE FEARS ABOUT IT OVERBLOWN?

    After revealing the $5.5 million figure in its report, DeepSeek had added, “Note that the aforementioned costs only include the official training of DeepSeek-V3, excluding the costs associated with prior research and ablation experiments on architecture, algorithms, or data.”

    Earlier this week, tech mogul Palmer Luckey slammed the U.S. media for widely reporting the $5 million figure from DeepSeek, accusing the press of ignoring that a significant portion of the Chinese AI company’s infrastructure costs were still unknown.

    Anduril founder Palmer Luckey

    Palmer Luckey, founder of Anduril Industries, during an interview on “The Circuit with Emily Chang” at Anduril’s headquarters in Costa Mesa, California, US, on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023.  (Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    US REPORTEDLY INVESTIGATING WHETHER CHINA’S DEEPSEEK USED RESTRICTED AI CHIPS

    “I think the problem is they put out that number specifically to harm U.S. companies,” Luckey told FOX Business’ “That Claman Countdown.” “You had a lot of useful idiots in U.S. media kind of just mindlessly reporting that that’s the case, and neither China nor the media nor DeepSeek has any kind of incentive to correct the record as a lot of U.S. companies like Nvidia crashed to the tunes of hundreds of billions of dollars.”

    DeepSeek’s model appears able to match the capability of chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Meta’s Llama but at a fraction of the development cost. It also rose to No. 1 on the Apple App Store over the weekend and reportedly can use reduced-capability chips from Nvidia.

    Those revelations slammed the U.S. tech sector on Monday.

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    “There’s a reason they put out the news that way, and if the stock market is any indication, it’s accomplishing exactly what they hoped to,” Luckey added. “So, look: We can recognize that Chinese AI is a real competitive threat without losing our minds over it and falling for CCP [Chinese Communist Party] propaganda.”

  • Trump admin files first antitrust action to block tech deal

    Trump admin files first antitrust action to block tech deal

    The Trump administration took its first antitrust action on Thursday, announcing a lawsuit to block a proposed $14 billion tech industry deal.

    The U.S. Department of Justice filed suit to block Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) from acquiring a rival wireless local area network (WLAN) tech provider, Juniper Networks. 

    According to the complaint, Juniper has grown rapidly from being a relatively small competitor in the enterprise-grade WLAN market to become one of the three largest U.S. suppliers of the technology. The DOJ contends that Juniper’s innovation has brought competitive pressures that have lowered costs for consumers – a dynamic that would be undercut if the deal were to go ahead, as HPE and market leader Cisco would control over 70% of the market.

    “HPE and Juniper are successful companies. But rather than continue to compete as rivals in the WLAN marketplace, they seek to consolidate – increasing concentration in an already concentrated market,” said acting assistant attorney general Omeed Assefi of the DOJ’s Antitrust Division.

    INVESTMENT BANKERS SAY TRUMP MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS BOOM ALREADY UNDERWAY

    Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s proposed $14 billion acquisition of Juniper was the subject of an antitrust lawsuit by the Trump administration’s DOJ. (AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images / Getty Images)

    “The threat this merger poses is not theoretical. Vital industries in our country – including American hospitals and small businesses – rely on wireless networks to complete their missions. This proposed merger would significantly reduce competition and weaken innovation, resulting in large segments of the American economy paying more for less from wireless technology providers,” Assefi said.

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    JNPR JUNIPER NETWORKS INC. 34.74 +0.37 +1.08%
    HPE HEWLETT PACKARD ENTERPRISE CO. 21.02 -0.14 -0.68%

    DOJ’s complaint noted that HPE had a “mandatory training for its engineers and salespeople, to ‘beat’ Juniper when competing for contracts,” adding that HPE sales teams viewed the threat from Juniper as “dire.” 

    The complaint quoted one former HPE executive as telling his team that “there are no rules in a street fight” and that they should try to “kill” Juniper when competing with the firm for sales.

    MERGERS THAT WERE BLOCKED OR CHALLENGED BY THE BIDEN ADMIN IN 2024

    Juniper Networks

    Juniper and HPE pushed back on the DOJ’s lawsuit and argued their tie-up would be beneficial for the market. (Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    HPE and Juniper pushed back on the DOJ’s lawsuit to block the merger, arguing in a statement that the agency’s “analysis of this acquisition is fundamentally flawed” and vowing to “vigorously defend against the Department of Justice’s overreaching interpretation” of antitrust law.

    “Consistent with the conclusions reached by all other major antitrust regulators who have reviewed the deal, this transaction brings together two complementary networking offerings and will create a networking player with the scope and scale to more effectively compete with global incumbents,” the companies wrote.

