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EU Weighs ‘Trade Bazooka’ as France Signals Readiness to Counter New U.S. Tariffs

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France signaled the EU is prepared to deploy its most powerful trade defenses, including the anti-coercion “trade bazooka”, if Washington’s new 10% global tariff escalates into a broader confrontation.


A fresh transatlantic trade confrontation is taking shape after President Donald Trump imposed a flat 10% global tariff, prompting France to warn that the European Union is prepared to use its most forceful economic countermeasures if necessary.

French Trade Minister Nicolas Forissier told the Financial Times that Paris is coordinating with EU partners and the European Commission to assess the U.S. move.

“Should it become necessary, the EU has the appropriate instruments at its disposal,” he said.

The tariff decision followed a ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States that many of Trump’s earlier duties, imposed under emergency economic powers, were illegal. While the judgment curtailed part of the administration’s prior trade strategy, the new 10% levy signals a recalibration rather than a retreat.

At the center of Brussels’ response calculus is the Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI), a mechanism designed to deter or counter economic pressure from third countries. Informally dubbed the “trade bazooka,” the ACI is broader and more flexible than conventional tariff retaliation.

Unlike traditional countermeasures that target goods trade, the ACI allows the EU to act across services, investment, and public procurement. Options include:

  • Tariffs on services, including digital and financial services.
  • Restrictions on market access or licensing.
  • Export controls.
  • Limitations on foreign direct investment.
  • Exclusion of foreign firms from EU public procurement contracts.

French officials indicated that U.S. technology companies could be among those affected if the instrument were activated. That prospect materially shifts the balance of leverage. While the EU runs a goods trade surplus with the U.S., the United States enjoys a significant surplus in services — particularly in technology, digital platforms, and financial services. Any retaliation in those areas would strike at sectors where American firms are highly competitive.

Suspended Tariff Arsenal

Beyond the ACI, the EU maintains a suspended package of retaliatory tariffs covering more than €90 billion ($106 billion) worth of U.S. goods. Originally assembled during earlier disputes over steel, aluminum, and industrial subsidies, that list can be reactivated swiftly.

The products on that roster were chosen not only for economic weight but also for political resonance — a hallmark of EU trade strategy, which often calibrates retaliation to maximize domestic pressure in the opposing country.

The existence of both the ACI and the suspended tariff list gives Brussels layered escalation pathways, from symbolic signaling to systemic economic countermeasures.

French President Emmanuel Macron addressed the developments at the annual agricultural salon in Paris. Referring to the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on earlier tariffs, he said, “It is not bad to have a Supreme Court and, therefore, the rule of law. It is good to have power and counterweights to power in democracies.”

Macron’s remarks subtly underscored a broader point: institutional constraints matter in trade governance. At the same time, he emphasized reciprocity as the guiding principle for France and the EU, adding that Europe should not be “subjected to unilateral decisions.”

France’s economic exposure is significant as the United States is a major destination for French agricultural products, luxury goods, fashion, and aeronautical exports. These sectors are not easily substitutable in global markets, making tariff increases economically sensitive.

Legal Reconfiguration in Washington

The Supreme Court’s recent ruling limited the administration’s ability to rely on certain emergency statutes to impose tariffs. However, it did not eliminate presidential authority to levy duties under other trade laws. The new 10% global tariff appears to be grounded in alternative statutory mechanisms, underscoring how executive trade powers can be restructured within constitutional boundaries.

From Brussels’ perspective, this legal pivot complicates strategy. The EU must assess whether the tariff is temporary, negotiable, or a durable policy shift. The degree of permanence will influence whether the EU opts for immediate retaliation or extended negotiations.

The U.S. and EU are each other’s largest trading partners when goods and services are combined. Integrated supply chains mean that tariffs can ripple through manufacturing networks, aerospace production, pharmaceuticals, and advanced technology sectors.

A broad 10% U.S. tariff raises costs for European exporters and could compress margins or redirect trade flows. Retaliation targeting U.S. services could, in turn, disrupt transatlantic investment and digital operations.

Financial markets tend to view transatlantic trade friction as a macro risk factor, particularly when combined with currency volatility or divergent monetary policy. Escalation could weigh on business confidence and capital expenditure decisions.

Strategic Autonomy vs. Managed Interdependence

The episode also intersects with Europe’s push for “strategic autonomy” — reducing vulnerability to external economic pressure while maintaining open markets. The ACI was conceived precisely to counter what Brussels describes as coercive trade practices.

Activating it against Washington would be politically significant. It would mark the first major use of the instrument against a longstanding ally, signaling that the EU is willing to defend its economic sovereignty even within traditional partnerships.

