The White House is making a statement with what was originally supposed to be President Donald Trump’s first overseas trip: the US is eager to lure more investment from abroad. In traveling next week to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, the president is looking to tap into the billions in the region’s wealth funds. Just this week, the Treasury Department said the administration was working on a way to fast-track screening of foreign investments in the US to ease the process. Saudi Arabia and the UAE have already promised $1 trillion or more in investments in the US. The trip also underscores how much Trump sees Saudi Arabia and the other countries as essential economic and strategic partners, even as he keeps traditional US allies off balance. Trump Photographer: Bonnie Cash/UPI It’s on brand for the president, who made Saudi Arabia his first foreign visit during his first term in 2017. (This time, an unexpected trip to Italy for Pope Francis’ funeral makes it his second.) CNN reported that his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, a former adviser who has done a slew of business deals with entities in the region, is privately advising Trump ahead of his travel. During Trump’s first term, Kushner helped negotiate the Abraham Accords, landmark pacts that normalized relations between Israel and several Arab nations. Trump is likely looking to build on that and bring Saudi Arabia into the accord. “There’s a lot of wins for the president to achieve in Saudi Arabia,” Hagar Chemali, a White House national security official in the Obama administration, said on Bloomberg TV’s Balance of Power program. “Pulling the region away from China” will also be an objective of the trip, according to Chemali, along with upping defense trade there. The trip is taking place as Trump and his administration are engaging in a spate of negotiations as he seeks to restructure global trade, which has put financial markets on edge. He got agreement on a framework for trade negotiations with the UK yesterday and his advisers have drawn up a list of roughly 20 other nations targeted for talks. Read the scoop from my colleagues Josh Wingrove and Alicia Diaz: US Sets Trade Talk Priority List of Economies Big and Small The most closest-watched meeting yet takes place this weekend as Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer travel to Switzerland for talks with top Chinese officials. Trump earlier today floated an 80% tariff on China (still high but down from 145%) ahead of those talks. Either way, the president could use some tangible victories after weeks of questions about the direction of the economy under his watch. Other developments this week: - Stablecoin standoff: Legislation to set up a regulatory framework for stablecoin that is backed by the digital assets industry was blocked by Senate Democrats after Republicans rebuffed their demands to include a provision barring Trump and other senior officials from profiting off of crypto ventures while in office, Bloomberg’s Steven T. Dennis reported. Trump has promoted a memecoin bearing his name and stands to profit from its success, and a Trump family venture has also launched its own stablecoin. A deal still could be reached in the coming weeks.
- Court record: Trump has faced at least 328 lawsuits as of May 1 over his expansive use of executive power. Bloomberg’s Zoe Tillman and Christopher Cannon reported that more than 200 orders in 128 cases have stopped Trump’s actions, while judges allowed challenged policies to go forward in 43 cases. There’s been no ruling in more than 140 cases. Their analysis found that his court losses and wins came from a mix of appointees of Democratic and Republican presidents, including some nominated by Trump during his first term.
- Tariff uncertainty: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank is in no hurry to adjust interest rates while they wait to see what the data shows about the impact of Trump’s tariffs on the economy, Bloomberg’s Jonnelle Marte reported. Powell said the inflationary impact of the duties could be short lived or be more persistent. “Uncertainty about the economic outlook has increased further,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement, and that, “the risks of higher unemployment and higher inflation have risen.”
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