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U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday that the United States was getting very close to securing a nuclear deal with Iran, and Tehran had "sort of" agreed to the terms.
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There are significant questions on how the order can be implemented, and if companies can raise prices on already approved drugs, analysts say.
US President Donald Trump said on Thursday that India has offered to enter a bilateral trade deal with the US that “basically” proposes that "no tariffs" would be levied on a range of American goods.
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The Mirror US on MSNDonald Trump plans may see pensioners face '20 percent fall in income'A leading pensions body has warned that retirement pots are set to be hit by Donald Trump's trade war, with many savers facing the prospect of having to put off retirement
Oil prices saw a considerable drop on Thursday. This decline is attributed to the potential U.S.-Iran nuclear deal and a sudden increase in U.S. crude oil inventories, triggering concerns of oversupply.
President Trump indicated the U.S. was close to a deal in which Iran agrees to forgo nuclear weapons, sparking a selloff in oil prices. "You probably read today the story about Iran has sort of agreed to the terms,
Colleges in Washington, D.C., are responding to President Donald Trump's second term with courses examining the presidential office, role and Trump's impact.
The Trump administration has proposed cutting a $56 million grant that teaches first responders how to use the lifesaving overdose reversal drug naloxone, which experts say could reverse progress the United States has made in lowering opioid overdose deaths.
(Reuters) -Indian pharma stocks fell 1.6% on Monday, bucking broader market gains, after U.S. President Trump said he would cut drug prices by 30%–80% to match other wealthy nations. Trump said he would sign an executive order on Monday to pursue "most favored nation" pricing.
Marathon-long House committee markup meetings for President Donald Trump's massive tax and government spending plans, monikered as "one, big, beautiful bill", are putting U.S. representatives from both sides of the political aisle to sleep.