A trade deal that was set to be signed in March is still not signed.
The tariff rules it was built on got rewritten by the Supreme Court mid-talks.
Now Washington is sending a team to India to put the deal back on the rails.
For investors, this is the biggest emerging market trade pact still on the table.
It is also the only one that could move tariffs on Indian goods from 50% all the way down to 18%.
What The Deal Actually Says
The framework from February has two big numbers.
U.S. tariffs on Indian goods drop from 50% to 18%.
India puts $500 billion into U.S. sectors over five years.
Those sectors include energy, aviation, metals, coal, and tech.
Then the Supreme Court struck down Trump's broader tariffs.
Trump came back with a 10% baseline tariff on every country for 150 days, starting February 24.
That made India's 18% look less like a discount and more like a penalty next to the new 10% global floor.
That is the gap U.S. and Indian teams are trying to close in the next round of talks.
U.S. Ambassador to India Sergio Gor said his talks with U.S. Trade Rep Jamieson Greer have been "highly productive."
For investors tracking trade moves like this every morning, Market Briefs lays it out in five minutes, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.
What Is Holding It Up Beyond Tariffs
The U.S. Trade Representative launched two Section 301 probes in March.
One looks at forced-labor rules across 60 economies.
The other targets the industrial policies of 16 economies.
India and China are named in both.
Section 301 is the same tool that kicked off the U.S.-China trade war in 2018.
It can lead to new tariffs on top of the ones being talked away.
That makes signing this deal awkward.
The U.S. is using the same tool to threaten new tariffs while it tries to cut a deal.
India also wants services and labor mobility on the table.
That means easier visas and market access for Indian tech workers.
That has long been the hardest thing for any U.S. White House to give.
India's Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is skipping this trip due to Parliament work at home.
What To Watch
Chief negotiator Darpan Jain is leading India's side of the talks.
The next round in Washington decides whether this gets signed before midterms or slides into 2027.
If it slips, U.S. importers stay stuck paying near-doubled tariffs on Indian goods.
Goods that ride on this deal include auto parts, textiles, and pharma inputs that U.S. firms source from India.
Indian tech firms like Infosys and TCS would also gain from any new services and visa terms.
For a daily morning read on the moves Wall Street is actually watching, 350,000+ investors trust Market Briefs, and you also get a 45-minute investing course as a free bonus.
