Trump tariffs live updates: Wall Street will have to wait longer for a Supreme Court tariff decision

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President Trump’s most sweeping tariffs face a landmark test of presidential powers, as the US Supreme Court is set to rule on the implications and legality of Trump’s global duties on trade partners.

The high court’s first two opportunities to issue a verdict — the latest on Wednesday — have come and gone without a decision.

Whatever the ruling, the case is being closely watched, as companies like Costco (COST) bring lawsuits against the US government in the hope of securing a refund on import duties if the court rejects Trump’s authority to impose tariffs.

The court heard arguments in early November. Both conservative- and liberal-leaning justices asked skeptical questions of the method by which the president imposed his most sweeping duties. Trump imposed his tariffs by invoking a 1977 law meant for national emergencies.

The Trump administration also made appeals to the court last year, and in recent weeks Trump has frequently expressed concern over the ruling, saying losing the ability to tariff other countries would be a “terrible blow” to the US. On Monday, he went even further.

“If the Supreme Court rules against the United States of America on this National Security bonanza, WE’RE SCREWED!” he wrote on social media.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview that if the high court rules against Trump’s tariffs — which he still views as unlikely — the US Treasury has more than enough funds to cover the costs of any refunds. But Bessent said he thinks businesses won’t be passing those refunds back to consumers.

“It won’t be a problem if we have to do it, but ‍I can tell you that if it happens — which I don’t think it’s going to — it’s just a corporate boondoggle,” Bessent told Reuters. “Costco, who’s suing the US government, are they going to ​give the money back to their clients?”

Meanwhile, China’s trade surplus hit a record $1.2 trillion in 2025, despite Trump’s tariffs. Beijing proceeded to blame the US for growing global trade imbalances.

Read more: What Trump promised with his ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs — and what he delivered

LIVE 25 updates

  • US tariff revenue dropped by almost $3 billion from November to December

    A new Treasury report released Tuesday showed the US government brought in $27.89 billion in tariff revenue in December to end a year of reordered trading policy.

    Yahoo Finance’s Ben Werschkul details the income from changing tariffs at the end of 2025:

    Read more here.

  • Ben Werschkul

    Another Supreme Court decision day passes without a ruling on President Trump’s tariffs

    The Supreme Court convened on Wednesday and issued three opinions — but not the one that markets are watching most closely around President Trump’s tariffs.

    The rulings concerned issues like warrantless entries, while the tariff decision was put off for another day. The court also issued an opinion last Friday.

    The ruling in the tariffs case, formally known as Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, is still expected between now and the end of the court’s session in June. It is centered on the 1977 law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which gives the president the ability to declare an economic emergency and take action but doesn’t specifically outline tariffs as a remedy.

    Trump and his team had seized on the law to declare a variety of emergencies — over issues ranging from fentanyl to trade imbalances and more — and impose blanket tariffs in response.

    Trump set the stage for this week’s decision with weeks of Truth Social posts, including one on Monday declaring that a negative decision would mean “WE’RE SCREWED!”

  • Jenny McCall

    China’s 2025 rare earth exports hit highest since at least 2014 despite restrictions

    China’s exports of rare earth materials in 2025 hit the highest level since at least 2014, a sign that Beijing is delivering on its promise, as agreed as part of the one-year trade truce with the US, to start shipping rare earths.

    In retaliation for President Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs, China restricted shipments of several elements in April.

    Reuters reports:

    Read more here.

  • Jenny McCall

    US approves Nvidia H200 chip exports to China with some conditions

    President Trump gave the go-ahead on Tuesday for the sale of Nvidia’s (NVDA) H200 AI chips to China. Nvidia said in a statement that this latest move by Trump “strikes a thoughtful balance that is great for America” and will help the company compete in the global chip market.

    However, sources claim that China’s customs department has told agents not to allow the H200 chip into the country.

    Reuters reports:

    Read more here.

  • Jenny McCall

    China’s customs agents told Nvidia’s H200 chips are not permitted

    China has pushed back on Nvidia’s (NVDA) H200 AI chips, with Beijing’s customs department telling agents this week that the chips are not permitted to enter China, according to people familiar with the matter.

    The H200 chip from Nvidia is the second most powerful and was approved by the Trump administration for export to China this week. There is strong demand for the chip from Chinese companies, but it is unclear if Beijing is planning restrictions.

    Reuters reports:

    Read more here.

  • Jenny McCall

    China’s trade ends 2025 with record trillion-dollar surplus despite Trump tariffs

  • Jenny McCall

    Trump team nears Taiwan trade deal with more US chip investment

  • Jenny McCall

    Trump risks imploding China trade truce with Iran tariff vow

    The one-year trade truce between the US and China risks derailment after President Trump on Monday announced new tariffs on goods from countries trading with Iran. China, the world’s largest buyer of Iranian oil, could be affected, raising concerns that the move may strain the truce with China’s President Xi Jinping.

    These latest threats come a few months after a deal between Washington and Beijing was clinched, which led China to remove export restrictions on rare earths and the US, in return, paused its tariffs on Beijing.

    Bloomberg News reports:

    Read more here.