At the same time, EU leaders are aware that a full-scale trade confrontation would undermine growth at a moment when Europe faces structural economic headwinds, including energy transition costs and industrial competitiveness challenges.

Brussels’ messaging suggests a dual-track approach: preparedness paired with restraint. The language from Paris emphasizes capability rather than inevitability. By highlighting the ACI publicly, France increases negotiating leverage without immediately deploying countermeasures.

The coming weeks will likely focus on whether diplomatic channels can narrow differences. If talks stall and the 10% tariff remains in place, the EU may escalate incrementally — beginning with reactivating suspended tariffs before considering broader service-sector measures.

Implications of China’s Explicit Classification of Real World Assets 

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China has recently officially defined Real-World Asset tokenization and banned it for the private sector – it has created an exception for it on “state approved infrastructure.”

Faisal Monai, CEO of droppRWA, posits that Beijing is clearly interested in RWA tokenization, and wants to execute it at the state level. “What most coverage is missing is that China didn’t actually ban tokenization. They banned private tokenization.

The notice explicitly carves out an exception for activity conducted on state approved financial infrastructure. That’s a very deliberate distinction. Beijing is saying what a lot of governments are thinking but haven’t said publicly yet, real world assets on public, permissionless chains is a non-starter for sovereign economies.

The only version of this that works is state controlled, sovereign-native infrastructure. The interesting comparison is Saudi Arabia, which reached the same conclusion from the opposite direction. Instead of locking down first and figuring out the infrastructure later, the Kingdom went straight to building it, integrating tokenization directly into the national property registry and executing live sovereign transactions.

And critically, they’re inviting the private sector to build on top of that infrastructure, not shutting them out. The state owns the rails, but technology companies, banks, FinTech and PropTech firms are welcome to build services on them.

China is closing the door to private participation. Saudi Arabia is holding it open on sovereign terms. Singapore, Hong Kong, the UAE, are all advancing regulated frameworks and supervised pilots. But the jurisdictions that will actually define this market aren’t the ones testing in sandboxes.

They’re the ones putting national infrastructure into production. That’s where this is heading and China’s notice just made it harder to argue otherwise. The notice provides China’s first explicit regulatory definition of RWA tokenization.

It describes it as the use of cryptographic technology, distributed ledger technology or similar technologies to convert ownership rights, income rights, or other asset-related rights into tokens or token-like rights, equity, or debt instruments for issuance and trading.

Unlicensed or unapproved RWA tokenization activities conducted within mainland China—including issuance, trading, intermediary services, and related technical and IT support—are classified as illegal financial activities. This includes risks like unauthorized securities offerings, illegal fundraising, or operating securities and futures businesses without approval.

In practice, this effectively prohibits private sector players from engaging in decentralized or unlicensed RWA tokenization onshore, aligning with China’s long-standing strict stance against unregulated crypto-like activities. The policy is not a blanket ban on all tokenization. It explicitly allows exceptions when activities are: Approved by competent authorities.

Conducted through designated (regulated) financial infrastructure. This carves out space for state-supervised or licensed implementations, often interpreted as separating “compliant” RWA within traditional finance rails from decentralized/private crypto-style versions.

Onshore entities face strict vetting and compliance requirements for offshore issuance of tokenized assets backed by Chinese onshore assets. Unapproved offshore RMB-linked stablecoins are also banned, and foreign entities are prohibited from illegally providing RWA services to domestic parties.

This move extends China’s 2021 crypto ban which targeted virtual currencies, trading, and mining to explicitly cover tokenized real-world assets, while distinguishing RWA from pure cryptocurrencies which remain fully prohibited.

Some analysts view it as a “milestone” that brings RWA into a clearer regulatory framework rather than leaving it in a gray area—potentially enabling controlled innovation in tokenized securities or asset-backed structures, especially offshore with approval.

Others see it as a tightening clampdown to prevent private-sector risks to financial stability and capital controls. Stock markets reacted positively in some cases, with RWA-related shares rising on hopes of regulated opportunities, though enforcement remains strict for unlicensed private initiatives.

China has now officially defined RWA tokenization and prohibited it for unlicensed and private sector activities onshore, while allowing tightly controlled, approved versions—consistent with Beijing’s preference for centralized oversight over decentralized finance.

Equinox’s $40,000 ‘Optimize’ Membership Draws 1,000-Plus Wait List as Luxury Wellness Market Surges Toward $10tn

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Equinox’s $40,000-a-year “Optimize” membership has drawn a waiting list of more than 1,000 people, underlining how aggressively wealthy consumers are spending on longevity, diagnostics, and high-performance living.


