The 9 most disruptive deals of Trump's first year back in office | Fortune
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The 9 most disruptive deals of Trump's first year back in office | Fortune
"President Trump lives on deals: "That's what I do-I do deals," he once told Bob Woodward. On the one-year anniversary of his second presidency, he's pushing hard to make his biggest, most disruptive deal ever, one that would bring Greenland under the control of the U.S.-and the global business community is still scrambling to adapt to his approach. Here are nine of Trump's most unorthodox deals from the past year."
"Trump imposes " reciprocal tariffs " on 57 countries, with each tariff understood as an opening bid in a negotiation. Several countries have since made deals. The one-on-one negotiations, unlike the multilateral system of the past 80 years, can be chaotic for companies and economies June 13: U.S. Steel "Golden Share" In return for allowing Nippon Steel to buy U.S. Steel, Trump requires that the U.S. receive several powers over the company, including total power over all the board's independent directors"
President Trump pursued a sequence of unconventional, high-impact deals during the first year of his second presidency to assert U.S. control over strategic assets and sectors. He pushed to bring Greenland under U.S. control and imposed reciprocal tariffs on 57 countries as opening negotiation bids, shifting away from multilateral trade systems. He required a "golden share" for U.S. oversight in the U.S. Steel sale, took a $400 million equity stake in MP Materials with a decadelong purchase contract for rare-earth magnets, reversed an Nvidia chip ban for revenue sharing, restored Columbia funding with extensive applicant data requirements, and prompted an announced Apple investment.
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