The U.S. Supreme Court Strikes Down Donald Trump’s Tariffs

The ruling by the nation’s highest court marks a major setback for the White House, which had relied on that legal mechanism to justify sweeping tariffs on imported goods.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday struck down the broad tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump under a law originally designed for national emergencies, in a decision that curbs the scope of executive power and is set to have direct repercussions on the global economy.

The ruling represents a significant blow to the administration, which had used emergency powers as the legal foundation for large-scale import levies. The statute was intended for exceptional situations tied to national security, but was repurposed by the Trump administration as a central pillar of its trade policy.

A blow to the trade war

Since the start of his second term, Trump had made tariffs a strategic tool of both economic policy and international negotiation. They became the backbone of a renewed phase of the trade war, straining relations with traditional allies and deepening fragmentation in global trade.

The Court’s decision challenges one of the broadest interpretations the White House had made of its commercial authority. In practical terms, it could force the government to dismantle part of the existing tariff framework or redesign it using alternative legal instruments.

Over recent months, the tariffs had weighed on financial markets, disrupted supply chains, and influenced investment decisions worldwide. They also created uncertainty for U.S. companies dependent on imported inputs, many of which passed higher costs on to consumers.

Fiscal and economic impact

The tariff regime was projected to generate trillions of dollars in revenue for the United States over the coming decade—funds the administration framed as a way to strengthen public finances and reduce debt.

That outlook is now under review. Beyond the legal debate, the ruling introduces a broader economic reset: it could ease pressure on importers and consumers, while opening a period of regulatory transition if the executive branch seeks to replace the tariffs with other trade instruments.

Global repercussions

The decision extends far beyond U.S. domestic policy. The global economy had already adjusted expectations around Washington’s hardening trade stance, with strategic partners, emerging markets, and major industrial exporters recalibrating trade flows in response to the tariff structure.

Now, the Supreme Court’s ruling reshapes that landscape. While it does not necessarily signal the end of protectionist policy, it draws a clear institutional boundary on the use of extraordinary powers to redefine trade policy—introducing a new phase of uncertainty and potential realignment in global commerce.

Snapchat Tops $1B in Revenue Despite Instagram and TikTok Dominance

Snap Inc., the company behind Snapchat, has reached a major milestone in its diversification strategy: its direct-revenue business has surpassed $1 billion in annualized revenue, driven primarily by the growth of its premium subscription service, Snapchat+.

A picture taken on October 1, 2019 in Lille shows the logo of mobile app Snapchat displayed on a tablet. (Photo by DENIS CHARLET / AFP) (Photo by DENIS CHARLET/AFP via Getty Images)

The achievement comes amid intense competition from platforms like Instagram and TikTok, which continue to dominate user engagement and advertising markets, putting pressure on Snap’s traditional ad-based model.

According to the company, its direct-revenue portfolio—covering subscriptions, in-app purchases, and premium tools—now includes more than 25 million paying users.

A Strategic Shift Away from Advertising

This milestone reflects Snap’s broader effort to reduce dependence on advertising and build more stable, recurring revenue streams based on direct user monetization.

Launched in 2022, Snapchat+ has become the core growth engine, offering exclusive features such as advanced customization, early access to new tools, and digital identity elements designed to deepen engagement among power users. The company reports steady quarterly growth in subscriptions, positioning it as one of the fastest-growing premium consumer services in the social media sector.

Competing in a Tough Market

The shift is especially significant as Snap faces structural challenges: larger rivals command greater advertising scale and resources, while some brands continue to reduce spending on smaller platforms.

Looking ahead, Snap plans to expand its monetization model further by enabling creators to generate recurring income from followers through new subscription tools expected to begin testing in 2026.

Growth with Pressure Points

Despite progress in monetization, challenges remain. Daily active users rose 5% year-on-year to 474 million in the last quarter, but declined versus the previous period—highlighting competitive pressure on engagement.

