Business Today
This newsletter is supported by Royal London
Business live
US dollar hits three-year low after Trump intensifies attack on Fed chair Powell
Live  
US dollar hits three-year low after Trump intensifies attack on Fed chair Powell
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Headlines
US economy  
Stock markets fall again as Trump calls Fed chair ‘a major loser’
Stock markets fall again as Trump calls Fed chair ‘a major loser’
Trump tariffs  
Peppercorns to plastic forks – US firms that rely on Chinese products reel
Boeing  
Investors brace for fallout from Trump tariffs
Energy bills  
More struggling British households will resort to energy theft, campaigners say
Trade  
Trump’s erratic tariffs harder to navigate than pandemic, says UK export agency
UK GDP  
Travel body accuses government of ‘sabotaging’ tourism industry
Aerospace  
China sends back new Boeing jet made more expensive by tariffs
China  
Threat of countermeasures against countries that ‘appease’ US
Travel  
London Gatwick is UK’s worst airport for flight delays, figures show
NatWest  
Investors to scrutinise pay in last AGM before full privatisation
Mobiles  
Be a sim-only saver: could you join the phone users shunning bundles?
China  
How ‘embodied AI’ is reshaping daily life in China
‘It was very difficult to hold on to’  
Are Michelin stars a blessing - or a curse?
Profile  
Peter Navarro: the economist who has outsmarted Elon Musk and has the ear of Donald Trump
Film  
UK taxpayers contributed £89m to the most expensive movie ever made
Today's agenda
The US dollar has sunk to a three-year low as the exodus from US assets gathers pace. Traders are anxious after Donald Trump launched another blistering attack on America’s top central banker yesterday, calling Jerome Powell “Mr Too Late” and “a major loser”, as the US president intensified his calls for US interest rate cuts. 

The news has pushed the dollar down against a basket of currencies to its lowest level since March 2022. Against the yen, the dollar has hit a seven-month low, trading at ¥140 for the first time since last September. Last week, Trump posted that “Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough”. 

The weakness of the dollar has pushed the pound up to its highest level against the US currency in seven months. Sterling climbed to $1.3423 in early trading, up around half a cent, to its highest level since last September.

Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG, says Trump’s attacks on Powell are leading to a lack of confidence in the markets: "Their relationship has long been contentious. Despite appointing Powell in 2017, Trump has since expressed regret, criticising Powell for “bad decisions” and being “always too late and wrong.

"Powell has countered by warning that Trump’s tariffs could spur higher inflation and slower growth, contradicting Trump’s claims of his policies’ economic benefits."

Yesterday (when European markets were closed), there were further losses on Wall Street, where the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost another 2.5%, or almost 1,000 points. Investors are also disappointed at the lack of progress in trade talks, after the hefty tariffs announced by Trump earlier this month. This is creating a worrying situation, in which the dollar, the US stock markets and US government bond prices all are falling.

Typically in a crisis, US government debt and the dollar would rally as traders sought out a safe haven.

Jim Reid, market strategist at Deutsche Bank, explains: "The market reaction is arguably more about broader investor concerns that less credible US policymaking may erode the exorbitant privilege that has allowed the US to run high twin deficits than it is about the specific risk of political influence over the Fed’s rates policy.”

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will give its verdict on the economic consequences of the US trade war later today, when it releases the latest forecasts in its World Economic Outlook.

Central bank governors, finance ministers, and other economic leaders are heading to Washington DC for the annual IMF-World Bank spring meetings. Rachel Reeves will fly to Washington this week too. The UK chancellor will use the spring meetings of the IMF to make the case that free trade is in both British and global interests.

The agenda
• 
9am BST: ECB Survey of Professional Forecasters
 2pm BST: IMF releases its latest World Economic Outlook.
 3pm BST: EU Consumer Confidence report
• 3.15pm: IMF releases its Global Financial Stability Report

We'll be tracking all the main events throughout the day …
Opinion
Economics viewpoint  
Labour must focus on risk to global financial stability posed by Trump policies, not only trade
Labour must focus on risk to global financial stability posed by Trump policies, not only trade
Explainer  
Why the UK’s electricity costs are so high – and what can be done about it
It’s not too late to stop Trump and the tech broligarchy from controlling our lives, but we must act now
Explainer  
Can Trump fire Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell?
British Steel must now join the modern economy, not be a prisoner of the old
Editorial  
The Guardian view on City deregulation: a recipe for recklessness
Media
Afghanistan  
A ‘strange dance’: media mogul Saad Mohseni on making TV under the Taliban
A ‘strange dance’: media mogul Saad Mohseni on making TV under the Taliban
Culture  
Arts Council England a victim of ‘London-centric’ media coverage, CEO says
Spotlight
‘Honest folk are paying for this’: the fight against Britain’s £1.5bn energy heist
Energy industry  
‘Honest folk are paying for this’: the fight against Britain’s £1.5bn energy heist
From raids on marijuana farms to illegal bitcoin miners, suppliers are finding new ways to tackle the rise in gas and electricity theft
Popular on business
‘It might be gutted’ – Boots braces for dose of private equity’s bitter medicine
‘It might be gutted’ – Boots braces for dose of private equity’s bitter medicine
Dark chocolate Toblerone to be discontinued in UK due to ‘changing tastes’
The party's over for Club 18-30 as Thomas Cook retires the brand
Do those so-called US recession indicators actually mean anything?
Britain must steel itself for the future
Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email [email protected]
 Paid for by Royal London   
Committed to building financial resilience
Our range of tools, insights and 5-star service help you add to the benefits you offer your employees.

We'll help you deliver the value of your scheme and give you the support needed to manage it easily.

You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to Business Today. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396