
JPMorgan to enable crypto purchases via credit cards in Coinbase tie-up
Once viewed warily by traditional financial institutions, the digital assets industry has gained enough traction among consumers and investors that large banks are now entering the space.
From custody services to card-linked purchases, financial heavyweights are increasingly offering crypto-related products and mulling new use cases for the tokens, signaling how far the once-nascent market has matured.
The cryptocurrency market recently touched a $4 trillion valuation and is expected to grow further as regulatory clarity in major markets such as the United States drives broader adoption.
"Beginning in 2026, you'll be able to directly link your Chase account to Coinbase," the cryptocurrency exchange said in a blog post.
Starting in 2026, Chase customers will be able to redeem credit card reward points for USDC, a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin, and directly link their bank accounts to Coinbase to fund crypto purchases.
Stablecoins are a type of token designed to shield users from price volatility and are widely used as a bridge between traditional finance and digital assets.
With rising demand for low-cost, instant transactions, stablecoins are poised for rapid growth as adoption spreads across payments, trading and emerging financial platforms.
Earlier this month, PNC said it was working with Coinbase to offer crypto trading to the bank's customers.
Coinbase shares were last up 3 per cent in premarket trading. They have surged about 50 per cent so far this year, giving the crypto exchange a market value of about $95 billion and helping it secure a spot in the benchmark S&P 500 index, a milestone for the industry.
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Praise Trump and speak simply: How the South Korean team negotiated its trade deal
SEOUL: The South Korean ministers tasked with negotiating a last-ditch trade deal with United States President Donald Trump said that to prepare, they role-played and solicited tips for engaging with the unpredictable leader. Among the advice they received? Call Trump a "great person" and speak as simply as possible, Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan told reporters in Washington after the deal was announced on Wednesday (Jul 30). The US will impose a 15 per cent tariff on imports from South Korea. The 15 per cent rate is below a 25 per cent tariff that Trump had threatened earlier and was equivalent to deals with Japan and the European Union. The stakes were particularly high for South Korea, a major export-driven economy, and Kim and other members of the delegation have only been on the job for a few weeks after President Lee Jae Myung won a snap election in June. Kim called Trump a "master of negotiations" and said each of the team, which included Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol and Minister for Trade Yeo Han-koo, took turns role-playing as the US president to prepare. "We tried to talk like President Trump, and President Trump's way of talking is very terse and straightforward," Kim said. "We prepared a lot of scenarios on our own on how to answer this or that question." Koo said the team only knew for sure they would be meeting Trump when they saw it on social media. The meeting itself went for about half an hour and the two sides went back and forth on the amount of the investment fund, which was eventually settled at US$350 billion, Koo said. "We collected a lot of negotiation strategies used by our counterparts in advance and thought a lot about how to respond, so the negotiation was very smooth," he said. Yeo quoted Trump as saying his personal involvement is rare in dealing with officials who are not heads of state, and means "he respects South Korea very much and attaches great importance to South Korea".


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Aixtron posts Q2 sales above market expectations
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Trump's Aug 1 tariff deadline is fast approaching. Here's where the world stands
United States President Donald Trump's latest tariff deadline is rapidly approaching. Set to take effect on Friday (Aug 1), time is running out for countries to make a trade deal with Washington. Trump in April unveiled sweeping import taxes on goods coming into the US from nearly every country, including heightened 'reciprocal' rates for certain countries. The implementation of levies has since been postponed twice. By early July, Trump began sending warning letters that higher tariffs would be imposed against dozens of countries from Aug 1. Since then, the US has announced more trade frameworks. But key details remain sparse. Here's what we know about the agreements so far. SOUTH KOREA Trump said on Wednesday the US will impose a 15 per cent tariff on imports from South Korea – a lower levy than the earlier threatened 25 per cent. As part of the deal, Trump added that South Korea had agreed to invest US$350 billion into the US and to purchase US$100 billion of liquefied natural gas and other energy products. The US president also said South Korea would accept American products, including cars, trucks and agriculture into its markets and impose no import duties on them. JAPAN Japan will similarly face a 15 per cent levy on its exports to the US – also a lower rate than the previously threatened 25 per cent. Crucially, that reduction includes the tariffs on automobiles, an industry accounting for 30 per cent of the country's exports to the US last year. Trump said that Japan would also invest US$550 billion into the US and 'open' its economy to American autos and rice. CHINA US and Chinese officials on Tuesday agreed to seek an extension of their 90-day tariff truce that is set to expire on Aug 12 – though Trump has yet to officially agree to the extension. At its peak, Trump's new tariffs on Chinese goods totalled 145 per cent and China's counter-tariffs on American products reached 125 per cent. The levies were eventually rolled back to 30 per cent and 10 per cent on May 12 following the agreed truce. In June, the two countries announced a trade agreement. As part of the deal, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that China had agreed to make it easier for American firms to acquire Chinese magnets and rare earth minerals critical for manufacturing and microchip production. Meanwhile, the Chinese Commerce Ministry said that the US would ' lift a series of restrictive measures it had imposed on China". Other key details of the deal remain murky — including the timing of implementation for these terms. US trade policy expert William Reinsch said he thinks the US will extend the Aug 12 deadline by another 90 days. He noted that Trump's rhetoric on China has gotten less dramatic and that "he's not complained about Xi Jinping in particular". "I think he wants to have a one-on-one meeting with China's