Still, the company points to a 28% annual increase in active advertisers and the rapid expansion of paid products as evidence that its business model is becoming more diversified, resilient, and less dependent on cyclical ad markets.

Argentine ADRs Jump Up to 7% on Wall Street on Labor Reform Optimism

In a session shaped by the congressional vote on labor reform, Argentine assets traded unevenly: equities rallied, while bonds moved lower.

Argentina’s president Javier Milei gestures as he delivers his inaugural speech.

Markets were selective on Thursday, driven by negotiations over the labor reform bill in Congress and a nationwide strike. Moving against the S&P 500 and broader global markets, Argentina’s dollar-denominated S&P Merval posted its best session of February. However, dollar bonds declined and country risk remained above 520 basis points.

The Chamber of Deputies is voting this afternoon on a controversial labor reform proposal promoted by President Javier Milei, which triggered a 24-hour general strike called by opposition groups. The government is positioning itself to secure approval of the reform and move forward with labor market liberalization.

The bill, which was approved by the Senate last week, is expected to be amended in the lower house—requiring a final ratification by the Senate. The reform has the backing of the ruling coalition and allied blocs. Against this backdrop, the S&P Merval rose 4.3%, rebounding from a 3.3% drop in the previous session, which had reflected adjustments after the long Carnival holiday that kept markets closed earlier in the week. Its dollar-denominated counterpart also climbed 4.3%.

Local equities posted gains of up to 6.7%, led by Grupo Supervielle, followed by Grupo Financiero Galicia (+6.5%) and Sociedad Comercial del Plata (+5.7%). On the downside, Aluar fell 2.9%.

Argentine ADRs in New York also advanced broadly, rising as much as 7%, driven by Grupo Supervielle and Banco Macro, followed by Grupo Financiero Galicia (+6.4%) and Pampa Energía (+4.7%).

Bonds and Country Risk

Dollar-denominated bonds traded lower, with losses of up to 1.3% led by the Bonar 2041 and Bonar 2038 (-1%). In this context, country risk hovered around 524 basis points. The market is still waiting for signals that would allow a renewed convergence of Argentina’s yields toward regional levels.

 

Mexican Peso Weakens Against the Dollar for Second Straight Session

The peso fell for a second consecutive session as markets digested the monetary policy outlook in both Mexico and the United States, following the release of minutes from their respective central banks.

The Mexican peso weakened against the dollar in Thursday’s trading, extending its decline for a second day in a market adjusting to shifting monetary policy expectations on both sides of the border.

The exchange rate closed at 17.2768 pesos per dollar, compared with 17.2319 the previous session, according to official data from the central bank, representing a depreciation of 4.49 centavos, or 0.26%.

During the session, the dollar traded in a range between a high of 17.3013 and a low of 17.1929 pesos. The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, rose 0.17% to 97.91.

[[USD/MXN-graph]]

Banxico minutes

Minutes from the latest monetary policy meeting showed that Mexico’s central bank—after pausing its long rate-cutting cycle last month—identified temporary inflationary pressures stemming from new taxes and tariffs on Chinese imports.

While policymakers noted that the impact of these measures on prices has so far been “limited and localized,” the minutes also highlighted uncertainty regarding the speed and magnitude of the pass-through of higher tariffs to consumer prices.

A hawkish Fed

At the same time, the exchange rate continues to absorb the message from the U.S. Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee minutes, which showed a near-unanimous decision to pause rate cuts and explicitly mentioned the risk of rate hikes should inflation stall.

The combination of a more hawkish Fed and Mexico’s domestic reform agenda creates a challenging environment for the peso, despite the structural support provided by the country’s export sector.

Data and geopolitics

Investors also digested fresh U.S. economic data, including weekly jobless claims. New filings totaled 206,000 last week, below expectations of 223,000 and the prior week’s 229,000.

On the geopolitical front, some analysts linked the dollar’s strength to rising concerns over the possibility of a military conflict between the United States and Iran.

