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China Hits Back with 125% Tariffs on US Imports Amid Escalating Trade Tensions

In a bold move, China has raised tariffs on US imports to a staggering 125%, up from 84%, as a direct response to the Trump administration’s recent 145% tariffs on Chinese goods.

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China Hits Back with 125% Tariffs on US Imports Amid Escalating Trade Tensions

In a bold move, China has raised tariffs on US imports to a staggering 125%, up from 84%, as a direct response to the Trump administration’s recent 145% tariffs on Chinese goods. This tit-for-tat escalation, announced on Friday, April 11, 2025, signals a deepening trade war between the world’s two largest economies. The decision has sent ripples through global markets, raising concerns about supply chain disruptions and economic stability.

Why China Imposed Higher Tariffs

The Chinese Commerce Ministry stated that the new tariffs are a countermeasure to what it calls “unilateral bullying” by the US. Alongside the tariff hike, China has taken its grievances to the World Trade Organization (WTO), filing a lawsuit to challenge the US levies. Beijing also expressed openness to dialogue, emphasizing a desire to resolve the trade dispute through negotiations, though tensions remain high.

This latest move follows a series of retaliatory actions. Earlier this week, China imposed 84% tariffs on US goods after President Trump increased duties on Chinese exports to 125%. The back-and-forth reflects a broader struggle for economic dominance, with both nations unwilling to back down.

Impact on Global Trade

The escalating tariffs are already shaking up global markets. Asian and European stock indices dropped as investors grappled with fears of a prolonged trade war. For consumers and businesses, the higher tariffs could mean pricier goods, disrupted supply chains, and potential economic slowdowns. Industries like manufacturing, agriculture, and technology, which rely heavily on US-China trade, are bracing for the fallout.

China’s finance ministry didn’t hold back, criticizing the US tariffs as a violation of international trade rules. “This is a numbers game that will hurt everyone,” a ministry spokesperson remarked, warning of the broader consequences for global commerce.

What’s Next for US-China Relations?

While China has signaled a willingness to talk, the path to resolution looks rocky. The US has paused tariffs on other countries for 90 days to encourage negotiations, but China was excluded from this reprieve. Beijing’s response—doubling down with higher tariffs and legal action—suggests it’s digging in for a long fight.

As the trade war heats up, all eyes are on how both nations will navigate this high-stakes standoff. Will cooler heads prevail, or are we headed for even more economic turbulence? For now, the world watches and waits.

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B30 cities drive mutual fund surge, account for over half of new SIPs 

The share of B30 in the mutual fund industry’s total AuM now stands at 18 per cent, excluding cash-dominant institutional funds that are largely concentrated in T30 cities. Equity Assets under Management (AuM) in B30 cities have also kept pace with those in T30 metros, growing at a CAGR of 46 per cent over the same period. This has enabled B30 cities to retain a 26 per cent share of the overall equity AuM of the mutual fund industry.
Tier-II and III cities, collectively referred to as B30 locations, are emerging as the growth engine of India’s mutual fund industry, according to a recent report released by CAMS at the 18th Mutual Fund Summit held by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). As of January 2025, B30 cities accounted for 56 per cent of all new SIP registrations, up from 49 per cent in FY23, marking a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 64 per cent.
The CAMS report suggests that the momentum in B30 locations is driven by sachet-sized SIPs, rising digital adoption, and widening access to financial advisory services. Locations beyond the top 10 B30 cities are witnessing faster growth, underscoring the potential of deeper penetration across smaller towns.
Age-wise segmentation shows that investors aged 20–40 years make up 56 per cent of the B30 investor base, signalling increasing interest from the younger demographic. Furthermore, 74 per cent of B30 investors are focused solely on equity schemes, with another 24 per cent diversifying across multiple asset classes.
The report, titled “B30 Locations – Performance & Potential”, draws from data sourced from CAMS MFDEx, which covers around 98 per cent of the mutual fund industry’s AuM. The report indicates that the B30 investor base now stands at around 2 crore, accounting for 58 per cent of the total first-holder investor base serviced by CAMS.
Speaking about the report, Rishi Kumar Bagla, Chairman, CII Western Region, said, “The report is a testament to the success of regulatory foresight and collaborative industry efforts. It’s encouraging to witness Bharat investing confidently, backed by access, awareness, and advisory.”
The data also points to a diversification trend among B30 investors. The proportion of investors with exposure to more than four mutual fund schemes rose from 20 per cent in March 2023 to 22 per cent in January 2025. Additionally, 47 per cent of B30 investors are now investing through more than one fund house, suggesting a maturing investment approach.
Retail participation continues to lead growth. Gross inflows into equity schemes from B30 locations have more than doubled over two years, growing from ₹1.3 lakh crore in FY23 to ₹2.7 lakh crore in FY25 (till January). Distributors such as mutual fund distributors (MFDs) and registered investment advisors (RIAs) have seen significant traction, with RIA-led SIP registrations increasing nearly four-fold during this period.
Published on April 15, 2025

