
Who is Megan Cassella, the reporter who infuriated Donald Trump with 'Taco' trade jibe?
Live Events
What Is the 'Taco Trade'?
So, Who Is Megan Cassella?
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel
A White House press briefing on Wednesday took a sharp turn when US President Donald Trump was asked a question that clearly got under his skin. The source of the tension? A new Wall Street nickname for his trade tactics—'Taco,' short for 'Trump Always Chickens Out.' And the reporter behind the viral moment was Megan Cassella , a CNBC correspondent known for her unflinching economic coverage.Cassella asked pointedly: 'Mr. President, Wall Street analysts have coined a new term called the Taco trade . They're saying 'Trump Always Chickens Out' on your tariff threats. And that's why markets are higher this week. What's your response to that?'Trump, visibly irritated, pushed back saying, 'I chicken out? Oh, I've never heard that,' he snapped. 'You mean because I reduced China from 145% that I set down to 100 and then to another number?'He was referencing the shifting tariff rates on Chinese goods, which he recently slashed from a high of 145% to 30%. The comment — and his discomfort — highlighted exactly why the term 'Taco trade' is catching on.The 'Taco trade' is a tongue-in-cheek term coined by Wall Street analysts to describe a now-familiar cycle: Trump talks tough on tariffs, markets fall, then he backs down — and markets rally. Just last week, he threatened to impose 50% tariffs on EU goods starting June 1. Within days, he changed course and postponed them until July 9 after "promising talks" with European leaders.By the time markets reopened after Memorial Day, stocks had surged — a perfect illustration of the Taco effect in action.Megan Cassella is no stranger to the high-stakes intersection of economics and politics. A seasoned journalist based in Washington, D.C., she currently works as a correspondent for CNBC, covering economic policy, trade, and market regulation.Before joining CNBC, Cassella served as a senior economics and policy reporter at Barron's, where she covered everything from Federal Reserve decisions to government spending and inflation. Earlier, she spent over five years at Politico, becoming one of the go-to reporters during the Trump administration's tumultuous trade battles, including coverage of the NAFTA renegotiation and U.S.-China tensions.Cassella is known for breaking down complex financial stories in ways that resonate with both market insiders and everyday Americans — and her question to Trump is a perfect example of that clarity and nerve.Megan Cassella earned her Bachelor's degree in Business Journalism and International Politics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2015. During her time at UNC, she was active in student journalism and recognized by the Kappa Tau Alpha Honor Society for academic excellence.In 2018, she was selected for the Wharton Seminars for Business Journalists at the University of Pennsylvania — a prestigious program aimed at deepening journalists' understanding of financial markets and business strategy.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News18
34 minutes ago
- News18
'9th Time In 20 Days': Jairam Ramesh Asks PM Modi To 'Speak Up' On Trump's Ceasefire Claims
Last Updated: On Friday, Trump reiterated that he had stopped India and Pakistan from engaging in a full-blown conflict and averted a nuclear confrontation The Congress is at it again. Two days after questioning the silence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Donald Trump's claims of having brokered the ceasefire between India and Pakistan, the Grand Old Party once again asked PM Modi to 'speak up" as the US President repeated his assertions. On Friday, Trump reiterated that he had stopped India and Pakistan from engaging in a full-blown conflict and averted a nuclear confrontation. 'We stopped India and Pakistan from fighting. I believe that could have turned out into a nuclear disaster, and I want to thank the leaders of India and Pakistan, and I want to thank my people. 'Also, we talk trade, and we say we can't trade with people who are shooting at each other and potentially using nuclear weapons. They're great leaders in those countries, and they understood and they agreed, and that all stopped, and we're stopping others from fighting. Also, because ultimately, we can fight better than anybody, we have the greatest military in the world. We have the greatest leaders in the world…" The US President's statement gave fresh ammo to the Congress, with party MP Jairam Ramesh saying it was the '9th time in 20 days" that Trump had repeated the sequence of events but the prime minister had maintained silence on the issue. This is the 9th time in 20 days, across 3 countries and 3 cities. Donaldbhai keeps repeating the same sequence of events of how he got the 4-Day India-Pakistan war to stop – US intervention and the use of the trade instrument to stop nuclear escalation. The equivalence of India… — Jairam Ramesh (@Jairam_Ramesh) May 31, 2025 'This is the 9th time in 20 days, across 3 countries and 3 cities. Donaldbhai keeps repeating the same sequence of events of how he got the 4-Day India-Pakistan war to stop – US intervention and the use of the trade instrument to stop nuclear escalation. The equivalence of