427442 February 25, 2026 10:00 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Trump is reframing the Supreme Court tariff loss as a detour, not a derailment, as his team shifts the broad tariff base to Section 122 while keeping key sector and China-related tariffs intact.
Summary:
Trump addressed tariffs during his SOTU address
Supreme Court ruled IEEPA doesn’t authorise tariffs (Feb 20, 2026)
White House pivoted to temporary global tariffs under Section 122
Rate set at 10% for 150 days; administration working toward 15%
Many other tariffs (Section 232/301) remain intact
Economists question “balance-of-payments crisis” rationale, raising fresh legal risk
Refunds and trade-deal durability remain live issues
Trump says tariffs stay despite Supreme Court setback — what changed, what didn’t
In his State of the Union address, President Donald Trump called the Supreme Court’s decision against his tariff program “very unfortunate,” but argued tariffs will remain in place, most countries want to keep existing trade deals, and Congress won’t need to act.
The backdrop is a major legal loss for the White House on February 20, 2026, when the US Supreme Court ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) does not authorise the president to impose tariffs. The ruling invalidated a broad swathe of the administration’s emergency-tariff framework and immediately raised questions about refunds, deal continuity and the legal durability of the wider tariff agenda.
Crucially, the administration moved quickly to keep a tariff “floor” in place. Within hours of the ruling, Trump issued a new order imposing a temporary global tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 — initially set at 10% for 150 days, with the White House subsequently working to lift the rate to 15% (the statutory ceiling). Section 122 is rarely used and is framed around “serious” balance-of-payments concerns; economists and legal specialists have questioned whether current US conditions meet that test, raising the risk of further litigation.
Trump’s claim that tariffs “remain in place” is also helped by the fact that many other tariffs are unaffected by the IEEPA ruling, including Section 232 sector/national-security tariffs and Section 301 trade-action tariffs. In parallel, the administration has indicated it can pursue additional tariff probes under other statutory authorities, supporting the view that the tariff regime is being re-routed rather than dismantled.
On trade deals, US officials have signalled that counterparties have not moved to walk away, but governments are watching closely for how the legal reset affects enforcement and timelines. The next market focus is whether Section 122 tariffs are maintained beyond the 150-day window (where congressional involvement can become relevant), and whether refund claims grow as court challenges evolve.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
427441 February 25, 2026 08:50 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Generic and non specific comments on investment and manufacturing (manufacturing jobs are lower so far under Trump!).
He does mention lower drug prices.
Whole stack of stuff not of relevance to markets.
Excerpts provided by WSJ (gated).
His central economic policy has collapsed.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
427440 February 25, 2026 07:40 Forexlive Latest News Market News
This is just a post for data, I’ll have details and analysis posted separately.
more to come
Background:
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
427439 February 25, 2026 04:40 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The focus is the Australian CPI data for January:
Trump will speak later. State of the Union speech. His centrepiece economic policy has completely collapsed. He’s scrambling to recover:
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
427438 February 25, 2026 04:25 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Markets:
The Citrini rout yesterday had many of the hallmarks of a bottom in sentiment around software stocks. The panic yesterday looked like investors trying to get out at any price and it was followed up today by Anthrophic hosting a presentation that touted its partners, including some of the most-beaten up stocks over the past month. As a result, some of those names had big bounces like Thomson-Reuters up 11.5% and the software IGV ETF up 1.8%. Power and chip stocks were also strong once again and AMD rose 8% on a deal with Meta. It wasn’t all cheering though as EXPD and FICO (both AI exposed names) fell badly once again.
The FX market largely followed the mood in stock markets as the US dollar rallied early when stocks were flat but reversed lower as indexes climbed.
In terms of economic data, the improvement in the consumer confidence report was mostly ignored and Fed commentary still leaned heavily towards sitting on the sidelines for a month or two of data.
Traders are now looking toward Trump’s State of the Union speech and particularly any talk about attacking Iran in it.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
427436 February 25, 2026 01:25 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The US Treasury will auction 2 year notes. Below is some color from BMO:
Today’s $69 bn 2-year auction comes amid the bond-bullish tone-shift that has defined the last several weeks of price action in the Treasury market. While there isn’t a compelling outright discount with WI 2-year rates at 3.45%, there is a sizable curve-concession with 2s/10s back below the 100-day moving-average of 59.5 bp, and more than 15 bp off the steeps achieved a couple of weeks ago. After reaching as low as 3.38% last Tuesday, the back-up in 2-year rates off the local lows has coincided with a delaying of rate cut expectations into the second half of 2026. Still, the broader cutting bias remains intact with 2-3 cuts expected by year-end, and the market-implied terminal policy rate anchored near 3.0%. Of course, renewed global trade policy uncertainty has, once again, increased the market’s sensitivity to fresh tariff headlines, although that risk didn’t correspond to larger auction tails in 2025. Fundamentally, policymakers have refocused on the inflation side of the dual mandate and while that doesn’t necessarily make 2-year rates look attractive below 3.50%, we suspect that the magnitude of the curve concession is sufficient for a small stop-through at 1pm ET.
