Amazon, Toyota, Alcoa and others working to counter
Trump's tariff plans
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[July 21, 2018]
By Jeffrey Dastin and David Shepardson
SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Big
companies in the United States from Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O> to Toyota
Motor Corp <7203.T> and Alcoa Corp <AA.N> are working to counter the
effect of the Trump administration's trade policies and to head off new
tariffs.
Companies are attempting to avoid any confrontation with U.S. President
Donald Trump but want to exert as much influence as they can to dissuade
him from tearing up trade agreements or introducing tariffs on a wide
swath of imports.
Amazon, the world's largest online retailer and cloud-computing company,
which could be hurt by tariffs on items sold through its website and
components for its data centers, is discussing industry-wide advertising
campaigns and more extensive government lobbying, a person familiar with
the matter told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
Amazon declined to comment.
Toyota Motor North America, a subsidiary of Japan's Toyota, which could
suffer if Trump follows through on a plan to impose tariffs on imported
vehicles and parts, flew workers to Washington for a rally this week in
front of the U.S. Capitol while the unit's chief has met key members of
Congress in recent weeks to discuss the potential impact of tariffs.
Executives from General Motors Co <GM.N>, which could be hurt if Trump
pulls the United States out of the North American Free Trade Agreement
or if he imposes auto tariffs, have also held meetings with the
administration and Congress over the last year to raise its concerns
about trade issues. Tariffs would lead to "a reduced presence at home
and abroad," the company said in June.
The largest U.S. automaker is set to hire Trump's former deputy director
of the National Economic Council and adviser on international economic
affairs. Everett Eissenstat, who left the White House earlier this
month, will head GM's public policy efforts, according to sources
familiar with the matter. GM told Reuters it had an opening but declined
to confirm the hire. Eissenstat could not be reached for comment.
Those already suffering from the Trump administration's tariffs on steel
and aluminum imports, which went into effect in June, are also pushing
for relief in private.
The chief executive of Alcoa told investors on a conference call this
week that the aluminum producer was in "active discussions" with the
Trump administration, the Commerce Department and members of Congress
about the elimination of tariffs or getting an exception for Canadian
aluminum.
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An Alcoa aluminum plant is seen in Alcoa, Tennessee, United States
April 8, 2014. REUTERS/Wade Payne/File Photo
Alcoa said this week it will incur as much as $14 million a month in extra
expenses, mainly from tariffs levied on aluminum imported from Canada, its
biggest supplier.
CLOUD PAIN
In addition to the steel and aluminum tariffs already imposed, the Trump
administration has threatened 10 percent tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese
goods which would affect thousands of imported products from furniture to
network routers.
Seattle-based Amazon is concerned such tariffs would hit shoppers during the
crucial holiday shopping season, the person familiar with the matter said.
Amazon has identified a wide range of items, some of them high-value, the
tariffs would hit and is assessing the potential impact on its business, the
person said.
High among its concerns is an increase in import costs for components used in
data centers or other items that would make its cloud computing division less
competitive, two people familiar with the matter said. Amazon Web Services is
the company's most profitable unit.
Amazon is not alone in the technology industry with its worries. "It’s hard to
think of many of our companies that don’t have some risk and exposure as a
result of the tariff," said Dean Garfield, chief executive of the Information
Technology Industry Council, which counts Amazon rivals Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O>,
Alphabet Inc's <GOOGL.O> Google and others as members.
Lobbying administration officials and members of Congress can be costly with no
guarantee of victory, but some have succeeded.
Apple Inc <AAPL.O> won guarantees from the Trump administration that its
lucrative iPhones would ship from China without being subject to tariffs, the
New York Times reported last month.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin and David Shepardson; Additional reporting by
Nandita Bose; Editing by Chris Sanders and Bill Rigby)
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