Demand for ultra-premium health programs is accelerating, with Equinox reporting that its $40,000-a-year “Optimize by Equinox” membership has attracted a waiting list of more than 1,000 prospective clients.

Launched in 2024, Optimize is positioned among the most expensive gym memberships globally. The program combines personal training, advanced nutrition planning, sleep coaching, massage therapy, and access to a dedicated “health concierge,” packaging fitness, recovery, and preventive health into a single subscription model aimed squarely at high-net-worth individuals.

Harvey Spevak, the company’s executive chairman, described demand as “insatiable,” linking it to broader shifts in consumer priorities.

“Health is the new luxury,” Spevak said. “The number one thing in the experience economy, besides travel, that the consumer wants, is, ‘How do I live a high-performance lifestyle?’”

The Economics of Longevity

Equinox’s expansion into high-end performance programs comes as the global wellness industry is projected to approach $10 trillion by 2030, up from $6.8 trillion in 2024, according to the Global Wellness Institute. Growth has been driven by aging affluent populations, heightened post-pandemic focus on health optimization, and an explosion of products and services centered on longevity.

Millionaires and billionaires, whose numbers have risen globally over the past decade, are increasingly allocating discretionary income toward preventive care, biohacking, diagnostics, and bespoke wellness experiences. Unlike traditional healthcare spending, much of this expenditure sits outside insurance systems, making it highly profitable for private operators.

Optimize reflects this shift. The membership integrates services from Function Health, offering tests for 100 biomarkers twice a year. Those data points inform individualized fitness, nutrition, and recovery regimens. By incorporating clinical-style diagnostics into a lifestyle offering, Equinox is positioning itself at the intersection of hospitality, fitness, and personalized medicine.

The program has launched in Los Angeles and Dallas and is expected to expand to New York. A waiting list of more than 1,000 at $40,000 per year implies potential annualized revenue of at least $40 million if all those applicants convert — before factoring in ancillary spending on additional services.

Building a Closed-Loop Luxury Ecosystem

Equinox’s strategy extends well beyond traditional gyms. The company operates 115 fitness clubs and plans to open 40 more, including in Nashville, Toronto, Charlotte, North Carolina, and South Florida. Spevak said the company remains the largest retailer in New York by square footage and continues to add locations in its home city.

The brand’s ambitions in hospitality are equally expansive. Equinox opened its first hotel in Manhattan’s Hudson Yards in 2019 — the Equinox Hotel Hudson Yards — and is preparing to open a second property in Saudi Arabia. Spevak said the company is likely to operate close to a dozen hotels globally within seven to eight years, spanning the Middle East, the Caribbean, and the United States.

Hotels serve as strategic anchors in Equinox’s broader ecosystem. They allow the company to deliver immersive, 360-degree performance experiences, combining fitness, sleep optimization, nutrition, recovery treatments, and high-end hospitality under one roof. The IV drip lounge at the Hudson Yards hotel — currently the company’s only one — has already become “a seven-figure business,” according to Spevak.

This convergence of hospitality and health services mirrors a broader trend among luxury brands that are embedding wellness into their core offerings to capture higher-margin experiential spending.

Equinox has also introduced EQX ARC, a personalized program designed around women’s health across different life stages. The offering uses diagnostics, wearable technology, and specialized coaching to tailor fitness and wellness protocols. The company says the program has already developed its own wait list, suggesting strong demand for gender-specific performance services.

The move reflects growing recognition within the wellness industry that women’s health — historically underrepresented in clinical research and fitness programming — presents a substantial commercial opportunity.

Private Company, Public Ambitions

Equinox is privately held and does not disclose detailed financials. Spevak described 2025 as a “record year” and said he expects 2026 to be even bigger.” He also noted that other high-end consumer companies are approaching Equinox to explore partnerships centered on health and wellness.

“When you think about the economy moving from a product economy to an experience economy, a lot of big consumer companies are saying, ‘Well, how do I continue to serve my consumer and health and wellness, and who do I talk to?’” Spevak said.

“There’s truly only one brand that has the authority and the brand equity.”

Equinox’s Optimize program illustrates how luxury consumption is evolving. High-end consumers are no longer spending solely on visible status symbols such as fashion or real estate. Increasingly, they are investing in invisible assets: biomarkers, sleep scores, metabolic efficiency, and perceived longevity.

With the wellness market projected to approach $10 trillion by the end of the decade, companies that can integrate data, personalization, and exclusivity stand to capture a disproportionate share of affluent spending. Equinox is betting that the future of luxury lies not just in how consumers look or travel, but in how long and how well they live.