-Vail Hartman, Delaney Choi, and Ian Lyngen
Pros
Six of the last nine 2-year auctions stopped-through, and by an average of 0.8 bp.
January’s 2-year auction was notably well-received, clearing an impressive 1.5 bp below the WI yield at the bidding deadline for the largest stop-through since August 2025.
2s/10s has pushed below 60 bp for the first time since January, leaving the curve ~15 bp off the early-February steeps.
Cons
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
427437 February 25, 2026 01:25 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The auction was near the WI level. The Bid to cover was right on the 6 month average. The domestic buyers were marginally higher than the six-month average while the international buyers were marginally lower than the six-month average. The dealers were saddled with slightly less than what has been the average.
Overall, the auction grade: B
The US treasury will auction off 5 and 7 year notes tomorrow and Thursday respectively.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
427434 February 24, 2026 22:25 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Details:
Among demographic groups, confidence on a six-month moving average basis ticked upward in February for consumers under age 35, which continued to be the most optimistic group. Confidence edged down for respondents 35 and older.
I find this something of a narrative violation:
The
Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index traced a dramatic arc
through 2025, defined by a steep erosion of sentiment tied to tariff
uncertainty, a brief mid-year recovery, and a renewed slide into
year-end and an 11-year low in January 2026.
Confidence
began the year at its highest point, then fell for five consecutive
months from February through June. The decline accelerated sharply in
March and April as tariff fears intensified. By April, the index had
plunged to 86.0 — levels not seen since the onset of the COVID pandemic —
with the Expectations Index cratering to 54.4, its lowest since October
2011. Nearly a third of consumers expected fewer jobs ahead,
approaching levels last seen during the Great Recession, and
expectations for future income turned negative for the first time in
five years. The decline cut across all age groups, income brackets, and
political affiliations.
May
brought a notable 12.3-point rebound to 98.0 — the largest monthly gain
in four years — fueled by the May 12 U.S.-China tariff pause. The
improvement was broad-based, though the Expectations Index remained
below 80, the threshold historically associated with recession risk.
That
recovery proved short-lived. Confidence resumed declining from the
summer onward, falling for five straight months through December. By
year-end, the index stood at 89.1, with the Present Situation Index
dropping sharply to 116.8 as views on business conditions turned
negative for the first time since September 2024. The Expectations Index
held at a weak 70.7, marking 11 consecutive months below the
recession-warning threshold of 80. Write-in responses continued to be
dominated by concerns about prices, tariffs, and politics, though
mentions of personal finances, immigration, and war increased into
December.
January
2026 brought a further 9.7-point plunge to 84.5 — driven by a
near-10-point drop in the Present Situation Index — suggesting the
cautious consumer mood that defined 2025 has carried firmly into the new
year.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
427435 February 24, 2026 22:25 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Details:
Composite manufacturing index fell to -10 in February from -6 in January. Estimate was -8
Shipments dropped to -13 from -5 last month
New orders decreased to -9 from -6 lat month
Employment edged down to -7 from -6 last month
Local business conditions index declined to -15 from -8 last month
Prices paid and received growth rates slowed in February to 6.52 from 7.06 last month
Prices received also slowed to 4.25 from 4.58 last month
Capital expenditures rose to -5 from -16 last month
Services expenditures -20 versus -16 last month
Firms expect further moderation in price growth over the next 12 months**
6 month forward expectations:
Future local business conditions improved to 22 from 19
Future shipments and new orders eased slightly but remained solidly positive. Shipments fell to 29 from 34. New orders fell to 35 from 36 las mont
Employment expectations rose to 6 from 2 last month
The regional index remains in the negative for the index. The 3 month average has not been above the 0 level since 2022.
The Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index serves as a monthly “pulse check” for the industrial sector across the Mid-Atlantic region, covering Maryland, Virginia, the Carolinas, D.C., and most of West Virginia. It is a composite indicator derived from three key pillars: new orders, shipments, and employment levels. A reading above zero indicates expansion, while a reading below zero signals contraction. Because this district represents a diverse slice of American industry, the index is widely watched by economists and investors as a “canary in the coal mine” for the broader U.S. manufacturing economy, often providing early signals of shifting demand or supply chain trends before national data is released.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
427433 February 24, 2026 21:40 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Home Depot’s fiscal fourth quarter results paint a familiar picture: the American homeowner remains cautious, selective, and increasingly uncertain about the macro backdrop.
The retailer posted $38.2 billion in revenue for the quarter ended February 1, a 3.8% decline year-over-year — though roughly $2.5 billion of that gap is explained by a missing 14th week in the current fiscal calendar. Strip that out via comparable sales, and you get a modest 0.4% increase. Earlier today, the CaseShiller 20-city US house price index was up just 1.4% with the South particularly soft.
