Analysis-Companies race to ship goods to the US ahead of potential tariffs
FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Trump signs Laken Riley act, in Washington · Reuters

By Arriana McLymore, Helen Reid and Emma Rumney

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - In recent months, plenty of business executives have said they were taking a wait-and-see approach to U.S. President Donald Trump's broad threats of tariffs. Early holiday-quarter earnings reports show many of them were not.

Automakers like General Motors and Mercedes, French cognac makers, and Italian producers of parmesan cheese and sparkling wine have all expedited deliveries to the United States. Commodities buyers meanwhile stepped up purchases of steel, aluminium, and soybeans.

"We see companies currently front-loading their imports into the U.S.," said Patrick Lepperhoff, managing director at supply chain consultancy Inverto in Cologne.

"They have modelled scenarios on how much they could be hit by tariffs, and decided quite broadly to import the volumes in order to be covered for a certain time."

Executives have described to Reuters and on conference calls the challenges of an environment made more uncertain by Trump's shifting plans for tariffs that could upend world trade and prompt some companies to move production to the United States.

Even before he returned to office this month, uncertainty motivated businesses to rush shipments. The U.S. trade deficit spiked to a record $122 billion in December as goods imports rose 4% and exports dropped 4.5%.

PacSun, which sells casual clothing for teens and young adults, is one of many retailers importing goods.

CEO Brieane Olson told Reuters the privately-held company had brought in a portion of its first-quarter sales earlier as part of contingency plans. It also has a "tariff taskforce" that meets twice a week to work with suppliers on the issue.

"PacSun has a very proactive plan for what we can do to help our suppliers and vendors best," Olson said.

Trump's threats have ranged from possible 100% to 200% fees on cars from Mexico to universal tariffs on all imported goods.

A test of his resolve will come on Saturday, when the U.S. president has said he plans to introduce duties on imports from neighbours and major trade partners Mexico and Canada.

Numerous sectors could be affected. The U.S. imported about $844 billion in goods from Canada and Mexico in 2024, about 28% of all imports, according to U.S. federal data.

Efforts to prepare have already given some companies a boost. German chemical company Lanxess said fourth-quarter profits were significantly better than expected due to advance buying by U.S. customers.

Italian producers have shipped more Parmigiano Reggiano cheese to the United States, according to the industry's trade association, which said it hopes to get exemptions for its premium foods.