Básico
Spot
Opera con criptomonedas libremente
Margen
Multiplica tus beneficios con el apalancamiento
Convertir e Inversión automática
0 Fees
Opera cualquier volumen sin tarifas ni deslizamiento
ETF
Obtén exposición a posiciones apalancadas de forma sencilla
Trading premercado
Opera nuevos tokens antes de su listado
Contrato
Accede a cientos de contratos perpetuos
TradFi
Oro
Plataforma global de activos tradicionales
Opciones
Hot
Opera con opciones estándar al estilo europeo
Cuenta unificada
Maximiza la eficacia de tu capital
Trading de prueba
Introducción al trading de futuros
Prepárate para operar con futuros
Eventos de futuros
Únete a eventos para ganar recompensas
Trading de prueba
Usa fondos virtuales para probar el trading sin asumir riesgos
Lanzamiento
CandyDrop
Acumula golosinas para ganar airdrops
Launchpool
Staking rápido, ¡gana nuevos tokens con potencial!
HODLer Airdrop
Holdea GT y consigue airdrops enormes gratis
Launchpad
Anticípate a los demás en el próximo gran proyecto de tokens
Puntos Alpha
Opera activos on-chain y recibe airdrops
Puntos de futuros
Gana puntos de futuros y reclama recompensas de airdrop
Inversión
Simple Earn
Genera intereses con los tokens inactivos
Inversión automática
Invierte automáticamente de forma regular
Inversión dual
Aprovecha la volatilidad del mercado
Staking flexible
Gana recompensas con el staking flexible
Préstamo de criptomonedas
0 Fees
Usa tu cripto como garantía y pide otra en préstamo
Centro de préstamos
Centro de préstamos integral
Centro de patrimonio VIP
Planes de aumento patrimonial prémium
Gestión patrimonial privada
Asignación de activos prémium
Quant Fund
Estrategias cuantitativas de alto nivel
Staking
Haz staking de criptomonedas para ganar en productos PoS
Apalancamiento inteligente
New
Apalancamiento sin liquidación
Acuñación de GUSD
Acuña GUSD y gana rentabilidad de RWA
Customer sues Costco for tariff refunds
Customer sues Costco for tariff refunds
2 days ago
ShareSave
Natalie ShermanBusiness reporter
ShareSave
Getty Images
A Costco customer in the US has taken the retailer to court, demanding that the company use potential tariff refunds to return money to shoppers who paid more due to the levies.
In a proposed class action lawsuit, customer Matthew Sockov argues that Costco is in the position to potentially recoup its tariff costs twice, “from customers through elevated pricing and from the government”.
He says that amounts to “unjust enrichment” and asks the court to order the firm to refund shoppers.
The legal battle is a sign of the complexities looming over the roughly $166bn (£124bn) in tariff refunds the US owes to companies since the Supreme Court struck down many of Trump’s tariffs last month.
The ruling left the refund process in the hands of the Court of International Trade, which has ordered the government to start returning money.
But there is significant uncertainty as to when that might happen - and who might benefit.
Importers paid those taxes when they brought the goods into the country, but in many cases at least some portion of the cost was passed on to distributors and customers in the form of higher prices.
Sockov’s complaint, which was filed against Costco in federal court in Illinois, cites a Goldman Sachs report that estimates that consumers were “shouldering two-thirds of President Trump’s new tariff costs”.
“The truly injured parties possess no direct avenue for redress,” he says.
Costco, one of the thousands of businesses that is seeking refunds, did not respond to a request for comment.
Speaking to analysts after reporting earnings this month, chief executive Ron Vachris said it remained unclear “what refunds, if any, will be received”, adding that in many cases the company had not passed on the “full cost” of the duties.
“As we have done in the past, when legal challenges have recovered charges passed on in some form to our members, our commitment will be to find the best way to return this value to our members through lower prices and better values,” he added.
“We will be transparent in how we plan to do this if and when we receive any refunds.”
Other firms also face the issue of how to deal with refunds.
Delivery giant FedEx, which handled the tariffs on behalf of many businesses and individuals, is among the companies that has pledged to refund money it receives to the businesses and consumers that had faced tariff charges.
Last week, the Trump administration told the court it needed 45 days to create a new electronic process to handle the task, warning that its current systems would otherwise be overwhelmed.
It said more than 330,000 different importers were eligible for refunds as a result of the decision, which struck down tariffs Trump had imposed on dozens of countries under a 1977 emergency law known as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).
“Existing administrative procedures and technology are not well suited to a task of this scale and will require manual work that will prevent personnel from fully carrying out the agency’s trade enforcement mission,” Brandon Long, executive director of the agency’s trade programmes said in a court filing.
Companies
Trump tariffs
Global trade