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Age-wise segmentation shows that investors aged 20–40 years make up 56 per cent of the B30 investor base, signalling increasing interest from the younger demographic. Furthermore, 74 per cent of B30 investors are focused solely on equity schemes, with another 24 per cent diversifying across multiple asset classes.
The data also points to a diversification trend among B30 investors. The proportion of investors with exposure to more than four mutual fund schemes rose from 20 per cent in March 2023 to 22 per cent in January 2025. Additionally, 47 per cent of B30 investors are now investing through more than one fund house, suggesting a maturing investment approach.
Tier-II and III cities, collectively referred to as B30 locations, are emerging as the growth engine of India’s mutual fund industry, according to a recent report released by CAMS at the 18th Mutual Fund Summit held by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). As of January 2025, B30 cities accounted for 56 per cent of all new SIP registrations, up from 49 per cent in FY23, marking a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 64 per cent.
Published on April 15, 2025 Retail participation continues to lead growth. Gross inflows into equity schemes from B30 locations have more than doubled over two years, growing from ₹1.3 lakh crore in FY23 to ₹2.7 lakh crore in FY25 (till January). Distributors such as mutual fund distributors (MFDs) and registered investment advisors (RIAs) have seen significant traction, with RIA-led SIP registrations increasing nearly four-fold during this period.
Speaking about the report, Rishi Kumar Bagla, Chairman, CII Western Region, said, “The report is a testament to the success of regulatory foresight and collaborative industry efforts. It’s encouraging to witness Bharat investing confidently, backed by access, awareness, and advisory.”
The share of B30 in the mutual fund industry’s total AuM now stands at 18 per cent, excluding cash-dominant institutional funds that are largely concentrated in T30 cities. Equity Assets under Management (AuM) in B30 cities have also kept pace with those in T30 metros, growing at a CAGR of 46 per cent over the same period. This has enabled B30 cities to retain a 26 per cent share of the overall equity AuM of the mutual fund industry.
The CAMS report suggests that the momentum in B30 locations is driven by sachet-sized SIPs, rising digital adoption, and widening access to financial advisory services. Locations beyond the top 10 B30 cities are witnessing faster growth, underscoring the potential of deeper penetration across smaller towns.
The report, titled “B30 Locations – Performance & Potential”, draws from data sourced from CAMS MFDEx, which covers around 98 per cent of the mutual fund industry’s AuM. The report indicates that the B30 investor base now stands at around 2 crore, accounting for 58 per cent of the total first-holder investor base serviced by CAMS.

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Belgium Responds to Extradition Request, Apprehends Mehul Choksi

The long-running Punjab National Bank (PNB) scam, which began in 2011, unraveled when bank officials demanded full margin money for issuing new Letters of Undertaking (LOUs). This raised suspicions, leading to an investigation after companies linked to Mehul Choksi and his nephew Nirav Modi admitted to securing LOUs without collateral. On Saturday, Belgian police detained […]

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Image courtesy by ANI

The long-running Punjab National Bank (PNB) scam, which began in 2011, unraveled when bank officials demanded full margin money for issuing new Letters of Undertaking (LOUs). This raised suspicions, leading to an investigation after companies linked to Mehul Choksi and his nephew Nirav Modi admitted to securing LOUs without collateral. On Saturday, Belgian police detained Choksi following an extradition request from India’s Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and Enforcement Directorate (ED), according to PTI.

Choksi, a key figure in the Rs 13,000 crore PNB loan fraud, has been evading authorities for seven years. He gained Antigua citizenship in 2019 and recently traveled to Belgium for medical treatment. His lawyer, Vijay Agarwal, confirmed the arrest, stating that Mehul Choksi is battling cancer and is “extremely unwell.” Agarwal plans to appeal the detention, arguing that Choksi is not a flight risk and should be allowed to fight the extradition while receiving treatment, rather than remaining in custody.

The scam involved fraudulent LOUs issued in violation of Reserve Bank of India guidelines, enabling shell companies to secure overseas credit for Choksi and Modi’s diamond businesses. Choksi, who transformed his family’s diamond trade into a well-known brand with Gitanjali Gems, faces multiple charges alongside Modi. In 2018, a case was filed against him, followed by chargesheets. By 2022, five additional criminal cases accused Choksi and others of defrauding banks and financial institutions. The ED has also seized assets worth Rs 2,500 crore as part of its probe.