Supreme Court’s Ruling on Trump’s IEEPA Tariffs Paves Way for Potential $175–$179bn in U.S. Customs Refunds

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In a 6-3 decision on Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) as a legal basis for President Donald Trump’s sweeping import tariffs, delivering a major blow to the administration’s trade policy and opening the door to massive refunds for importers who paid duties under the challenged regime.

Chief Justice John Roberts authored the majority opinion, joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Amy Coney Barrett, Ketanji Brown Jackson, and Neil Gorsuch. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh dissented.

The ruling held that IEEPA, a 1977 law granting the president authority to regulate international commerce during national emergencies, does not extend to unilateral imposition of broad import taxes absent a direct, imminent foreign threat. Roberts wrote that Trump’s use of IEEPA for “reciprocal” tariffs—levied to match or exceed foreign duties—and emergency declarations tied to issues like fentanyl trafficking and national security claims exceeded congressional intent and constituted an unconstitutional overreach of executive power.

“The statute was designed for targeted responses to foreign crises, not as a blank check for indefinite trade wars,” the majority opinion stated.

Dissenters argued that IEEPA’s broad language affords the president necessary flexibility in economic statecraft, with Thomas writing that the majority’s interpretation “undermines the executive’s ability to protect American interests in a dangerous world.”

How the Ruling Triggers Potential $175–$179 Billion in Refunds

The decision dismantles the legal foundation for tariffs collected under IEEPA since February 2025, when Trump began imposing duties on a wide array of imports. According to estimates from the Penn-Wharton Budget Model (PWBM), produced at Reuters’ request, this could lead to refunds totaling $175–$179 billion for duties paid by importers over the past year.

PWBM’s forecast is based on a detailed, ground-up model incorporating tariff rates by product and country across 11,000 import categories and 233 trading partners. The model calculates approximately $500 million in daily IEEPA-based revenue, leading to the cumulative $179 billion figure through early 2026.

A cross-check using historical U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) assessment data as a share of total Treasury customs receipts yielded a similar $175–$176 billion range. CBP’s last published IEEPA assessment (December 14, 2025) stood at $133.5 billion, with net collections typically lower after adjustments, protests, and refunds.

If upheld (pending potential appeals or stays), importers could file claims with CBP for refunds on duties paid since the tariffs’ inception. The process would involve administrative reviews, potentially stretching over months or years, but the sheer volume could overwhelm CBP systems and create logistical challenges.

A $175 billion refund would exceed the combined fiscal 2025 outlays of the Department of Transportation ($127.6 billion) and Department of Justice ($44.9 billion), representing a significant fiscal outflow for the Treasury. Administration officials, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, have expressed confidence in covering refunds through existing cash balances ($850 billion projected at end-March 2026, $900 billion at end-June).

Bessent told Reuters in January that the Treasury is prepared, but the ruling could force a pivot to alternative tariff authorities (e.g., Section 232 national security tariffs or Section 301 unfair trade practices) to restore duties. White House spokespeople indicated the administration is reviewing options to minimize disruptions.

Economic and Market Implications

The ruling could reshape U.S. economic dynamics:

  • Inflation Relief: IEEPA tariffs added an estimated 0.5–1% to core inflation since 2025 by raising import costs. Their removal could ease price pressures, benefiting consumers and import-dependent industries (electronics, autos, apparel).
  • Currency and Trade Flows: A tariff unwind might weaken the U.S. dollar (down 0.8% in after-hours trading on Friday), making U.S. exports more competitive but potentially increasing import volumes. Global supply chains could see short-term disruptions as importers adjust.
  • Fiscal Impact: The $175–$179 billion refund would represent a one-time hit to federal revenues, potentially widening the deficit unless offset by new tariffs or spending cuts. CBO estimates had projected $300 billion in annual tariff revenue over the next decade; a partial loss could force fiscal recalibrations.
  • Sector Winners and Losers: Import-heavy sectors (retail, manufacturing) stand to benefit from lower costs, while domestic producers (steel, aluminum) previously protected by tariffs may face increased competition.
  • Markets reacted swiftly: U.S. stock futures rose modestly Friday evening, with import-reliant companies like Walmart (+1.2%) and Apple (+0.9%) leading gains. Treasury yields dipped slightly, reflecting potential inflation relief. The dollar weakened against major currencies, boosting commodity prices like oil (+1.4%) and gold (+0.6%).

Political Ramifications

The decision is a major setback for Trump’s “America First” trade agenda, which relied heavily on IEEPA for broad tariffs on allies and adversaries alike. Midterm elections loom in November 2026, and the ruling could energize critics who argue tariffs raised consumer costs without delivering promised manufacturing resurgence.

