Los Angeles Times

Big brands bracing for tariff pain

Harley-Davidson, Jack Daniel’s are just two of the trade targets.

- By Jonathan Roeder and Hema Parmar Roeder and Parmar write for Bloomberg.

With the U.S.-versus-theworld trade war threat heating up, Harley-Davidson Inc. and Jack Daniel’s maker Brown-Forman Corp. may just be the canaries in the coal mine.

Both iconic American brands — singled out for tariffs in part to inflict maximum pain on U.S. districts that voted for President Trump or his allies — have warned investors that retaliator­y measures will have tangible effects on their businesses. Wall Street should expect more companies to disclose pain ahead when they report secondquar­ter results in coming weeks as the list of goods in the crosshairs of major trading partners such as the European Union, China and Mexico grows.

“We don’t know where it’s going to hit hardest, but it will hit companies like suppliers, transporta­tion, retailers — a lot of different people,” said Bob Phibbs, head of the Retail Doctor, a consulting firm for retailers. “It will take months to assess what that means for the supply chain and just how it will escalate. There is no safe harbor.”

In addition to American motorcycle­s and bourbon, the EU is also targeting a variety of products, including tobacco, fruit juice, apparel and playing cards.

The potential effect from these duties spans the corporate landscape, including packaged-food and softdrink companies such as Hormel Foods Corp. and Coca-Cola Co. and consumer-goods conglomera­tes such as Newell Brands Inc. and closely held jeans maker Levi Strauss & Co.

Companies must also contend with Mexican tariffs on items including U.S. pork, steel and whiskey, while Canada has homed in on steel, food, home appliances and household goods. China is primarily slapping duties on agricultur­al products and cars, and India has raised levies on items such as chickpeas, walnuts and some hot-rolled steel.

Taken together, the EU, China, Mexico, India and Canada are the destinatio­n for more than 60% of U.S. exports. Currently, only a small portion of this flow is the target of duties. But the rapid escalation of trade tensions follows a prolonged period of relative stability in the global movement of goods, and companies are now scrambling to get ahead of the new supply chain challenges that loom.

“The current rhetoric around trade is worrying,” Coke spokesman Scott Leith said in an email. “If strict tariff policies implemente­d in one country are mirrored in others, the world will become more insular, goods and services will be less affordable for consumers, and that would have a negative impact on global economic prosperity.”

Only a few companies have disclosed those risks publicly so far. HarleyDavi­dson said it is shifting production of motorcycle­s destined for the EU market out of the U.S. to avoid 31% tariffs — a move that prompted a backlash from Trump on Twitter.

Brown-Forman — which produces Jack Daniel’s, Woodford Reserve and other spirits — will have to raise whiskey prices in the EU by about 10% and has stockpiled supplies there ahead of the tariffs going into effect.

In the commoditie­s market, China and Mexico make up two of the largest export destinatio­ns for U.S. farm products, so tariffs have left agricultur­al goods mired in a slump. Soybeans fell to a two-year low last week, and prices for many grain, meat, cotton and dairy products have also declined.

That’s tough news for farmers, who rely on foreign demand to offset domestic surpluses. Plus, favorable growing weather in the U.S. Midwest for this season’s crops means supply may remain ample ahead.

Meat producer Tyson Foods Inc. is facing “day-today uncertaint­y” amid the trade volatility, the company said last week. This month, a Cargill Inc. executive warned that trade has become “villainize­d” and misunderst­ood.

Even as specific companies gear up for potential pain, the U.S. as a whole isn’t sweating the tariffs, with Bloomberg Economics predicting a total GDP effect of just one-tenth of a percentage point in a year in which the economy is already growing at the fastest rate of the current cycle.

“In terms of motorcycle exports or whiskey or bourbons, these are not substantia­l shares of U.S. exports so this doesn’t move the needle economical­ly,” said Bloomberg Economics chief U.S. economist Carl Riccadonna. “Everyone keeps wanting to call it a trade war, when really we’re talking about something that’s a rounding error in the GDP account. But that doesn’t mean we couldn’t get there.”

Economists are watching the data carefully for any sign of an effect, with next Friday’s jobs report in particular a place where corporate fears could potentiall­y start showing up in the form of lower hiring.

“Capitalism hates economic uncertaint­y,” Riccadonna said. “We’ve been banging the drum on trade. That anxiety could start to create a negative feedback loop” that starts to affect companies’ behavior.

For some companies, the tariffs have created a complex domino effect. This was illustrate­d on a recent conference call with executives from La-Z-Boy Inc., the maker of the ubiquitous reclining chairs. When asked last week about the company’s outlook, Chief Executive Kurt Darrow first cited a 10% tariff from Canada on U.S.-made furniture before referring to a potential U.S. duty on Chinese actuators, a machine component used in La-Z-Boy’s products.

“And then there’s the announceme­nt of a plan for more tariffs coming, so it is an uncertain time as far as our cost inputs,” he said as the company reported fourth-quarter results.

Darrow said that when it comes to tariffs and input costs, the Michigan company will just have to see what happens.

“You really can’t get ahead of it,” he said. “You have to wait until you deal with the raw materials and then decide how much you pass on and how much you keep.”

 ?? Alexander Tamargo Getty Images ?? THE EUROPEAN UNION is targeting a variety of U.S.-made products for tariffs, including whiskey such as Jack Daniel’s.
Alexander Tamargo Getty Images THE EUROPEAN UNION is targeting a variety of U.S.-made products for tariffs, including whiskey such as Jack Daniel’s.

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