  • Jenny McCall

    China and the EU agree on steps to resolve their dispute over EV imports

  • Brett LoGiurato

    Trump says he’s putting 25% tariffs on goods from countries that do business with Iran

    President Trump tweeted on Monday:

    The move is set to increase pressure on Tehran as its government has faced mass protests in recent days. Trump has threatened military action against Iran, saying the US would hit Iran “very hard” if it continued to use force against protesters.

    The order would risk complicating trade relationships with several partners that also trade with Iran. Notably, those countries include China and India.

  • Brett LoGiurato

    Trump says ‘we’re screwed’ if SCOTUS rules against tariffs

    President Trump on Monday was characteristically blunt as he reemphasized the stakes he sees for his administration and the US as the Supreme Court prepares to rule on the legality of his most sweeping tariffs.

    “If the Supreme Court rules against the United States of America on this National Security bonanza, WE’RE SCREWED!” Trump posted on Truth Social.

    Trump has gone on the warpath since the case was argued in November, painting the high court’s decision as critical to his economic policy agenda. Both conservative- and liberal-leaning justices asked skeptical questions of the method by which the president imposed his most sweeping duties. Trump imposed his tariffs by invoking a 1977 law meant for national emergencies.

    Trump on Monday cited trade agreements the US has struck with a number of countries that have included pledges for the countries to invest in the US. Combined with other potential “refunds” — most prominently to companies that have already sued the government in the lead-up to the Supreme Court’s ruling — Trump said it would add up to a “mess.”

    He wrote: “Anybody who says that it can be quickly and easily done would be making a false, inaccurate, or totally misunderstood answer to this very large and complex question. It may not be possible but, if it were, it would be Dollars that would be so large that it would take many years to figure out what number we are talking about and even, who, when, and where, to pay.

  • Jenny McCall

    US hosts meeting on rare earths as China-Japan spat simmers

    The US has announced it will hold a G-7 meeting this week to discuss rare earths, underscoring the need to develop alternative supplies away from China, which currently dominates the industry.

    In the recent one-year trade truce established between the US and China last year, Beijing promised to lift export restrictions on rare earth materials. However, China’s spat with Japan has led it to restrict supplies to Tokyo, leading to concerns among other countries that rely on rare earths for crucial technology and automotive components.

    Bloomberg News reports:

    Read more here.

  • Jenny McCall

    Europe and China’s feud over chips is reaching a breaking point

  • Yahoo Finance

    EU countries approve Mercosur deal partly in response to US tariffs

    European Union countries have approved the Mercosur trade deal with Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay, a massive free-trade agreement aimed at countering the EU’s dependence on the US and China for trade, the Wall Street Journal reports:

    Read more here.

  • Yahoo Finance

    Trump’s tariffs are having a bigger impact on hiring than on most prices — so far

    The widely expected impact of President Trump’s tariffs on prices for everyday goods imported from overseas has yet to materialize (with some notable exceptions). But as CNN reports, the tariffs have already had a chilling effect on the job market, with job growth at its lowest in decades and unemployment creeping higher

    Read more here.

  • Bessent says US Treasury has enough funds to cover potential tariff refunds

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Friday that he still doubts the US Supreme Court will rule President Trump’s tariffs to be unconstitutional, but that the US Treasury has more than enough funds to provide tariff refunds if that’s what the high court orders. Any such repayments would be spread out up to a year, Bessent told Reuters:

    Read more here.

  • Brett LoGiurato

    The Supreme Court’s next potential tariff decision day

    The Supreme Court said Wednesday, Jan. 14, would be the next time it issues opinions — and therefore the next time it could rule on the tariff case.

    Of course, a decision on tariffs is not guaranteed, as today showed. The court simply says that rulings on already argued cases are possible when it sets these dates.

    We’ll keep circling these on our calendars!

  • Brett LoGiurato

    Supreme Court will not rule on tariffs today

    The Supreme Court did not issue a ruling in the case centered on President Trump’s tariffs on Friday, the first day the high court is in session in 2026.

    Market watchers had circled Friday as a potential date for the tariff verdict. But the court issued only one opinion today.

    The court is in session next week, though it is unclear when they may next issue rulings.

  • Brett LoGiurato

    Lutnick: Modi’s failure to call Trump stalled potential trade deal

  • Ben Werschkul

    How much more complex Trump 2.0 tariffs are — and how much the Supreme Court could roll things back

    The ever-increasing complexity of the US tariff landscape has been in evidence for months, but the dawn of 2026 provides a direct measure of just how much additional paperwork US importers must wade through one year into Trump 2.0.

    The benchmark of tariff complexity is the so-called tariff book — formally known as the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States — which is the central reference point for importers on what they have to pay the government.

    The “basic” version for 2026 was just released and clocks in at over 4,500 pages. That’s more than 100 pages longer than last year (and an 800-page increase from 2017, when Trump first took office).

    It’s just one indicator of the increased complexity that comes with a large dash of uncertainty for businesses so far in 2026 as the Supreme Court weighs how much of this new maze of regulations will pass legal muster.

    The looming Supreme Court decision, which could be handed down as soon as Friday morning, is already presenting market risks. The complexity issue comes in addition to the tariffs themselves, which the Yale Budget Lab calculates at an average rate for consumers of 16.8%.

    Read more here.