The US has listed major trade grievances against Canada ahead of the USMCA review deadline on July 1, 2026, covering dairy, digital taxes, and auto rules.

US President Donald Trump has warned he would 'rather not have' the free trade agreement ahead of its July 1 review.

Trump's 25% tariffs on Mexican and Canadian imports threaten the USMCA ahead of its July 2026 review, sending ripples through crypto markets and Bitcoin

The US has listed major trade grievances against Canada ahead of the USMCA review deadline on July 1, 2026, covering dairy, digital taxes, and auto rules.

The US has triggered a decade-long process to potentially exit the USMCA trade agreement, with a critical joint review set for July 2026.

While the agreement may survive at the end of negotiations, years of uncertainty, tariffs, and prolonged talks could reshape North American trade.

The USMCA review began on July 1 as Washington declined to extend the pact, starting a decade-long clock that hangs over Mexico, the peso and autos.

As US, Canadian, and Mexican officials meet to review the trilateral trade pact, more is on the line than simply tariff rates and rules of origin.

The USMCA trade agreement faces its first mandatory six-year review in July 2026, with $1.8 trillion in trilateral trade and cross-border supply chains at

Officials from the US, Mexico, and Canada will meet on Wednesday to review the trade agreement after Trump said he does not want to extend.