Trump has vowed to fight the decision, posting on social media: “The Supreme Court has just handed China and our enemies a win. We’ll fix this FAST with new tools!”

The administration has signaled contingency plans, potentially invoking other statutes like Section 232 (national security) or Section 301 (unfair practices) to reimpose duties. However, these alternatives may face their own legal challenges and could take months to implement.

Judge Upholds $243m Verdict Against Tesla in Landmark Autopilot Fatality Case

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A federal judge has upheld a $243 million jury verdict against Tesla over a fatal 2019 Autopilot crash, sustaining the first federal jury award tied to a deadly accident involving the driver-assistance system.


A federal judge has rejected Tesla’s attempt to overturn a $243 million jury verdict arising from a 2019 crash involving an Autopilot-equipped Model S that killed a 22-year-old woman and severely injured her boyfriend.

In a decision made public Friday, U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom in Miami said the evidence at trial “more than supports” the August 2025 verdict and that Tesla presented no new arguments that would justify setting it aside. The ruling leaves intact what is widely regarded as the first federal jury verdict concerning a fatal crash involving Tesla’s Autopilot system.

Tesla is expected to appeal.

The case stems from a crash on April 25, 2019, in Key Largo, Florida. George McGee was driving his 2019 Model S at about 62 mph (100 kph) when he bent down to retrieve his dropped cellphone. The vehicle traveled through an intersection and struck an SUV parked on the shoulder. Naibel Benavides Leon and Dillon Angulo were standing beside the SUV at the time. Benavides was killed; Angulo suffered severe injuries.

McGee reached a prior settlement with the plaintiffs and was not part of the verdict against Tesla.

Jurors found Tesla 33% responsible for the crash. They awarded $19.5 million in compensatory damages to Benavides’ estate and $23.1 million to Angulo. The jury also imposed $200 million in punitive damages, to be divided between them, bringing the total judgment to $243 million.

The allocation of fault reflects the jury’s conclusion that driver negligence and product-related factors both played roles in the crash.

In seeking to overturn the verdict, Tesla argued that McGee alone was responsible for the collision and that the Model S was not defective. The company said the verdict “defied common sense” and argued that automakers “do not insure the world against harms caused by reckless drivers.”

Tesla also challenged the punitive damages award, asserting that it did not exhibit “reckless disregard for human life,” the threshold required under Florida law.

Judge Bloom rejected those arguments, writing that the trial record supported the jury’s conclusions and that Tesla had not identified grounds to disturb the findings. By upholding both compensatory and punitive damages, the ruling reinforces the jury’s determination that the case met the legal standard for punitive liability.

Adam Boumel, a lawyer representing Benavides’ estate and Angulo, welcomed the decision.

“From day one, Tesla has refused to accept responsibility,” Boumel said in an email. “Autopilot was defective, and Tesla put it on American roads before it was ready and before it was safe.”

The verdict is a milestone in litigation involving advanced driver-assistance systems. While Tesla has faced numerous lawsuits over crashes involving Autopilot and its Full Self-Driving software, many were dismissed, settled, or resolved before reaching a jury. This case is the first in federal court in which jurors imposed substantial liability for a fatal Autopilot-related crash.

The decision could influence how future juries assess responsibility in cases involving partially automated systems. Autopilot is designed as a driver-assistance feature, requiring drivers to remain attentive and ready to intervene. Tesla has consistently maintained that drivers are responsible for maintaining control of their vehicles at all times.

The plaintiffs, however, argued that the system was defective and that Tesla’s design and deployment decisions contributed to the crash. The jury’s finding that Tesla bore 33% of the responsibility indicates that it accepted at least part of that argument.

The punitive damages component is particularly significant. Such awards are intended not only to compensate victims but also to punish conduct deemed especially egregious and to deter similar behavior. Under Florida law, punitive damages require proof of intentional misconduct or gross negligence. By allowing the award to stand, the court signaled that the jury had sufficient evidence to meet that standard.

Implications for Tesla’s Autonomy Strategy

Elon Musk, Tesla’s chief executive and the world’s richest person, has long positioned the company as a leader in autonomous driving technology for private vehicles and robotaxis. Tesla continues to promote advancements in its driver-assistance systems as a central pillar of its future growth strategy.

The upheld verdict comes as the broader automotive industry races to deploy increasingly sophisticated automation features, while regulators and courts grapple with how to assign responsibility when human drivers and software share control.

Tesla’s expected appeal will likely focus on legal standards for product defect, causation, and punitive damages. Appellate review could address whether the evidence was sufficient to support findings of defect and reckless disregard, as well as whether the size of the punitive award complies with constitutional limits.