India and Pakistan gets reiterated yet again. President Trump's Commerce Secretary has made exactly the same claims in his submission to the New York-based Court of International Trade on May 23rd. But Donaldbhai's friend Mr. Narendra Modi continues to ignore his claims with absolute silence. Why doesn't the PM speak up?" Ramesh asked on X. This is not the first time Ramesh has trained his guns on the government's radio silence on the issue. Earlier, the Congress leader said: 'Our Prime Minister does not want to hear about tariffs; our Prime Minister only wants to hear 'Tareef' (praise). So, the PM is silent on this. The Prime Minister has not said anything." He also slammed the US President for hyphenating India and Pakistan, saying: 'India's economy has increased 10 times in comparison to Pakistan's economy, but both of them have come in the same boat. How can this happen?" THE CEASEFIRE India, in retaliation for the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 people, launched Operation Sindoor on May 7, pounding terror launchpads linked to outfits such as Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad in Pakistan and PoK and killing more than 100 terrorists. A rattled Pakistan responded with attempts to launch a military action, resorting to cross-border shelling, drone assaults, and even military strikes. However, India's air defence system and armed forces thwarted these attempts. After four days of intense cross-border fighting, India and Pakistan arrived at a ceasefire understanding on May 10, with Trump announcing the truce. WHAT TRUMP SAID The US President had claimed that India and Pakistan agreed to reach a 'full and immediate" ceasefire after mediated talks, claiming that he used 'trade to a large extent" to broker the ceasefire. 'I said let's make a deal, let's do some trading. Let's not trade nuclear missiles. Let's trade the things you make so beautifully. And they both have very powerful leaders, strong leaders and it all stopped. Hopefully it will remain that way," he had said. However, the external affairs ministry slammed Trump's offer to mediate on Kashmir and his claim of having used trade to prevent a 'nuclear war", saying that the military action under Operation Sindoor was 'entirely in the conventional domain". While addressing a press briefing, MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said, 'I refer to you the position made clear on May 13. From the time Operation Sindoor commenced on May 7, the issue of trade or tariff did not come up in any of these discussions. External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar had also clarified it was established directly through DGMOs." Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: May 31, 2025, 09:04 IST News politics '9th Time In 20 Days': Jairam Ramesh Asks PM Modi To 'Speak Up' On Trump's Ceasefire Claims


India Today
34 minutes ago
- India Today
China rehearsing for real deal: US warns of imminent threat in Indo-Pacific
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth reassured allies in the Indo-Pacific on Saturday that they will not be left alone to face increasing military and economic pressure from China, as Washington warned a potential conflict over Taiwan could be 'imminent.'He said Washington will bolster its defences overseas to counter what the Pentagon sees as rapidly developing threats by Beijing, particularly in its aggressive stance toward Taiwan. China has conducted numerous exercises to test what a blockade would look like of the self-governing island, which Beijing claims as its own and the US has pledged to army 'is rehearsing for the real deal,' Hegseth said in a keynote speech at a security conference in Singapore. 'We are not going to sugarcoat it — the threat China poses is real. And it could be imminent.'HEGSETH SAYS CHINA IS TRAINING TO INVADE TAIWAN China has a stated goal of having its military be able to take Taiwan by force if necessary by 2027, a deadline that is seen by experts as more of an aspirational goal than a hard war China also has built sophisticated man-made islands in the South China Sea to support new military outposts and developed highly advanced hypersonic and space capabilities, which are driving the US to create its own space-based 'Golden Dome' missile at the Shangri-La Dialogue, a global security conference hosted by the International Institute for Security Studies, Hegseth said China is no longer just building up its military forces to take Taiwan, it's 'actively training for it, every day.'advertisementHegseth also called out China for its ambitions in Latin America, particularly its efforts to increase its influence over the Panama urged countries in the region to increase defence spending to levels similar to the 5% of their gross domestic product European nations are now pressed to contribute.'We must all do our part,' Hegseth RAISED ABOUT US COMMITMENT TO INDO-PACIFICHe also repeated a pledge made by previous administrations to bolster US military capabilities in the Indo-Pacific to provide a more robust deterrent. While both the Obama and Biden administrations had also committed to pivoting to the Pacific and established new military agreements throughout the region, a full shift has never been US military resources from the Indo-Pacific have been regularly pulled to support military needs in