U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled a new round of tariff demand letters on Wednesday, including a 50% rate on Brazil, one of the highest so far announced for the levies which are set to hit in August.
Trump cited the treatment of former President Jair Bolsonaro — a rightwing populist leader — in his letter to Brazil, calling on authorities to drop charges against him over an alleged coup attempt. "This Trial should not be taking place. It is a Witch Hunt that should end IMMEDIATELY!” Trump wrote in the letter.
Trump on Wednesday also said he would levy a 30% rate on Algeria, Libya, Iraq and Sri Lanka, with 25% duties on products from Brunei and Moldova and a 20% rate on goods from the Philippines. The levies were largely in line with rates Trump had initially announced in April against those countries, though Iraq’s duties are down from 39% and Sri Lanka’s reduced from 44%.
Trump began notifying trading partners of new rates on Monday ahead of a deadline this week for countries to wrap up negotiations with his administration — and posted to social media that he planned to release "a minimum of 7” letters on Wednesday morning, with additional rates to be posted in the afternoon.
Brazil is the first country to receive one of Trump’s tariff notifications that was not on the initial list of trading partners when he announced higher so-called reciprocal tariffs in April. And the letter to Brazil also presents a warning shot to the BRICS group of developing nations, which Trump has cast as a threat to the U.S. dollar’s status as the world’s key currency.
Brazil is unusual among Trump’s most recent tariff targets because it runs a deficit in trade with the U.S., while almost all the others post large surpluses. In 2024, Brazil imported some $44 billion of American products, while U.S. imports from Brazil were around $42 billion, according to the Census Bureau.
Brazil ranks among the top 20 U.S. trading partners. Out of the other seven countries cited in Trump’s announcements Wednesday, only the Philippines — which sent some $14.1 billion of goods to the U.S. last year — makes it into the top 50.
Imports from the remaining six nations put together amounted to less than $15 billion last year, with Iraq — an exporter of crude oil — accounting for about half of that sum.
Asked what formula he was using to determine the appropriate duty rate for trading partners, Trump told reporters at a White House event on Wednesday that it was "based on common sense, based on deficits, based on how we’ve been over the years, and based on raw numbers.”
"They’re based on very, very substantial facts, and also past history,” he said.
So far, the latest warnings have done little to rattle markets, with traders focusing on Trump’s overall extension of the deadline for the so-called reciprocal tariffs to Aug. 1. That’s effectively given trading partners an extension for talks and initially fueled skepticism on Wall Street that he would follow through on his import taxes.
But the move on Brazil shook the real, which slumped as much as 2.9% against the U.S. dollar, while the $5.35 billion iShares MSCI Brazil ETF — the largest U.S.-listed exchange-traded fund tracking the nation’s equities — was down 1.8% in postmarket trading.
Trump added to uncertainty earlier this week by claiming he was "not 100% firm” on that new cut-off date for talks. He has since sought to signal to investors and trading partners that he is committed to carrying out his tariff threats, vowing Tuesday that "all money will be due and payable starting AUGUST 1, 2025 — No extensions will be granted” on country-specific levies.
Deputy Treasury Secretary Michael Faulkender on Wednesday indicated that even if tariffs kicked into effect, negotiations could continue beyond the August deadline.
"There’s enormous progress that has been made with many of these countries, and for some of them it is just finalizing some of the terms of the framework,” he said in an interview. "Now obviously, the details of the trade agreement will be worked out well beyond August 1st, but a general framework is the objective to have by August 1st.”
The president has also raised the stakes for two key trading partners, saying the European Union could receive a unilateral tariff rate soon despite progress in negotiations, and vowing to hit India with an additional 10% levy for its participation in the BRICS.
And he’s raised the specter of more industry-specific tariffs, floating a 50% rate on copper products that sent that metal climbing as high as 17% in New York on Tuesday, a record one-day spike. He also pitched tariffs as high as 200% on pharmaceutical imports if drug companies don’t shift production to the U.S. in the next year.
The barrage of letters and fresh tariff threats marked the latest turn in a dizzying trade agenda that has spurred volatility in markets and left consumers, businesses and trading partners anxious about the impact on trade flows and the global economy.
Trump initially announced the so-called reciprocal tariffs on April 2, but after markets reacted with alarm, paused the higher duties to 10% for a 90-day negotiating period that was set to end on Wednesday, July 9 before the latest three-week extension.
Trump’s letters on Monday targeted countries including Japan, South Korea, South Africa, Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia. Most of the tariff rates, however, were largely in line with what Trump had already announced the nations were likely to face.
While Trump has touted his tariff notification letters as deals, even the actual agreements he has managed to strike during the negotiating period with the U.K. and Vietnam have been far short of comprehensive, leaving many details unclear. Trump also secured a truce with China to lower rates and ease the flow of critical earth minerals.
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