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    The DOJ’s suit to block the acquisition comes as dealmakers expect the new Trump administration to take a lighter regulatory approach to scrutinizing proposed deals after the Biden administration blocked several high-profile mergers.

  • Tramp tariffs that will take effect: What to know

    Tramp tariffs that will take effect: What to know

    The White House on Friday confirmed that President Donald Trump will implement tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China this weekend.

    Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said  thatTrump will impose a 25% levy on imports from Mexico and Canada and a 10% tariff on imports from China, beginning on Saturday, in response to the “illegal fentanyl that they have sourced and allowed to distribute into our country, which has killed tens of millions of Americans.”

    TRUMP’S PROPOSED TARIFFS COULD DRIVE UP FOOD PRICES, EXPERTS SAY

    “These are promises made and promises kept by the president,” she said. 

    The comments came just after he signed an executive order titled “America First Trade Policy” which instructed government officials to “investigate the causes of our country’s large and persistent annual trade deficits in goods, as well as the economic and national security implications . . . ,” the order said. 

    President Donald Trump delivers his inaugural address after being sworn in as the 47th president in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Chip Somodevilla/Pool/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    However, his recent actions against China are far lower than his initial threats he made during his campaign. He pledged a universal 10% to 20% tariff on imports from all foreign countries, along with an additional 60% to 100% tariff specifically on imports from China.

    TRUMP’S TARIFFS WOULD DRIVE UP CONSUMER PRICES: NATIONAL RETAIL FEDERATION

    However, Democrats and opponents argue that the cost of the tariffs would just be passed on to American consumers. Over the past several months, several retailers have raised concerns about the prospect of tariffs pumping up the costs of their products or even forcing them to cut back on inventory. 

    Donald Trump and Larry Ellison

    Oracle founder Larry Ellison listens to President Donald Trump speak in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on Jan. 21, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    For instance, Dollar Tree – which has high exposure to China – warned that if tariffs are implemented, the company might have to change product details or sizes and even stop carring items altogether if they become too expensive. 

    A Walmart spokesperson said in a statement to FOX Business that the company remains “concerned that significantly increased tariffs could lead to increased costs for our customers at a time when they are still feeling the remnants of inflation.” 

    Meanwhile, Wall Street titan Goldman Sachs also raised concerns that hiking the levies on products will drive up costs for everyday Americans.  

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    David French, the National Retail Federation’s executive vice president of government relations, said the United States “needs a review of our trade relationships to be sure that those relationships are structured to achieve fair, balanced and effective outcomes for American workers and businesses.” 

    “Tariffs are taxes paid by Americans, and any new tariff tax increases should be methodically and effectively deployed toward only the most strategic goods,” French said. “Undertaking a strategic assessment of trade priorities is an important first step.” 

    FOX News’ Greg Norman contributed to this report.

  • Trump reasserts towering 100% tariff threat against BRICS countries

    Trump reasserts towering 100% tariff threat against BRICS countries

    In an apparent bid to preserve the U.S. dollar’s global economic dominance, President Donald Trump reiterated his 100% tariff threat against BRICS nations.

    The president is demanding that the countries commit not to forming a BRICS currency or endorse a currency to supplant U.S. dollar hegemony.

    “The idea that the BRICS Countries are trying to move away from the Dollar, while we stand by and watch, is OVER,”  Trump warned in a Truth Social post on Thursday.

    TRUMP WARNS BRICS COUNTRIES IF THEY TRY TO REPLACE DOLLAR: ‘100% TARIFFS’

    President Donald Trump speaks to reporters about the collision of an American Airlines flight with a military Black Hawk helicopter near Ronald Reagan National Airport, in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on Jan. 30, 2025 in Washingto (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    BRICS is an acronym that refers to the nations of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, though the bloc also includes several other countries as well.

    “We are going to require a commitment from these seemingly hostile Countries that they will neither create a new BRICS Currency, nor back any other Currency to replace the mighty U.S. Dollar or, they will face 100% Tariffs, and should expect to say goodbye to selling into the wonderful U.S. Economy,” Trump continued

    “They can go find another sucker Nation. There is no chance that BRICS will replace the U.S. Dollar in International Trade, or anywhere else, and any Country that tries should say hello to Tariffs, and goodbye to America!” he concluded.