Looking ahead, the peso is expected to hold support in the 17.20–17.27 range. If the Fed maintains a restrictive tone and uncertainty surrounding the review of the USMCA deepens, the dollar could test levels around 17.35–17.42.

Big Tech Drags Wall Street Lower

Investors continue to digest the latest minutes from the Federal Reserve meeting, while assessing new U.S. labor market data.

The Nasdaq Composite is in decline as tech stocks sell off this week.
The Nasdaq Composite is in decline as tech stocks sell off this week.

Wall Street’s three major indexes are trading lower on Thursday morning. Big tech stocks are capping recent rebounds amid expectations of higher interest rates, while Walmart shares react to strong quarterly earnings.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which tracks 30 blue-chip companies, is down 0.42% at 49,455.34 points. The S&P 500, representing the most valuable U.S. companies, falls 0.24% to 6,865.09, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite declines 0.13% to 22,723.18.

[[SPX-graph]]

Large technology stocks, which had begun to recover in recent sessions after several difficult weeks, are sliding again after the Fed minutes pointed to the possibility of further rate hikes due to persistent inflation. The minutes revealed a lack of consensus on the future path of monetary policy, reflecting a broader tension between supporting the labor market and curbing inflation.

In this context, weekly U.S. jobless claims released this morning signaled continued labor market strength, with 206,000 filings last week—below expectations of 223,000 and down from 229,000 the previous week.

Walmart shares (-0.24%) are slightly lower after gaining more than 2% at the open. The company, which this year became the first retailer to surpass a $1 trillion market capitalization, reported earnings that exceeded analysts’ expectations.

If you want, I can also adapt it into a shorter wire-style version (Bloomberg/Reuters format) or a headline + lead format.

Bitcoin Falls to $66,000 as Fed Signals Weigh on Sentiment

Altcoins also came under pressure as investors pulled back from risk, extending losses across the crypto market.

Bitcoin may be headed much lower in the coming weeks.
Bitcoin may be headed much lower in the coming weeks.

The cryptocurrency market is trading in negative territory. Bitcoin fell 1.9% to $66,195.61, continuing to struggle to regain momentum amid negative signals from both the Federal Reserve and investors. Ethereum declined 2.6% to $1,933.27, while the broader altcoin market followed the same trend: Ripple (XRP) dropped 4.6%, BNB fell 2.2%, and Solana (SOL) retreated 3.4%.

Bitcoin has been trading on low volumes, reflecting investor uncertainty ahead of key U.S. macroeconomic data and the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate outlook. Minutes from the Fed’s January meeting revealed growing internal divisions over the long-term path of interest rates and inflation, with some officials even suggesting that further rate hikes could be necessary if inflation persists.

[[BTC/USD-graph]]

The minutes also showed disagreement over the economic impact of artificial intelligence, reinforcing a shift toward the U.S. dollar following their release.

Additional pressure came from political developments, after U.S. President Donald Trump nominated former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh as the new Federal Reserve chair, raising concerns that future monetary policy could be less flexible and less supportive of risk assets.

Corporate signals also weighed on sentiment. Strategy Inc, the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, stated it is positioned to withstand a price drop as low as $8,000 per coin. The company disclosed that it purchased 2,486 Bitcoin for $168.4 million last week, raising its total holdings to 717,131 BTC, at an average purchase price of $67,710 per coin.

Looking ahead, markets are focused on the upcoming release of the U.S. PCE price index—the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge—which is expected to provide further signals on the future direction of interest rates and risk appetite across global markets.

Nvidia and Amazon Lead Wall Street Rebound as Markets Focus on the Fed

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq advanced, driven by AI-linked technology stocks, as markets reassessed valuations after recent volatility.

Nasdaq is near its high point after Nvidia and other tech stocks soared.
Nasdaq is near its high point after Nvidia and other tech stocks soared.