the Middle East and Europe, especially since the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. In the first few months of President Donald Trump's second term, that's also been the the last few months the Trump administration has taken a Patriot missile defence battalion out of the Indo-Pacific in order to send it to the Middle East, a massive logistical operation that required more than 73 military cargo aircraft flights, and sent Coast Guard ships back to the US to help defend the US-Mexico was asked why the US pulled those resources if the Indo-Pacific is the priority theatre for the US He did not directly answer but said the shift of resources was necessary to defend against Houthi missile attacks launched from Yemen, and to bolster protections against illegal immigration into the USThe Indo-Pacific nations caught in between have tried to balance relations with both the US and China over the years. Beijing is the primary trading partner for many, but is also feared as a regional bully, in part due to its increasingly aggressive claims on natural resources such as critical cautioned that playing both sides, seeking US military support and Chinese economic support, carries risk."Beware the leverage the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) seeks with that entanglement,' Hegseth SENDS LOWER-LEVEL DELEGATIONChina usually sends its own defense minister to this conference, but Dong Jun did not attend this year in a snub to the US and the erratic tariff war Trump has ignited with Beijing, something the US delegation said it intended to capitalise on.'We are here this morning. And somebody else isn't,' Hegseth was asked by a member of the Chinese delegation, made up of lower level officers from the National Defence University, how committed it would be to regional alliances. In some, China has a more dominant said the US would be open to engaging with any countries willing to work with it.'We are not going to look only inside the confines of how previous administrations looked at this region," he said. "We're opening our arms to countries across the spectrum — traditional allies, non-traditional allies.'Hegseth said committing US support for Indo-Pacific nations would not require local governments to align with the West on cultural or climate not clear if the US can or wants to supplant China as the region's primary economic driver. But Hegseth's push follows Trump's visit to the Middle East, which resulted in billions of dollars in new defence InMust Watch IN THIS STORY#United States of America


Time of India
36 minutes ago
- Time of India
AMNS India targets 25% share in colour-coated steel market with new Optigal product line
New Delhi: ArcelorMittal Nippon Steel India ( AMNS India ) announced the launch of two new colour-coated steel products— Optigal Prime and Optigal Pinnacle —as part of its strategy to capture a 25 per cent share in India's 3.4 million tonne colour-coated steel market within the next two to three years. The announcement comes amid a steady 10–12 per cent annual growth in domestic demand for colour-coated steel, driven by sectors such as airports, railways, metro projects, and highways. 'We have launched Optigal Prime and Optigal Pinnacle , a totally new product range in the domestic steel industry, to cater to this demand. We are targeting sectors like highways, railways, metros, airports with our innovative and sustainable product,' said Ranjan Dhar, Director and Vice President, Sales and Marketing, AMNS India. Dhar said AMNS India is currently the only domestic producer of C4 category high-end corrosion-resistant colour-coated steel, which until now was available only in European markets. The new product line will be manufactured at the company's Pune facility. AMNS India's current colour-coated steel capacity stands at around 7 lakh tonnes annually, with plans to scale up to one million tonnes in the near future. Optigal Prime is designed for urban and moderately corrosive environments and comes with a 15-year warranty. It is available in finishes such as Silicon Modified Polyester (SMP), Super Durable Polyester (SDP), and PVDF. Optigal Pinnacle, positioned for more demanding industrial and coastal applications, is backed by a 25-year warranty and features PU/PA coatings for protection against moisture, UV exposure, and temperature variations. Six specialised variants of Optigal Prime and Optigal Pinnacle—High Gloss, Anti-Dust, Anti-Graffiti, Anti-Static, Anti-Microbial, and Cool Roof—have been developed using Zinc-Aluminium-Magnesium technology. This coating provides up to three times the corrosion and weather resistance compared to conventional coatings. The company said these new offerings will help support the government's infrastructure goals under the 'Viksit Bharat' programme. The products have been designed in line with the 'Make in India' initiative, incorporating low VOC emissions, no heavy metals or hexavalent chromium, and 100 per cent recyclability. 'These products mark a significant step forward as we continue to strengthen our value-added product portfolio in line with our brand promise – Smarter Steels, Brighter Futures,' Dhar said. The launch is aligned with the company's focus on expanding its value-added steel segment and meeting demand from India's rapidly growing infrastructure and construction sectors.