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GM delays investor call, UPS axes 20,000 jobs as Trump's tariffs create corporate chaos

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By Christoph Steitz, Marie Mannes, Kalea Hall, Lisa Baertlein

FRANKFURT/STOCKHOLM/DETROIT/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -The fallout from U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war reverberated further through the corporate world on Tuesday, as delivery giant UPS said it would cut 20,000 jobs to lower costs, while General Motors pulled its outlook and pushed its investor call to Thursday pending possible changes to trade policy.

The Detroit automaker, along with American ketchup maker Kraft Heinz, Swedish appliances maker Electrolux, and airline JetBlue Airways and other blue-chip names, on Tuesday joined the diverse list of companies that have pulled forecasts for 2025 or slashed outlooks, further evidence that Trump's see-sawing trade policy is taking a major toll on companies' ability to plan beyond the immediate term.

About 40 companies worldwide have pulled or lowered their forward guidance in the first two weeks of the first-quarter earnings season, a Reuters analysis showed.

"Every single prediction has been proved to be wrong," Electrolux CEO Yannick Fierling told Reuters. "I'm surprised if people are claiming they have a view where tariffs are going."

The White House has retreated several times on the sweeping tariffs Trump instituted in early April that unleashed a wave of selling across stocks worldwide and prompted investors to reduce holdings in the normally safe-haven U.S. dollar and Treasury debt. The broad-market S&P 500 is down 7% since Trump returned to office.

On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent tried to reassure consumers and investors by noting Trump would announce cuts to planned auto parts tariffs to avoid double levies on parts and the materials to make them, following considerable pressure from U.S. automakers. He also touted the administration's plans to cut taxes and reduce regulation to boost confidence.

However, executives are increasingly sounding the alarm over how Trump's trade policies have sapped consumer and business sentiment, raising fears that even if tariffs are rolled back substantially, the damage done in the last few months will not be easily reversed.

Trump marks 100 days in office on Wednesday, and he may be greeted with a contraction in first quarter U.S. gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the country's economic health. As of Tuesday morning, GDP was expected to come in at a weak 0.3%, according to a Reuters poll, but after another round of lackluster economic figures, prominent economists including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan lowered their expectations for the quarter to -0.8%, -1.4%, and -1.75%, respectively.