Connect with us

News

Corporate America fears wrath of Trump as it mulls tariffs response

Published

on

Corporate America fears wrath of Trump as it mulls tariffs response

US companies are struggling to figure out how to respond to Donald Trump’s trade war, concerned about the impact of the president’s tariffs on the economy but wary of speaking out for fear of retaliation by the White House, according to executives and board members.

Corporate leaders are unsure of how far to go in re-engineering their businesses in response to Wednesday’s tariffs, amid doubts over how long Trump will stick to his current course and hope that they can lobby him to ease some of the policies.

Complicating matters is a climate of fear created by the White House’s recent targeting of law firms including Paul Weiss. 

“You don’t want to be the barking dog for everyone else because you’re going to be the one who will get shot,” said one person who leads the board of a US company.

Another executive on a corporate board said the best approach was to make the case to Trump and his team privately that these policies could hurt his core constituents through higher prices and job losses.

Advertisement

“It is going to be velvet glove lobbying at his more thoughtful policy advisers and that clearly includes Scott,” said another executive on a US board, referring to US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent.

Disney chief executive Bob Iger voiced concern on Thursday at an internal editorial meeting at ABC News, according to people who heard the remarks.

He said that it would not be easy for US companies to shift their production to the country because of specialised workforces and differing skillsets across borders. Iger cited the example of Apple’s Foxconn facilities in China, where the tech giant makes the vast majority of its devices. 

Iger also cautioned that Disney itself would be affected. With steel prices likely to rise, the company’s costs of building cruise ships would go up, he said.

Trump’s tariff blitz and China’s retaliation roiled commodity markets, causing crude prices to settle at three-year lows of $65.58 on Friday, with oil traders betting the US administration has no immediate plan to reverse punitive trade measures.

Advertisement

On Friday shale magnate Harold Hamm, executive chair of Continental Resources, told the Financial Times he remained supportive of Trump and his efforts to make fundamental reforms and rebuild US manufacturing by tackling unfair trade practices overseas.

“But it is also true that you cannot drill, baby, drill if you are producing oil and gas below the cost of supply. Shale producers hope the current market turbulence is a temporary situation so they can deliver on the president’s agenda to unleash American energy dominance,” said Hamm, who is also executive chair of industry group Domestic Energy Producers Alliance. 

A private equity executive at one of the industry’s largest firms said many companies had analysed and gamed out tariffs to see their impact on their bottom lines and drawn up solutions to be prepared for “liberation day”, when the tariffs were announced.

But that preliminary work was thrown out because the formula the White House used to calculate the tariffs came nowhere near people’s expectations.

Scores of investment firms have or are planning to outline their views on tariffs to clients, many of whom are overseas investors who were shocked by the scope and direction of the levies.

Advertisement

Carlyle Group on Monday will host a “special global investment environment update” call with top investors, in which co-founder David Rubenstein and two other executives are expected to outline a playbook to deal with the tariffs.

Some corporate leaders appealed for calm and did not discount the possibility that the market overreacted. 

“While it has been pretty harsh and drastic, we all know stocks have a tendency to overreact and underreact,” said Herman Bulls, vice-chair at commercial real estate group JLL and a board director at USAA, Host Hotels, Fluence Energy and Comfort Systems. 

“This is not a surprise in terms of the direction,” Bulls said. “This was talked about during the campaign and when he won.”

The tariffs announcement came midway through the “retail round-up” conference hosted in New York by JPMorgan Chase for executives, investors and analysts in the retail sector.

Advertisement

Home Depot chief financial officer Richard McPhail was among executives who indicated there would now be potentially tense negotiations about shifting the burden of tariffs on to suppliers rather than US consumers.  

“In normal course, we are having always-on conversations about cost with our vendors,” he said. “When it comes to tariffs, that’s just another cost in the equation that we have to understand mutually.”

Another retailer, Guess, this week suggested that it could switch away from suppliers in Asia to Latin America, where the tariffs announced tend to be more moderate. 

But corporate advisers said there remained too many questions over US policy for companies to be able to commit to large-scale adjustments. 

“I think they will stop short of making major supply chain moves because this is not even the beginning of the end,” said Kristin Bohl, a customs specialist at PwC US.

Advertisement

“It’s not even the end of the beginning. There’s far too much uncertainty for a CEO to decide that he or she is going to pick up operations out of country A and move them to country B.”

Reporting by Joshua Franklin, Stephen Foley, Anna Nicolaou, Antoine Gara, Jamie Smyth, Patrick Temple-West and Claire Bushey

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

News

Wall Street slashes stock market forecasts amid Trump tariff fears

Published

on

Wall Street slashes stock market forecasts amid Trump tariff fears

Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for free

Wall Street banks have slashed their targets for the main US share gauge over the past fortnight, as fears grow over the potential economic fallout from President Donald Trump’s trade war.

At least 10 banks, including JPMorgan, Bank of America and Evercore ISI, have cut their estimates for the S&P 500 index in the weeks since Trump’s decision to impose a baseline duty of 10 per cent on most US imports and higher “reciprocal tariffs” sent shockwaves through financial markets.