Meanwhile, Nirav Modi, Choksi’s co-accused, has been imprisoned in the UK since 2019, with repeated bail denials. India continues to press for Modi’s extradition, raising the issue at the highest levels with UK authorities.

Choksi’s arrest marks a significant step in the PNB fraud investigation, bringing renewed focus to one of India’s largest banking scandals.

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The dollar is set to maintain its dominance.

But yes, this could hurt. Despite Trump, China also doesn’t enjoy the trust that the US enjoys — which Trump might be destroying. Published on April 13, 2025 And the dollar remained invincible. That’s the point to grasp.To fix the European problem Richard Nixon, a Republican president, went off the gold standard in 1971. By […]

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But yes, this could hurt. Despite Trump, China also doesn’t enjoy the trust that the US enjoys — which Trump might be destroying.

Published on April 13, 2025 And the dollar remained invincible. That’s the point to grasp.To fix the European problem Richard Nixon, a Republican president, went off the gold standard in 1971. By the mid-1970s Europe had lost its advantage which it still has not recovered.The only difference is that it was Europe and Japan which were the villains then and it’s China that’s the villain now. Europe exported more to the US between 1950 and 1970 than it imported — it still does — and found itself with a massive cache of dollars, called Eurodollars. Japan between 1970 and 1990 did the same and also accumulated huge reserves.Even in the 1970s, after America had refused to honour its pledge to give a troy ounce of gold for , there had been the same squeals of indignation and forecasts of apocalypse. All that happened was volatility in the financial markets and petrodollars replaced the Eurodollars. That’s when the Middle East became rich.

All things considered China doesn’t have the ‘comprehensive power’ depth that’s needed to take on the US. I think the deal Trump will offer is that the Pacific is yours but that’s all you get. Agree, and I will reduce tariffs to 10 per cent.Donald Trump’s trade policy has drawn two types of comments. One deserves to be rejected and the other requires closer scrutiny.In their place came China as the leading exporter to the US. Like Europe between 1950-70 and Japan between 1955-85 it, too, was facilitated by the US. So the idea that Trump doesn’t want the dollar to be the reserve currency by engineering a trade surplus for America is completely ludicrous. It could and has depreciated. But that’s temporary. By 1992, just as the the Europeans had bitten the dust by 1980, the Japanese economy also went into a stagnant phase. Neither Europe nor Japan have recovered even now.

The comments to be rejected are politically inspired, that he is trying to manipulate the financial markets so that someone can make money.

This is plain silly. His close friend Elon Musk has actually lost more than billion.International economics bloomed. Many papers and books were written. Some economists even won the ‘Nobel’ prize. But when all the commercial and academic dust had settled down, there the dollar was, as the safe haven currency of the world.

The other set of comments is about economics, that Trump is trying to devalue the dollar so that American exports become competitive. The simple answer to this is that a global reserve currency is, by definition, one that requires trade deficits.In 1985, Ronald Reagan, another Republican president, forced two things on Japan. He ‘persuaded’ the Japanese to accept voluntary export restraints to limit the numbers of Japanese food entering the US.

The other thing was known as the Plaza Accord that ‘persuaded’ Japan to revalue its currency vis-a-vis the dollar.We in India, meanwhile, should be wondering, like Kalia in Sholay, what’s going to be our fate. “Ab tera kya hoga, Kaliye”.In the end, the point is this: if you had to choose between America and China, who would you choose? And that’s the trillion dollar question: the Communist Party of China or America?Public memory may be short but I had thought economists would have somewhat longer memories. But apparently not, because they have forgotten what happened in the four decades from 1950 to 1990.The simple truth is this: what’s happening now is a replay of those years, namely, huge American budget and trade deficits accompanied by massive accumulation of dollars outside American control.

US or China?

A legitimate question today is if America has the same leverage with China as it did with Europe and Japan because it provided military security to both. And the obvious answer is no. China is a military adversary.When the US whipped them, Europeans responded by expanding their economic union both in trade and monetarily. The EU and the euro were the result eventually. The Japanese didn’t even try. They just rolled over.It then bit the hand that fed it. So now it is its turn to be hit. But will history repeat itself a third time? We will have to wait and see.What can China do? It has tried RCEP, an Asian trading block. It has tried an Asian infrastructure investment bank. It has tried to promote the yuan as the global reserve currency, directly and via BRICS. It’s pretending it’s on a par with the US on technology — via memes. It will blackmail the US via its control of rare earths but that control has now reduced.

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