World News

CNBC Daily Open: Trump’s expanded tariffs mean putting out home fires could be more expensive

CNBC Daily Open: Trump’s expanded tariffs mean putting out home fires could be more expensive


Cargo containers stacked aboard a ship at the Jakarta International Container Terminal in Tanjung Priok Port on Aug. 7, 2025.

Str | Afp | Getty Images

Tariff-related ruction appears to be settling down, but U.S. President Donald Trump is still reshaping global trade and industry — and everyday life.

After the Trump administration hinted it could be open to Nvidia exporting more powerful chips to China after their revenue-sharing agreement, the semiconductor darling was reported to be developing a new chip for Beijing.

And Intel’s bounty from the CHIPS Act, formalized by the previous administration under Joe Biden, might come with a price tag of giving the current U.S. government a stake in the company. Other companies that have received funding from the same act — such as Micron and Samsung — may be subject to the same exchange, Reuters reported.

Meanwhile, the effects of tariffs continue to creep into the home.

The costs incurred by fires in the U.S. — think of the tragic Los Angeles wildfires in January or the one near the Grand Canyon just last month — are already growing, not just in terms of the physical damage but also the price of insurance premiums.

And now that Trump has added fire extinguishers to a list of steel products that will face a 50% import tariff, even the price of relatively more benign and contained fires, such as those you start to burn photographs of your ex-partner, will be more expensive to put out. That’s a truly protest-worthy tariff.

What you need to know today

And finally…

The Millennium Bridge backdropped by St. Paul’s Cathedral in central London on Nov. 15, 2024.

Henry Nicholls | Afp | Getty Images

The price is REIT: UK-quoted property sector is consolidating rapidly

Episodes in which the mighty KKR receives a bloody nose are collector’s items — but we had one in the U.K. last week. The private equity giant was thwarted in an attempt to buy Assura, a property company that owns more than 600 doctor’s surgeries and medical centers.

That speaks to a bigger story — which is that U.K. stock market investors have concluded valuations in the country’s REIT (real estate investment trust) sector had become ridiculously low.

— Ian King



Source link

Related posts

Tech megacaps plan to spend more than $300 billion in 2025 as AI race intensifies

admin

Large sites appear in Gaza ahead of Israeli aid plan rejected by UN, images show

admin

With IPOs on hold even longer, tariffs spell trouble for private tech investors

admin

Leave a Comment