    PUTIN, XI VOW TO ‘DEEPEN’ ALLIANCE HOURS AFTER TRUMP RE-ENTERS THE WHITE HOUSE

    Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands

    Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) and President of China Xi Jinping (L) shake hands as they attend the 16th BRICS Summit in Kazan, Russia on Oct. 22, 2024. (Kristina Kormilitsyna/PHOTOHOST AGENCY/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Trump, who just took office again last week, had issued a nearly identical threat on social media in November.

    Euro Pacific Asset Managment chief economist and global strategist Peter Schiff, who discusses economic and political topics on his eponymous podast “The Peter Schiff Show,” pushed back against Trump’s comment last year.

    “You have the relationship backwards. The BRICS nations are the suckers for accepting our fiat currency for their real consumer goods. We get actual products that make our lives better, that we lack the capacity to produce ourselves. All they get in return is our inflation,” Schiff tweeted in December in response to Trump’s November post threatening BRICS countries.

    PUTIN WELCOMES IRAN, INDIA, CHINA TO BRICS SUMMIT TO DISCUSS ‘NEW WORLD ORDER’ TO CHALLENGE THE WEST

    Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, and Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi at the BRICS Summit in 2024

    President of Russia Vladimir Putin, President of China Xi Jinping and Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi are seen during limited attendance meeting of BRICS leaders during the 16th BRICS Summit in Kazan, Russia on Oct. 23, 2024.  (Alexei Danichev/Photohost Agency/Anadolu via Getty Images)

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    Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, and Indonesia, are also members of the bloc, according to Reuters.

    Brazil, which holds the BRICS presidency this year, has suggested that Saudi Arabia is a BRICS member, but Saudi Minister of Economy and Planning Faisal Alibrahim recently told Bloomberg Television that while the nation has been invited into BRICS, it is assessing before making a decision.

  • US reportedly investigating whether China’s DeepSeek used restricted AI chips

    US reportedly investigating whether China’s DeepSeek used restricted AI chips

    U.S. officials are investigating whether Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek, whose latest models sent the tech world into a frenzy this week, has been using advanced Nvidia semiconductors that are restricted from being shipped to China, according to multiple reports.

    DeepSeek’s release of new AI models that it claims rival those made by leading U.S. tech firms but at a fraction of the cost roiled markets on Monday and prompted concerns about American firms losing their edge in the AI race to Chinese rivals.

    A chatbot app developed by the Chinese AI company DeepSeek (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Reuters reported that, according to a person familiar, the Commerce Department is now probing whether DeepSeek was able to access AI chips that the U.S. has banned from Chinese access, adding that chip smuggling to China has been tracked out of countries including Malaysia, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates.

    Bloomberg also reported that the department is investigating whether DeepSeek was able to access high-performance Nvidia chips through third parties in Singapore.

    TECH MOGUL DOUBTS DEEPSEEK CLAIMS, SAYS US MEDIA FELL FOR ‘CCP PROPAGANDA’

    An Nvidia spokesperson told FOX Business that many of its customers have business entities in Singapore and use those entities for products destined for the U.S. and the west.

    The U.S. Commerce Department is reportedly probing whether DeepSeek accessed Nvidia chips prohibited for use in China.

    “Our public filings report ‘bill to’ not ‘ship to’ locations of our customers,” the spokesperson said in a statement. ” We insist that our partners comply with all applicable laws, and if we receive any information to the contrary, act accordingly.”

    The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to FOX Business’ request for comment. DeepSeek was unable to be reached for comment.

    NVIDIA CEO JENSES HUANG TO MEET WITH TRUMP AT WHITE HOUSE

    The reports come as President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang at the White House on Friday.

    Huang and Trump are expected to discuss AI, as well as chips and the power needed to train AI models and semiconductor manufacturing facilities.

    Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang holds chip

    Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., holds up the company’s AI accelerator chips for data centers. (Akio Kon/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    DeepSeek has said it used Nvidia’s H800 chips, which it could have legally purchased in 2023. Reuters could not determine whether DeepSeek has used other controlled chips that are not allowed to be shipped to China.

    DeepSeek also apparently has Nvidia’s less powerful H20s, which can still lawfully be shipped to China. The U.S. considered controlling them under the Biden administration and newly appointed Trump officials are discussing that as well.

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    The CEO of AI company Anthropic, Dario Amodei, said earlier this week, “it appears that a substantial fraction of DeepSeek’s AI chip fleet consists of chips that haven’t been banned (but should be), chips that were shipped before they were banned; and some that seem very likely to have been smuggled.”

    The U.S. has put in place a raft of restrictions barring exports of AI chips to China and plans to cap their shipments to a host of other countries.

    FOX Business’ Eric Revell and Reuters contributed to this report.