Minutes from the Federal Reserve showed broad consensus to hold rates steady, though divisions remain over the next policy steps.

Wall Street’s main indexes closed higher on Wednesday, led by a rebound in major artificial intelligence names after weeks of market caution. The S&P 500 rose 37.05 points (+0.56%) to 6,880.27, the Nasdaq Composite gained 170.88 points (+0.76%) to 22,749.27, and the Dow Jones added 123.44 points (+0.25%) to 49,656.63.

[[SPX-graph]]

Nvidia sets the pace

The rally was led by Nvidia, which extended its gains after announcing a multi-year agreement to sell millions of current and next-generation AI chips to Meta Platforms. The deal reinforced expectations that structural demand for AI infrastructure will remain strong, despite recent concerns over stretched valuations and the timeline for monetization.

Amazon and Microsoft also moved higher, while data storage companies such as Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate Technology maintained a positive tone, consolidating gains driven by the AI investment boom.

The rebound marks a contrast with early-month weakness, when AI-related stocks pulled back amid fears that valuations had become excessively demanding.

Fed on hold, but uncertainty remains

Markets also digested the minutes from the January 27–28 meeting of the Federal Reserve, which showed near-unanimous agreement to keep interest rates unchanged. However, the document revealed internal اختلافات over the future path of monetary policy.

According to the CME FedWatch tool, traders currently assign around a 50% probability to at least a 25-basis-point rate cut at the June meeting.

For now, markets remain in a delicate balance: the structural momentum of artificial intelligence continues to support risk appetite, while inflation and labor market data will determine whether the Fed begins easing policy in the middle of the year. Technology stocks reclaimed leadership, allowing major indexes to close in positive territory as investors continue to search for clearer signals on the central bank’s next move.

Bank of America Names Argentina as its Top Pick in Latin America.

In its latest Emerging Markets report, Bank of America said it is overweight U.S.-dollar sovereign bonds and maintains Argentina as its top investment opportunity, arguing that a return to international markets could trigger a “virtuous circle” of declining yields.

Argentina’s president Javier Milei gestures as he delivers his inaugural speech.

In its weekly Global Emerging Markets outlook, the bank reaffirmed its overweight position in Argentina’s external sovereign bonds, noting that current yields remain high relative to the country’s credit rating and that future credit upgrades are likely. BofA highlighted Argentina’s sharp disinflation, the government’s strong commitment to fiscal balance, high willingness to service external debt, and the implementation of an ambitious microeconomic and deregulation reform agenda as key drivers behind its positive view.

The bank added that bond yields are approaching levels that could make market re-access feasible. However, it also flagged risks, including global risk aversion, low international reserves, potential fiscal slippage through legislation, governance challenges in Congress, declining presidential popularity amid economic pressures, and social unrest. Risks that have recently eased include support from the United States Treasury, improved fiscal discipline, upcoming eurobond repayments, rising reserves, stronger political alliances, and progress on structural reforms.

Latin America positioning

BofA said it remains interested in receiving Brazilian bonds and maintaining short positions in USD/BRL, while in Mexico it favors high-quality bonds, expecting more rate cuts than currently priced in. In Argentina, it prefers local BONCER bonds due to favorable real yield dynamics. In Chile, it maintains a constructive view on the currency but has closed its receiver position, citing limited room for further rate cuts and the risk of future hikes.

“Externally, Argentina remains our top pick, as regaining market access should trigger a virtuous cycle in which lower yields reinforce further declines in yields,” the report concluded.

What were Warren Buffett’s Final Moves at Berkshire Hathaway Before His Retirement?

Company filings revealed the investments and portfolio adjustments made by the legendary investor.

NEW YORK, NY – SEPTEMBER 19: Philanthropist Warren Buffett is joined onstage by 24 other philanthropist and influential business people featured on the Forbes list of 100 Greatest Business Minds during the Forbes Media Centennial Celebration at Pier 60 on September 19, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Daniel Zuchnik/WireImage)

Berkshire Hathaway released its regulatory filings for the fourth quarter of 2025, revealing Warren Buffett’s final strategic moves ahead of his retirement. The billionaire stepped down as CEO on December 31, 2025, closing the year with significant reallocations and new investments that reshaped the direction of the company.