The S&P 500 has fallen more than 7 per cent in highly volatile trading since the initial levies were announced on April 2, and 14 per cent since touching a record high on February 19. Trump has since paused the reciprocal tariffs and created a carve-out for smartphones and some other electronics.

Advertisement

But economists say the uncertainty caused by rapid U-turns in trade policy could still slow economic growth, or even trigger a recession — something that would hit the earnings of listed US companies.

“The goldilocks sentiment in place entering this year has given way to abject uncertainty,” said Citigroup analyst Scott Chronert in a note.

Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

Wall Street’s average end of year S&P 500 target now stands at 6,012 — compared with 6,539 at the end of last year. The S&P 500 finished this week at 5,283.

The new forecasts mean that, despite growing worries about slowing economic growth, strategists nevertheless expect the index to rise 14 per cent over the coming months. It would mark a gain of just 2 per cent for 2025, a major slowdown from the back-to-back rallies of more than 20 per cent in 2023 and 2024.

Advertisement

The Banks’ newly cautious tone marks a humbling reversal since the start of the year, when many market participants had expected lower taxes and lighter regulation under a Republican administration to boost corporate profits.

Citigroup on Friday said it expects the S&P 500 to end the year at 5,800, down from a previous call of 6,500. The bank also lowered its 2025 earnings per share estimate to $255 from $270, just below the average forecast of $262, Bloomberg data shows.

Chronert said the recent sharp fall for US equities may become “the first bear market specifically triggered by US presidential actions”.

Line chart of S&P 500 showing US stocks have fallen sharply over the past two months

JPMorgan lowered its “base case” target on April 7 to 5,200 from 6,500, assuming “partial” relief on tariffs. “Even though we do not believe US exceptionalism is over,” the bank wrote at the time, “this [liberation day] shock came at a time when valuation was rich, positioning was crowded and leadership was particularly narrow.”

Peter Berezin at BCA Research, who has the lowest 2025 price target for the S&P 500 among analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, said in mid-February that he expects the index to close out this year at about 4,450, implying a drop of 15 per cent from current levels. In early March he said a US recession was likely to begin within the next three months.

“There’s a lot of groupthink on Wall Street,” said Berezin.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Trump administration has $15M deal with El Salvador to accept deportees, MD senator says

Published

on

Trump administration has M deal with El Salvador to accept deportees, MD senator says

Maryland Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen flew into Dulles Airport on Friday after visiting a wrongly deported man in El Salvador. The senator says he learned that the Trump administration struck a $15 million deal with the Central American nation to take deportees from the United States.

According to Van Hollen, Abrego Garcia been moved to a new detention facility in El Salvador. He says Abrego Garcia says he is well and that his family is keeping him motivated to keep going. 

Advertisement

But a major development came out of Van Hollen’s visit to El Salvador. 

The senator reported — for the first time — that he believes there is a $15 million deal between the United States government and El Salvador related to the detention facility where Abrego Garcia and many other deportees from the U.S. were being held. 

Van Hollen says he plans to investigate the use of taxpayer dollars in that deal as he continues to fight for Abrego Garcia’s return.

Advertisement

Dig deeper:

According to Van Hollen, Abrego Garcia asked for a phone call when he was placed in a Maryland detention facility but was denied. Then he was transferred to a facility in Texas before being put on a plane handcuffed, shackled, and he could not see out the window and did not know where he was going.  

Advertisement

Abrego Garcia says he has been traumatized by being at the detention center but he was recently moved to a new facility with better conditions.

Abrego Garcia told Van Hollen that he is not afraid of the other men in his immediate detention cell but he is fearful of other prisoners in the facility who called out to him and taunted him. 

The reason an immigration judge ruled in 2019 that he could not be deported to El Salvador was because he demonstrated a credible fear of persecution if he returned.

Advertisement

“An immigration judge found years ago that it would put his life in danger if he was returned to El Salvador,” Van Hollen said. “He was given protective status and a work permit.”
 

The other side:

Advertisement

Meanwhile, the White House continues to assert that he will not return to the United States.

Following Abrego Garcia’s deportation back in March, the Trump administration admitted that sending him back to El Salvador was an “error” but they won’t do anything to bring him back, even after a Supreme Court ruled that they should facilitate his return. 

READ MORE: Trump administration says US can’t force return of man mistakenly deported to El Salvador

Advertisement

Both Trump and El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele maintain that they have no plans to bring Abrego Garcia back.

The Trump administration has repeatedly claimed Abrego Garcia is a criminal and a member of the violent MS-13 gang, but has yet to provide direct evidence of those claims. 

Advertisement

The White House also insists Abrego Garcia was in the states illegally, despite the 2019 court ruling determining he should not be deported.

NewsDullesImmigrationDonald J. Trump
Continue Reading

News

Video: The Conservative Christian Network Inside the White House

Published

on

Video: The Conservative Christian Network Inside the White House

From the moment President Trump was re-elected, his conservative Christian supporters have rejoiced in a second chance at political power. Elizabeth Dias, the national religion correspondent for The New York Times, describes what that looks like in the White House now.

Continue Reading

Trending