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General Motors (GM) posted strong financial results for its first quarter on Tuesday, but says it will reassess its expectations for 2025 due to auto tariffs.
The car maker is pushing back its conference call to discuss its guidance and quarterly results until Thursday, so that it can assess potential tariff changes.
GM said that its initial full-year financial forecast does not contemplate the potential impact of tariffs. In January, the company announced that it anticipated 2025 adjusted earnings in a range of 11-12 dollars per share.
Late on Monday, The Wall Street Journal reported that President Donald Trump will possibly be dialling back on automotive tariffs, with anonymous sources claiming that he will stop duties on foreign-made cars from piling on top of other tariffs he implemented and easing some levies on foreign parts used to make cars in the US.
Mr Trump will be holding a rally in Michigan, the heart of the nation’s auto industry, on Tuesday. Michigan has been jolted by his steep trade tariffs and combative attitude toward Canada.
Mr Trump is making an afternoon visit to Selfridge Air National Guard Base for an announcement alongside Democratic Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer. He is expected to speak at a rally at Macomb Community College, north of Detroit.
Michigan was one of the battleground states Mr Trump flipped from the Democratic column in his election. But it has also been deeply affected by tariffs on imported cars and auto parts.
Michigan’s unemployment rate has risen for three straight months, including jumping 1.3% from March to reach 5.5%, according to state data. That is among the highest in the nation, far exceeding the national average of 4.2%.
Industry groups have urged the White House to scrap plans for tariffs on imported auto parts, warning that doing so would raise prices on cars and could trigger “lay-offs and bankruptcy”.
General Motors earned 2.78 billion dollars, or 3.35 dollars per share, for the three months ended March 31. A year earlier it earned 2.98 billion dollars, or 2.56 dollars per share.
Removing one-time charges and benefits, GM earned 2.78 dollars per share, topping the 2.68 dollars per share that Wall Street had expected, according to a survey by FactSet.
Revenue climbed to 44.02 billion dollars from 43.01 billion.
GM’s stock declined more than 2% before the market opened.