leader and does not want to do anything to rock the boat," he added. INDIA Trump on Wednesday said the US is still negotiating with India on trade, backtracking his announcement earlier in the day that the US would impose a 25 per cent tariff on goods imported from India starting on Friday, The US president added that there would be an unspecific penalty on India. What the penalty would be was not clear. Trump indicated initially, in a post on the Truth Social website, that the penalty was a response to India buying Russian arms and oil and its "obnoxious non-monetary trade barriers". When asked about the penalty later at the White House, he said it was partly due to trade issues and partly because of India's involvement in the BRICS group of developing nations, which he described as hostile to the US. Reinsch said of the situation in India: 'We are seeing classic Trump tactics.' "When the negotiation is not going quickly enough for him or when he thinks it's not going to have an ending that he wants, he makes more threats," said Reinsch. "You turn up the pressure and hope they fold.' PAKISTAN Pakistan and Washington have struck a deal in which they will work together in developing the South Asian nation's oil reserves, Trump announced on Wednesday. He added they were in the process of choosing the oil company that would lead the partnership. No further details were provided. Pakistan confirmed a deal had been reached with the US, adding that the agreement would result in reduced tariffs on Pakistani exports to the US. It also said the trade deal is expected to spur increased US investment in the country's infrastructure and development projects. PHILIPPINES Earlier this month, Trump announced a 19 per cent tariff rate on goods from the Philippines – one percentage point lower than the previously threatened levy. In return, Trump said on Truth Social, the US would not pay tariffs on American goods it shipped to the Philippines. But additional details remained unclear. In the days that followed, the ambassador of the Philippines to the US Jose Manuel Romualdez said the country hoped to renegotiate its trade deal with Washington. INDONESIA Similarly, Indonesian exports to the US will also be taxed 19 per cent, Trump announced on Jul 22. This compares to the previously threatened levy of 32 per cent. According to Washington, nearly all US goods will be able to enter Indonesia tariff-free. Moreover, it said Jakarta had agreed to recognise US standards for car and pharmaceutical imports. Indonesia had already made other concessions earlier in July, pledging to buy more US oil and agro-industrial goods. Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto said he will continue to negotiate with Trump, in hopes of further lowering the coming US tariffs. VIETNAM Vietnam saw tariffs on its exports more than halve to 20 per cent from the previously threatened 46 per cent in April. But a 40 per cent tariff will be imposed on goods manufactured in third countries that use Vietnam to circumvent steeper trade barriers. US goods will also not face any tariffs entering Vietnam. UNITED KINGDOM On May 8, Trump agreed to cut tariffs on British autos, steel and aluminium, among other trade pledges — while the UK promised to reduce levies on US products like olive oil, wine and sports equipment. Levies on UK autos dropped to 10 per cent for the first 100,000 vehicles per year, down from the earlier threatened 27.5 per cent. British steel and aliuminium exports to the US are subject to 25 per cent levies. It is the only country spared from Trump's 50 per cent levies on the metals. The rest of Britain's products are subject to the 10 per cent base rate. EUROPEAN UNION The EU and Washington announced a trade framework that includes a baseline US tariff of 15 per cent that will apply to 70 per cent of European goods brought into the US. The rate will apply to pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and car and car parts. The remaining 30 per cent of those imports is still open for negotiations. That is lower than the blanket 30 per cent tariffs Trump had threatened to impose, but significantly higher than the duties in place to date. As part of the deal, the 27-nation EU has agreed to purchase energy worth US$750 billion from the US and make US$600 billion in additional investments, according to Trump. The two sides have agreed to bilateral tariff exemptions on a number of "strategic products", notably aircraft, certain chemicals, some agricultural products and critical raw materials. BRAZIL Trump on Wednesday slapped a 50 per cent tariff on most Brazilian goods to fight what he has called a "witch hunt" against former President Jair Bolsonaro, but softened the blow by excluding sectors such as aircraft, energy and orange juice from the heavier levies. The new tariffs will go into effect on Aug 6, not Aug 1 as Trump announced originally. SECTORAL TARIFFS A 50 per cent tariff on copper pipes and wiring will kick in on Friday, Trump announced on Wednesday. Details of the levy, though, fell short of the sweeping restrictions expected and left out copper input materials such as ores, concentrates and cathodes. Steel and aluminium imports are also subject to a 50 per cent levy. WHICH COUNTRIES HAVE NOT STRUCK DEALS? Earlier this month, Trump sent letters to some countries warning of steeper tariffs if no deals were made with the US by Aug 1. Some of these countries have yet to announce agreements with Washington. In Asia, Myanmar, Laos, Brunei, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka have not struck deals with the US yet. On Thursday, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said he had spoken with Trump, and that US tariff rates on Malaysia would be announced on Friday. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in an interview with Fox News on Wednesday the US had made trade deals with Cambodia and Thailand. No further details were provided. WEAPONISING TRADE Trump is not the first person to weaponise trade for political objectives, Reinsch said, adding that "the Chinese have been doing it for years'. 'It's not a new thing,' he said. 'But it's a very worrisome thing because it's very hard to negotiate that.' "What he's telling the Indians is you need to change your foreign policy – and that's a big ask. That's different from saying you need to lower your tariffs," Reinsch said. Trump is also "really intervening in the sovereignty" of Brazil with his demand and it is very hard to have a negotiation about that, he added. The US president said tariffs on Brazil were to fight what he has called a witch hunt" against former President Jair Bolsonaro. Trump's administration also unveiled sanctions on the Brazilian supreme court justice who has been overseeing Bolsonaro's trial on charges of plotting a coup. "I'm very worried this is going to become a common tactic and I don't know how we're gonna deal with it," said Reinsch.