Los Angeles Times

FIRMS FEELING TRADE WAR’S EFFECT

Several big firms are citing tariffs for lower-than-expected quarterly results.

- By Samantha Masunaga and James F. Peltz

Last spring, companies warned that the Trump administra­tion’s steel and aluminum tariffs could hit their bottom line. Now the bill is starting to come due.

Several big manufactur­ers and consumer goods companies have cited growing trade tensions as factors for their lower-than-expected financial results in the second quarter.

On Wednesday, General Motors Co. updated its fullyear guidance and noted the “unfavorabl­e impact of rising commodity costs,” saying the “recent and significan­t” price increases “negatively affected business expectatio­ns.”

GM said those higher commodity costs cut its earnings by $300 million in the second quarter compared with a year earlier. The company cut its earnings guidance for the year by $1 billion. GM’s stock price fell nearly 5% on Wednesday.

The same day, Ford Motor Co. executives said the second quarter was “challengin­g,” partly because of higher commodity costs and “tariff-related impacts.” The

company reported revenue of $38.9 billion, compared with $39.8 billion during the same period last year.

A day earlier, appliance manufactur­er Whirlpool Corp. said tariffs were a reason its results fell short of expectatio­ns. Excluding noncash charges related to its overseas business, earnings fell to $3.20 a share from $3.35 a year earlier, and sales fell 4% to $5.1 billion from $5.3 billion.

Whirlpool Chief Executive Marc Bitzer cited weaker-than-expected U.S. demand for its appliances and “head winds related to U.S. tariffs” that helped drive up prices of steel and other raw materials costs.

“The tariffs affect companies in two ways,” said Larry Harris, professor of finance at USC’s Marshall School of Business. “It increases the cost of items that they buy from abroad that the U.S. government has now placed a tariff on. It also increases the cost to foreigners of the items they sell abroad. Both effects reduce [companies’] earnings.”

President Trump announced plans in March for a 10% duty on aluminum and a 25% tariff on steel imports from the European Union, Canada, China and Mexico. Several countries vowed to retaliate with their own tariffs.

Shortly after the Commerce Department urged Trump in February to consider the tariffs, the weekly price of steel and aluminum increased. The price increase, at least for aluminum, probably flowed to equipment manufactur­ers, such as Whirlpool, by late in the second quarter, said Doug Hilderhoff, principal analyst in aluminum at CRU.

Campbell Soup Co. warned financial analysts in May that its margins could take a hit in the year starting in August due to the anticipate­d import tariffs. An executive from the Camden, N.J., firm said on an earnings call then that the company expected to see “double-digit increases” on steel and aluminum, “all of it driven by the impact of anticipate­d tariffs.”

By late June, motorcycle maker Harley-Davidson Inc. said it would move some production out of the United States to avoid tariffs levied by the EU. On a Tuesday earnings call about the company’s second-quarter results, Chief Executive Matthew Levatich described that decision as “key” to “protect[ing] the marketplac­e and our customer value equation as well as our dealer business model.”

Company executives said at the time that they expect the cost of the tariffs this year to be $45 million to $50 million and, because of that, lowered their earnings guidance for this year.

“We are doing everything we can at the company to absorb [all] the costs that we can,” John Olin, Harley Davidson’s chief financial officer, said on the call. “As we look forward, we can’t eat the whole $45 million to $50 million or can’t cover it in other parts of our business. And for that, we are bringing down our guidance.”

On Tuesday, Bitzer of Whirlpool said “uncertaint­y related to tariffs and global trade actions” led to increased costs for “certain strategic components,” as well as finished goods, imports and exports. While the tariffs had only a “limited impact” in the second quarter, he warned in an earnings call with analysts that there could be further effects in the future as suppliers are forced to pay the tariffs.

A Goldman Sachs report released last week on the potential effect of tariffs on earnings and returns of companies in the S&P 500 found that industries that are heavily reliant on imports, such as petroleum and coal products, computer and electronic products, and transporta­tion face the “greatest supply chain risk” from escalating trade tensions.

While tariffs could lower revenues, the report found that the duties posed a larger threat to profit margins of S&P 500 companies.

On Wednesday, United Parcel Service Chief Executive David Abney said the company has “seen no significan­t impact at this time” to the company’s internatio­nal freight shipment business, though it is “closely monitoring” the trade environmen­t.

“If this trade war continued or these actions continued, there would always be some exposure or risk to our business,” he said. “But that exposure is very much limited.” Boeing Co., a huge user of aluminum in its airplanes, did not mention tariffs in its earnings call Wednesday. A company executive did note, though, that good trade relations between the United States and China — which have been levying duties against each other’s products tit-for-tat — were beneficial to the aerospace industry.

 ?? Don Lee Los Angeles Times ?? WHIRLPOOL SAID tariffs were a reason its second-quarter results fell short of expectatio­ns. Above, a company plant in Clyde, Ohio.
Don Lee Los Angeles Times WHIRLPOOL SAID tariffs were a reason its second-quarter results fell short of expectatio­ns. Above, a company plant in Clyde, Ohio.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States