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The Supreme Court finally released its ruling on President Trump's use of the IEEPA to impose universal tariffs on foreign goods, and the verdict was utterly unsurprising, at least to those of us who have actually read the law. The 10-year Treasury note yield rose 1 basis point on Friday and 3 for the week.

US stock index futures declined on Monday as investors reacted to renewed tariff uncertainty after US President Donald Trump announced a new 15% global duty, even after a Supreme Court ruling struck down most of his earlier levies. The Supreme Court, in a 6–3 decision on Friday, voided a large portion of tariffs imposed last year, finding the emergency law used by the administration did not authorize such measures.

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Stocks dropped premarket after initially responding positively to the Supreme Court's ruling against large swathes of Trump's tariff regime.

U.S. President Donald Trump unleashes a new 15 per cent global baseline tariff – the maximum legal amount – following the Supreme Court's ruling that reciprocal country-specific levies were illegal. The European Commission has insisted Washington honours its trade pact following Friday's SCOTUS verdict.

CNBC's Steve Sedgwick and Ben Boulos assess the impact of the Supreme Court's decision to invalidate President Trump's use of emergency authority to impose sweeping tariffs and how any refunds could be processed.

At 3:47 a.m. ET, the 10-year Treasury yield was down less than 1 basis point to 4.076%.

Anna Edwards, Guy Johnson, Tom Mackenzie and Paul Dobson break down today's key themes for analysts and investors on "Bloomberg: The Opening Trade." For up to the minute market intelligence and insight, click MLIV <GO>.

Dollar slumps and gold rises as authorities say they will halt levies linked to emergency powers but give no word on refunds

Gold and silver prices climb

Yields on eurozone government bonds edged lower, tracking moves in Treasurys amid uncertainty over tariff policies.

The Supreme Court's IEEPA ruling curtails executive tariff authority, introducing heightened market uncertainty and a shift to Section 122 tariffs capped at 15% for 150 days. Bond markets signal concern over fiscal risks, as potential tariff refunds ($142–$175B) could drive increased Treasury issuance and higher yields, impacting equity valuations.