Auto sector scrambles after Trump threatens Mexican
tariffs
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[June 01, 2019]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Global auto and
parts manufacturers scrambled on Friday to make contingency plans and
look at ways of speeding some deliveries after U.S. President Donald
Trump threatened new tariffs on all Mexican imports starting early next
month.
Companies based in North America, Asia and Europe were holding
conference calls and meetings to explore if they could move up certain
shipments of parts and vehicles to mitigate tariffs on Mexican goods,
auto executives and trade group officials said.
Those tariffs were set to begin at 5 percent on June 10 and rise from
there - to 10 percent on July 1 and ultimately hitting 25 percent on
Oct. 1 "unless Mexico substantially stops the illegal inflow of aliens
coming through its territory," Trump said Thursday.
Trump said on Twitter the tariffs were aimed at Mexico's insufficient
response to migrants crossing the border illegally. The tweets
blindsided business executives, who two hours earlier had learned from
trade officials the administration hoped to push Congress to hasten a
vote to approve a revised North American free trade deal, auto
executives said.
Shares in auto companies slumped on Friday. Deutsche Bank warned that a
25 percent tariff on vehicles and parts imported from Mexico would
result in $23 billion hit that "could cripple the industry and cause
major uncertainty."
Some companies still hope Trump will reverse course, auto executives
said.
The Motor & Equipment Manufacturers Association warned U.S. governors,
members of Congress and the White House that the tariffs "will only
serve as an additional tax on the American people by increasing the cost
of goods and putting jobs and investment in the U.S. at risk. In short,
this action will undermine U.S. economic stability."
The industry has taken a series of trade hits since Trump took office in
January 2017.
"It isn’t just this one thing; it is the cumulative impact of trade
policies that are challenging the industry right now," said John
Bozzella, who heads an auto trade group representing major foreign
automakers.
RBC Capital Markets analyst Joseph Spak said in a research note the
Mexican tariffs could be "devastating to the entire auto value chain"
and a 5 percent tariff could result a $300 per vehicle hit.
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A carrier trailer transports Toyota cars for delivery while queuing
at the border customs control to cross into the U.S., at the Otay
border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico May 31, 2019. REUTERS/Jorge
Duenes
Autos are at the heart of U.S. trade talks with Japan and the European Union.
"If Trump will put these tariffs on Mexico, there will be no hesitance to tariff
Europe," he wrote.
Already, Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs have added billions of dollars to
the cost of assembling U.S. vehicles, and tariffs on Chinese-made parts have
also hiked costs. Companies like General Motors Co, Tesla Inc, Fiat Chrysler
Automobiles (FCA) and dozens of parts suppliers have petitioned for relief.
GM and Ford Motor Co have laid off thousands of workers in recent months, citing
a rapidly changing industry. Other companies have cut hundreds of jobs.
Major suppliers like Delphi Technologies, Lear Corp and Visteon Corp all derive
at least 22 percent of their global revenue from Mexico with a "meaningful
portion" that crosses the U.S. border, Deutsche Bank said.
The industry also faces additional tariffs on Chinese-made goods. UBS warned
that these, along with Mexican tariffs could push the U.S. economy into
recession.
The industry has spent more than a year fighting to convince Trump not to carry
through on a threat to impose up to 25 percent tariffs on all imported cars and
parts on national security grounds. That decision has been delayed to allow for
more trade talks with the European Union and Japan.
Trump, who has frequently boasted of a strong economy and stock market, believes
the tariffs could actually boost U.S. growth. He said Friday that to avoid
tariffs "companies will leave Mexico, which has taken 30% of our Auto Industry,
and come back home to the USA."
Industry officials say it takes years and billions of dollars to shift
production, and that lower-margin vehicles cannot be built profitably in the
United States.
(Reporting by David Shepardson, Edited by Ben Klayman)
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