Global Trade Weekly — 2026-06-27
The US and EU are finalizing a landmark trade deal set to take effect before Trump's tariff deadline, with 15% levies on most EU exports and zero tariffs on US industrial goods. Meanwhile, India's Commerce Minister signals a near-complete US trade agreement centered on securing tariff advantages over competitors like China, as Section 301 tariff risks loom large following a Supreme Court setback on IEEPA authority.
Global Trade Weekly — 2026-06-27
Top Stories
EU-US Trade Deal Finalizes Before Trump Deadline
The EU and US have reached a critical milestone on a trade agreement originally struck between President Trump and EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in July 2025. The deal sets 15% tariffs on most EU exports to the United States while offering zero tariffs for US industrial goods entering the 27-nation bloc. The agreement is expected to take effect before Trump's stated deadline, signaling a rare moment of trade stability between two major blocs after months of tariff uncertainty. This represents a negotiated settlement rather than retaliatory escalation.
India Eyes Tariff Advantage in Near-Complete US Trade Deal
India's Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal announced that a bilateral trade agreement with the US is nearly finalized, with negotiations focused on securing tariff advantages over competitors like China and Vietnam. Goyal emphasized that the deal's success hinges on India gaining preferential tariff treatment, positioning New Delhi to benefit from the ongoing US trade reorientation. Teams from both countries are fine-tuning remaining details ahead of anticipated implementation. This deal reflects the Trump administration's strategy of negotiating country-specific arrangements as leverage to reshape global supply chains away from China.
Section 301 Tariffs Risk Return to Pre-IEEPA Levels Following Supreme Court Shock
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has warned that Section 301 tariffs on India and other nations are poised to revert to their original levels after a Supreme Court decision struck down the administration's use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose tariffs. The IEEPA tariffs on India were previously reduced from 25% to 18% in February, days before the Court invalidated the legal authority. Bessent's warning signals potential tariff increases for India and dozens of other trading partners unless new Congressional or executive action intervenes.
Tariff & Sanctions Tracker
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US, 60 economies: Forced labor–based Section 301 tariffs at 10–12.5% under review; USTR determined all 60 major trading partners failed adequate forced labor prohibition enforcement. Effective date pending implementation.
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US–Iran: Sanctions relief phased approach via 14-point Memorandum of Understanding signed; US and Iran outline gradual sanctions reduction framework. Effective date: June 2026 (implementation ongoing).
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EU–US: 15% tariff rate on most EU exports; 0% on US industrial goods. Effective date: before end of June 2026.
By the Numbers
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Intra-ASEAN Trade Growth: Intra-ASEAN trade increased by more than 7% in 2024 after declining in 2023, signaling regional integration strength under RCEP framework. At current trajectory, RCEP has potential to lift 27 million additional people to middle-class status by 2035.
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Global Tariff Impact: The 2026 Trump tariffs amount to an average tax increase per US household of approximately $700 and have not meaningfully altered the US trade deficit.
Regional Spotlight
ASEAN and RCEP: Building Trade Resilience Beyond the Western Axis
As US-EU-China trade tensions dominate headlines, the Asia-Pacific region is quietly strengthening its own trade architecture. The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP)—binding 15 nations including China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and all ASEAN members—is showing tangible results, with intra-ASEAN trade rebounding sharply to 7%+ growth in 2024. Meanwhile, the EU is exploring new FTA agreements in Southeast Asia, with Malaysia negotiations potentially finalizing in 2026–2027. This two-pronged strategy—RCEP deepening intra-regional links while ASEAN opens to non-Chinese partnerships—demonstrates how middle-income economies are hedging against great-power tariff wars by diversifying trade relationships. RCEP's demonstrated ability to maintain growth amid global protectionism underscores why the bloc now represents the world's largest trade agreement by GDP.

What to Watch Next Week
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US Section 301 Tariff Reversion Risk: Monitor whether Congress or the White House moves to reinstate IEEPA tariff authority or authorize tariffs via alternative legal mechanisms. Treasury guidance on implementation timeline expected imminently.
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India-US Trade Deal Finalization: Negotiations teams reportedly in final detail-refinement phase; announcement of finalized agreement and effective date could come as early as late June or early July 2026.
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EU-US Trade Deal Commencement: Official implementation date confirmation and tariff collection protocols to be announced; watch for any last-minute challenges or delayed rollout.
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G7 Trade Ministers Meeting (if scheduled): Continued coordination on tariff policy responses, forced labor enforcement standards, and coordinated responses to unilateral US actions expected in advanced economies' forums.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This week marks a potential turning point in the 2026 trade landscape—away from pure protectionist escalation toward negotiated bilateralism, though legal uncertainty over Section 301 authority remains a critical wildcard for dozens of trading partners.
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