The portfolio reached a value of $274.16 billion, spread across 42 positions, combining long-standing core holdings with new exposure to media and technology companies. Apple remained the largest position at 22.60%, followed by American Express (20.46%) and Bank of America (10.38%).

The holding company is now entering a new chapter under Greg Abel, marking a major leadership transition. The portfolio is being repositioned for a market increasingly shaped by technology, artificial intelligence, and the transformation of traditional business models.

Buffett’s Key Purchases in 2025

Berkshire increased its stake in Chevron by 6.63%, bringing it to 7.24% of the portfolio. It also raised holdings in Chubb to 3.90%, and in Domino’s Pizza by 12.34%. Core positions were maintained in Coca-Cola (10.20%) and Occidental Petroleum (3.97%).

The most notable move, however, was Berkshire’s entry into The New York Times. The media group reported adjusted earnings of $0.89 per share, beating expectations of $0.88, and posted revenues of $802.3 million, above the $791.6 million consensus for 2025.

Buffett’s Key Sales in 2025

Berkshire also reduced several major positions. Apple was trimmed by 4.32%, though it remains the portfolio’s largest holding. Exposure to Bank of America was cut by 8.94%, while still representing 10.38% of total investments.

The most aggressive reduction was in Amazon, with a 77.24% cut, equivalent to 7.724 million shares. This comes amid a massive global surge in AI infrastructure spending, which Wall Street analysts estimate could reach $650 billion by 2026.

Other notable moves included a 48.39% reduction in Atlanta Braves Holding, a 12.12% cut in Aon, and an 11.28% reduction in Pool Corp. Berkshire also trimmed positions in DaVita HealthCare Partners (–1.25%), Constellation Brands (–2.99%), and Liberty LiLAC Group (–8.90%).

Nvidia and Meta Form Alliance to Deploy an AI Infrastructure Plan

With results expected by 2027, the technology company aims to benefit from the tools and platforms of the world’s leading AI firm.

Nvidia and Meta closed a gigantic deal.
Nvidia and Meta closed a gigantic deal.

Nvidia and Meta have reached a multi-generation strategic agreement to strengthen artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure across Meta’s operations. The partnership includes Nvidia’s Grace CPUs, the future Vera CPU generation, millions of Blackwell and Rubin GPUs, and the integration of Spectrum-X networking across Meta’s data centers.

Both Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia, and Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, подчеркнули (highlighted) the long-term strategic importance of the deal.

The agreement represents what industry sources describe as a “massive vote of confidence” from Meta toward Nvidia. Meta will become the first major company to deploy Nvidia CPUs as standalone server chips at hyperscale. While the real operational impact is expected to materialize in 2027, Meta’s AI capital expenditure—estimated at around $135 billion this year alone—could translate into hundreds of billions of dollars in long-term value creation.

Key Developments Behind the Nvidia–Meta Deal

Meta will build hyperscale data centers optimized for both AI training and inference, forming part of its long-term infrastructure roadmap. Alongside the large-scale deployment of Grace CPUs, supported by co-development investments and software optimization, Meta is also preparing for the rollout of Vera CPUs, currently projected for 2027.

In parallel, the company will implement Nvidia GB300-based systems and develop a unified architecture integrating Meta’s own data centers with deployments through Nvidia cloud partners, aiming to simplify operations while maximizing performance and scalability.

Another core pillar of the agreement is Spectrum-X Ethernet networking, designed to deliver low-latency, AI-scale connectivity with improved energy efficiency.

In addition, Meta has adopted Nvidia Confidential Computing for private processing on WhatsApp, enabling AI capabilities on the platform while preserving data confidentiality and integrity for users.