In a move that signals shifting trade dynamics, Canada has stepped away from lockstep alignment with the US, announcing Friday that it will slash its 100% tariff on Chinese electric vehicles. The deal? Lower tariffs on Canadian agricultural exports in return. Prime Minister Mark Carney confirmed the development, marking a notable pivot in North American trade policy. The move reflects mounting pressure on Ottawa to find bilateral solutions rather than staying tethered to broader North American trade tensions. For market observers, this signals something important: major economies are increasingly pursuing tailored trade arrangements instead of monolithic blocs. Whether this becomes a template for broader negotiations or remains an isolated case remains to be seen—but it's worth watching how this ripples through global supply chains and investor sentiment.

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TheShibaWhisperervip
· 7h ago
Canada's move this time is really impressive. They've finally stopped following the US and are doing their own thing.
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ZenChainWalkervip
· 7h ago
Canada's recent moves are quite interesting. They're finally not following the US step by step, but instead starting to negotiate with China... Agricultural products for electric vehicles and tariffs—mutual compromise is the way out.
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SerumDegenvip
· 7h ago
ngl this is just the beginning of the bloc fracturing... watch the cascade when other nations smell blood in the water. canada cracking first is the tell-tale liquidation signal nobody's talking about yet
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BlockchainTalkervip
· 7h ago
actually, let's break this down—canada just flipped the script on the whole "we're all in this together" narrative, and tbh it's peak game theory in action. bilaterals > bloc lockstep, empirically speaking this was inevitable once the pressure mounted enough. supply chain fragmentation incoming fr
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MemeKingNFTvip
· 7h ago
Wow, Canada really dares to rebel... How can the on-chain data react so quickly? I knew it, in the game of the rise and fall of Mainland China, the US and Canada simply can't keep the same rhythm, just as I predicted early on.
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InfraVibesvip
· 7h ago
Canada's move... is it considered a conflict with the United States? But then again, it's more realistic for each side to negotiate independently.
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