U.S. tariff deadline. Tariffs on goods from countries that do not reach new bilateral trade deals in the coming weeks will jump on August 1 to levels originally announced on April 2, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said yesterday. Trump said he would begin notifying countries today of their new tariff rates via letters.
BRICS summit. Trump threatened an additional 10 percent tariff on countries aligned with BRICS policies as leaders from the group met in Rio de Janeiro. Hours earlier, a joint statement from the summit had condemned recent bombings of Iran and called for a more open global trade regime. It also announced plans to issue loan guarantees via its development bank that would aim to speed investment in member countries.
Netanyahu in Washington. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is meeting with Trump at the White House today. The visit comes amid talks over a potential Gaza truce and after Israel said it bombed Houthi-held ports in Yemen overnight into this morning. Israel said the ports were used to receive weapons from Iran and that it was broadly responding to Houthi attacks on Israel. Two missiles were launched from Yemen at Israel afterward.
Suriname’s new leader. The country’s parliament elected Jennifer Geerlings-Simons as Suriname’s first female president yesterday. Her party had narrowly won the most seats in a May parliamentary election and then made a coalition with smaller parties to elect her. She pledged to make revenue from the country’s anticipated oil boom “available to all.”
Syria-UK ties. The United Kingdom (UK) restored full diplomatic ties with Syria during a visit to Damascus by UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy over the weekend. Lammy said a stable Syria would reduce irregular migration, ensure chemical weapons were destroyed, and help tackle the threat of terrorism. He also pledged $129 million in humanitarian and economic development support.
Green climate fund. A multilateral climate fund backed by the United Nations approved its largest-ever financing package in a single board meeting despite the U.S. withdrawal of a $4 billion pledge. The fund endorsed more than $1.2 billion for new projects across small island developing states and African countries, among others.
China-EU restrictions. China will bar companies based in the European Union (EU) from bidding on government contracts for some medical devices, Beijing announced yesterday. The EU issued a similar ban for Chinese firms last month. Chinese sales of medical devices to EU countries more than doubled from 2015 to 2023, according to the European Commission.
OPEC+ output hike. The alliance of oil-producing countries announced plans to increase their global production in August by 548,000 barrels a day, a greater spike in output than in the past three months combined. In the last few months, the real amount of oil hitting the market from OPEC+ countries has been lower than the announced quotas. Saudi Arabia also said it will increase the August price of its flagship crude oil by $1 a barrel for Asian buyers, suggesting it is confident in demand.