Khaleej Times

Tariffs start biting US manufactur­ers

- Noel Randewich —

san francisco— Tariffs are starting to bite big manufactur­ers and Wall Street could get another bout of caution and uncertaint­y from major industrial companies when a swath of reports comes in over the next week.

Investors are worried about the impact on earnings should the United States’ trade war with major trading partners escalate. Deutsche Bank in June estimated that an escalation of the dispute to include $200 billion of imports would hit earnings growth by 1-1.5 per cent.

“If today’s political rhetoric intensifie­s and translates into actual protection­ist policies, it will be a negative for all businesses in the US and abroad, including ours,” Hamid Moghadam, chief executive of supply chain management company Prologis, warned on a conference call on Tuesday.

Manufactur­ers across the country are concerned about Washington’s recent trade policies, with some saying that uncertaint­y related to tariffs was already hitting them, according to anecdotes collected by the US Federal Reserve in its Beige Book, released on Wednesday.

That is starting to show up in early reports by companies. Earnings from Honeywell Internatio­nal, General Electric and Stanley Black & Decker show companies facing higher costs due to already enacted tariffs, and uncertaint­y about tariffs.

GE said it expects tariffs on its imports from China to raise its costs by up to $400 million and Alcoa said the tariffs led to an extra $15 million in costs.

Second-quarter corporate earnings seasons kicks into gear starting on Monday, with results on tap from companies including Corning, Ford Motor, 3M Co and Boeing, which has fallen nearly two per cent since the start of March.

Since March 1, S&P 500 industrial­s have fallen nearly three per cent, reflecting the sector’s dependence on internatio­nal commerce. The S&P 1500 steel index has lost one per cent since March 1, as investors worry that a slowdown in global demand could offset US steelmaker­s’ benefits from tariffs against their foreign competitor­s.

“There are companies that might not be significan­tly impacted by tariffs from a cost perspectiv­e, but from the uncertaint­y around it,” said Kurt Brunner, a portfolio manager at Swarthmore Group in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia.

“They could see customers holding off on spending because they don’t know what is going to happen.”

Harley-Davidson, which said last month it would move some of its motorcycle production abroad as a result of the European Union’s retaliator­y tariffs, reports its results on Tuesday.

A strong US economy and deep corporate tax cuts have fuelled a five per cent increase in the S&P 500 this year, even as Wall Street worries about the tariffs’ impact.

Super-charged by deep corporate tax cuts, S&P 500 earnings are expected by analysts to grow 22 per cent in the June quarter and 23.1 per cent in the September quarter, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Estimates for the September quarter are likely to change as companies provide their outlooks over the next few weeks.

“The market is looking through Trump’s trade negotiatio­ns and governing style because of this strength. However, we are more cautious on the trade overhang and think headline risk, both to the upside and downside, will remain high,” EventShare chief investment officer Ben Phillips wrote in report on Thursday.

 ?? AP ?? Since March 1, S&P 500 industrial­s have fallen nearly three per cent, reflecting the sector’s dependence on internatio­nal commerce. —
AP Since March 1, S&P 500 industrial­s have fallen nearly three per cent, reflecting the sector’s dependence on internatio­nal commerce. —

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