Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
Corporate gloom deepens as new Trump tariffs take effect

In This Article:

LONDON/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -Makers of goods from sportswear to luxury cars and chemicals painted a gloomy picture on Wednesday of consumer and industrial health, hitting share prices and adding to concerns about the damage from U.S. President Donald Trump's trade wars.

Increased tariffs on all U.S. steel and aluminium imports took effect on Wednesday, as Trump stepped up his campaign to reorder global trade in favour of the United States. Europe swiftly retaliated.

Trump's plans for tariffs - and their back-and-forth implementation since he took office in January - have upended industries from cars to energy and unnerved businesses and investors. Worries that rising costs will reignite inflation, and that souring consumer sentiment could herald a U.S. recession, have caused stock markets to plunge.

At a grains conference on Tuesday in Carlsbad, California, news of Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs on Canada drew groans from the room of corporate agriculture executives, grain processors and traders. The whipsaw pace of policy changes that affect their industry has made the last six weeks seem much longer, many told Reuters.

"Nearly everyone in the economy is struggling to comprehend wild swings in Washington policies, and their implications for everyday decisions," said Stephen Dover, chief market strategist at asset manager Franklin Templeton.

The constant flip-flopping over tariffs is paralysing industries. Automakers, for example, are unable to plan while there is a threat of 25% tariffs on components made in Canada or Mexico.

"No reasonable auto executive can make such investments if the expected returns can be wiped out at the stroke of a pen," Dover said.

Germany's Porsche said on Wednesday it was assessing how it could pass on to consumers the cost of possible tariffs - expected to be 25% for U.S. imports from Europe - without pressuring its margins. That implies prices could be hiked to offset any drop in unit sales.

"For now, we are hoping there are solutions that will lead to a sensible tariff regime between regions," Porsche CFO Jochen Breckner said on a press call.

Two major South Korean steelmakers said they were considering options including possible investment in operations in the United States as the metals tariffs came into force.

Canada's Algoma Steel paused exports of steel from Canada to the United States until Thursday, when Canadian ministers are expected to meet their U.S. counterparts in Washington. CEO Michael Garcia called the tariffs "very concerning."