As Trump's tariffs bite, small U.S. manufacturers begin
to tap the brakes
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[May 04, 2018]
By Rajesh Kumar Singh
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Encouraged by a booming
demand for construction equipment, Mike Haberman was planning in early
February to hire at least 30 more workers for the manufacturing facility
of his Gradall Industries in Ohio.
That plan now is shelved, Haberman said, because the cost of steel used
in Gradall's telescopic excavators and vacuum trucks shot up by
one-third following President Donald Trump's crackdown on steel imports.
As steel costs account for 35 percent of his cost of production, he
fears rising prices would not only hurt his export sales, but also give
an edge to foreign rivals at home.
"At this point, we really need more visibility before we would bring in
more workers," he told Reuters.
When Trump signed a $1.5 trillion package of tax cuts at the end of
2017, supporters predicted businesses would respond this year with a
burst of hiring and investment.
But Reuters interviews with more than a dozen small to mid-sized
manufacturing executives and recent U.S. economic data reveal Trump's
protectionist trade policy is starting to lead some of them to take a
more cautious approach, and forcing them to put new investment and
hiring plans on hold.
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While these manufacturers lauded the administration's push to make U.S.
businesses globally competitive through measures such as the tax
overhaul and a deregulation drive, they complained that the steel and
aluminum tariffs along with the escalating trade spat with China were
undercutting those benefits.
Trump has proposed a separate 25 percent import tariff on some 1,300
Chinese products to try to force changes in Beijing's intellectual
property practices. If the tariff comes into effect, they would upend
Haberman's components supplies from China, he said.
The steel and aluminum import tariffs imposed in March were designed to
protect the American industries and its workers from global overcapacity
and unfair trade practices. Trump justified the measure saying
protecting the industries was important to the country's national
security. He argued that the tariffs would re-open closed mills, sustain
a skilled workforce, and maintain or increase production.
But the tariffs, which came into effect on March 23, have driven up raw
material costs and caused supply delays, rendering the manufacturers'
"Made in the USA" products uncompetitive against their foreign rivals,
according to these manufacturing company executives.
Mike Schmitt, president at The Metalworking Group in Ohio, said his
metal fabrication company has lost around a thousand hours repricing and
renegotiating contracts because it can't honor the old prices.
The company has delayed plans to spend around $500,000 on equipment this
year and bring on new staff to expand.
"It's going to be 2019 before we buy anything because we don't have
enough confidence to do it. There's just too much uncertainty out there
right now," Schmitt said.
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The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) survey on Tuesday showed how
widespread that sentiment is: manufacturers slowed down hiring for a
second straight month in April amid complaints that the tariffs have
brought business planning to a standstill.
Nicole Sahin, chief executive at recruitment firm Globalization Partners
in Boston, says a large multi-national client of hers recently pulled
back from an $800 million investment in a U.S.-based energy project
after rising steel costs made the investment not viable.
Sahin said all her clients who are exposed to steel prices have put
their investment plans on hold because of the business "uncertainty"
caused by the tariffs.
LIMITED OPTIONS
Big manufacturers are looking to manage cost increases by controlling
expenses through their supply chains or raising prices for their
products.
But not all small manufacturers have those options.
Take Florida Marine Tanks, which makes fuel, water and holding tanks for
yachts. Company President Orestes Monterrey said aluminum accounts for
70 percent of the company's cost of production, which has risen 26
percent since December.
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An employee torques the hydraulic fittings on the valves of a
Grandall XL4300V Wheeled Excavator at the company's facility in New
Philadelphia, Ohio, U.S., April 18, 2018. Picture taken April 18,
2018. Michael Norman/Grandall Industries/Handout via REUTERS
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When the Henderson, North Carolina-based company tried to pass along rising
aluminum costs, customers slowed down orders.
The company has shelved a $2.2 million plan to expand its North Carolina
facility and hire 46 new workers. It also fired four workers that were hired in
December for the project, Monterrey said.
"(We) don't know where business is going to go," said Monterrey. "Customers are
reducing their orders."
In a March study, Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC estimated the steel and
aluminum tariffs would result in a net loss of nearly 470,000 U.S. jobs. The
proposed tariffs on Chinese imports, the Washington-based consulting firm
estimates, would put 134,000 jobs at risk.
"There is just no way to sustain expansion, develop new products and bring on
new employees - as we thought we were going to do this year," said Troy Roberts,
chief executive officer at Colorado Springs-based Qualtek Manufacturing.
Roberts' company provides stamped parts to the medical device and aerospace
industries. Qualtek was planning to invest up to $1 million in new capital
equipment and expand its workforce by 17 percent this year.
Even though the company purchases domestically-produced steel and aluminum,
Roberts says the metal tariffs are projected to increase Qualtek's raw material
costs by $300,000, putting the investment and workforce expansion plans in
jeopardy.
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TIGHT SUPPLIES, COST CUTS
While the tariffs have increased the demand for local steel and aluminum,
domestic mills have not yet fully ramped up their capacity. Data from the
American Iron and Steel Institute shows capacity utilization at the steel mills
has gone up by just 1.1 percentage points from the same period last year.
As a result, the lead time for delivery of raw material is going up. Roberts of
Qualtek Manufacturing says his lead time has doubled to 14 weeks. In Florida
Marine Tanks' case, a shipment scheduled for early March hasn't arrived yet.
Trump has postponed a decision on whether to withdraw temporary exemptions from
the metals tariffs on Canada, the European Union and Mexico until June 1, and
has reached agreements for permanent exemptions for Argentina, Australia and
Brazil.
The imports from the exempted countries, however, will be restrained by quotas.
Manufacturers are not sure how the quotas will be implemented or will curb
rising metal prices.
Faced with supply delays, some manufacturers have decided to pay the tariffs and
get the metals from overseas.
The Vollrath Company in Wisconsin, which makes cookware and bakeware items, has
started importing aluminum from China after local mills couldn't meet its
demand.
The company's chief financial officer, Steve Heun, says the tariffs, CUT
including the latest countervailing duties, will make its aluminum products at
least 20 percent more expensive than those of its foreign rivals, and are
estimated to increase its input costs by as much as $6 million a year.
Its working capital requirements have gone up by 10 percent as the company is
now forced to hold more inventory, Heun said.
Vollrath employs 1,000 people in Wisconsin and had plans to hire 25-50 workers
this year. But with the tariffs weighing on its profitability, Heun says the
company is looking for ways to trim costs and has halted new hiring.
"If there was any positive feeling about the tax overhaul, clearly, it's been
wiped out," said Heun.
(Additional reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Joe White and Edward Tobin)
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