CFO Richard McPhail described a “frozen housing environment” that’s now persisted for three years with no meaningful thaw. He highlighted housing affordability and job security as worries for consumers. In terms of metrics, store transactions fell 1.6% year-over-year, even as average ticket rose 2.4%, suggesting fewer trips but slightly larger baskets when shoppers do show up, largely due to inflation.
Big-ticket transactions — those over $1,000 — edged up 1.3%, but McPhail conceded that some of that reflects “modest” price increases rather than genuine demand strength.
The good news is mortgage rates have come down to 5.99% on the 30-year fixed, matching the lowest level since 2022 but only marginally. In terms of guidance, McPhail said that 2026 looks like it will be no better than last year.
The lock-in effect remains a critical barrier. If you bought or refinanced at 3%, you’re not moving to take on a 6% mortgage unless you absolutely have to. And if you’re a first-time buyer, affordability ratios remain stretched to levels that simply don’t pencil for most households. The result is that housing turnover stays depressed.
Regarding tariffs, the company says it’s “still in the middle of analysis” on the latest proposed 15% global tariff, and that more than half of what it sells is domestically sourced. It’s also diversifying imports so no single foreign country represents more than 10% of purchases.
That’s prudent supply chain management, but it doesn’t eliminate the risk of further price increases being passed through to an already
Home Depot’s fiscal 2026 outlook calls for total sales growth of 2.5% to 4.5%, comparable sales ranging from flat to up 2%, and adjusted EPS roughly flat to up 4%. That’s not a company signaling a recovery.
The stock popped 3.4% on the earnings beat, and some bulls are pointing to spring selling season and moderating mortgage rates as potential catalysts. Maybe. But until housing turnover meaningfully picks up — and that requires both rates and prices to cooperate — Home Depot’s consumer-facing business remains in holding pattern territory.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
427432 February 24, 2026 21:25 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Home price data from the FHFA:
The
US housing market’s deceleration has been the story for months now,
and the Case-Shiller 20-City Composite continues to tell it clearly. The
index rose just 1.4% year-over-year in November 2025, a marginal tick
up from October’s 1.3% gain but still hovering near multi-year lows in
terms of annual appreciation. The December reading is due out today and
is unlikely to shift the narrative.
Here’s how the trend has unfolded since September:
The regional picture remains the most interesting part of this data set, and it continues to show a stark divergence between the Midwest/Northeast and the Sun Belt. Chicago led all 20 metros for a second consecutive month with a 5.7% annual gain, followed by New York at 5.0% and Cleveland at 3.4%. On the other end, Tampa posted a 3.9% decline, marking its 13th straight month of falling annual prices. Former pandemic darlings continued to struggle, with Phoenix and Dallas both down 1.4% and Miami off 1.0%.
What’s particularly notable is that home price appreciation has been trailing consumer inflation, which eased to 2.7% in November. That means in real terms, home values have been declining over the past year — a quiet but meaningful shift for homeowners who’ve grown accustomed to double-digit appreciation.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
427429 February 24, 2026 19:40 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The main highlight of the session was the Japanese Yen as the currency sold off across the board following a Mainichi report saying that Takaichi signalled opposition for further BoJ rate hikes at last week’s meeting with Governor Ueda. Her dovish views are of course well known, but the yen will continue to weaken as long as the rate hikes get pushed out. The economic data hasn’t been supporting a rate hike either.
Other than that, we haven’t got any notable news or data release. The US Supreme Court decision on Trump’s tariffs continues to reverberate across markets as uncertainty remains high, but overall nothing has really changed. At the margin, we could say that things improved a little bit as the average effective tariff rate fell.
We also had Fed’s Bostic speaking but he basically repeated the same old stuff. His focus remains on inflation which isn’t surprising given that he’s been holding a hawkish stance for several quarters. The most interesting comment was from Fed’s Waller yesterday as he mentioned that in case we see a repeat of the strong January’s NFP, he would be comfortable holding rates steady.
In the American session, we get the weekly US ADP jobs data and the US Consumer Confidence report. The weekly ADP was a market moving indicator only on the first releases, then it stopped being important. Nonetheless, the data has been showing significant improvement like many other US labour market data.
The US Consumer Confidence is expected at 87.1 vs 84.5 prior. The last report surprised to the downside. The Chief Economist at Conference Board wrote: “confidence collapsed in January, as consumer concerns about both the present situation and expectations for the future deepened. All five components of the Index deteriorated, driving the overall Index to its lowest level since May 2014 (82.2), surpassing its COVID-19 pandemic depths.”
This is a market moving report, especially when the deviations from expectations are large, but at this point it’s very unlikely to change anything for the Fed or the market.
This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.