
In the heat of summer, snowman cans face Trump's ‘chaotic' steel tariff storm
BELCAMP (Maryland), June 29 — In the sweltering US summer, metal containers decorated with snowmen and sleighs are taking shape — but tempers are also rising as their manufacturer grapples with President Donald Trump's steep steel tariffs.
At Independent Can's factory in Belcamp, Maryland northeast of Baltimore, CEO Rick Huether recounts how he started working at his family's business at age 14.
Huether, now 73, says he is determined to keep his manufacturing company afloat for generations to come. But Trump's tariffs are complicating this task.
'We're living in chaos right now,' he told AFP.
Since returning to the presidency in January, Trump imposed tariffs of 25 per cent on imported steel and aluminium — and then doubled the rate to 50 per cent.
This has weighed on operations at Independent Can, and Huether expects he eventually will have to raise prices.
Not enough tinplate
With the steady beat of presses, steel plates that have been coated with tin — to prevent corrosion — are turned into containers for cookies, dried fruit, coffee and milk powder at Huether's factory.
But there is not enough of such American-made tinplate for companies like his.
'In the United States, we can only make about 25 per cent of the tinplate that's required to do what we do,' in addition to what other manufacturers need, Huether said.
'Those all require us to buy in the neighbourhood of 70 per cent of our steel outside of the United States,' he added.
CEO of Independent Can Company Rick Huether poses for a photo in the company's manufacturing facility in Belcamp, Maryland, June 25, 2025. — AFP pic
While Huether is a proponent of growing the US manufacturing base, saying globalisation has 'gone almost a little bit too far,' he expressed concern about Trump's methods.
Trump has announced a stream of major tariffs only to later back off parts of them or postpone them, and also imposed duties on items the country does not produce.
For now, Independent Can — which employs nearly 400 people at four sites — is ruling out any layoffs despite the current upheaval.
But Huether said one of the company's plants in Iowa closed last year in part because of a previous increase in steel tariffs, during Trump's first presidential term.
Price hikes
With steel tariffs at 50 per cent now, Huether expects he will ultimately have to raise his prices by more than 20 per cent, given that tinplate represents a part of his production costs.
Some buyers have already reduced their orders this year by 20 to 25 per cent, over worries about the economy and about not having enough business themselves.
Others now seem more inclined to buy American, but Huether expressed reservations over how long this trend might last, citing his experiences from the Covid-19 crisis.
'During the pandemic, we took everybody in. As China shut down and the ports were locked up, our business went up 50 per cent,' he explained.
But when the pandemic was over, customers turned back to purchasing from China, he said.
'Today if people want to come to us, we'll take them in,' he said, but added: 'We need to have a two-year contract.'
Huether wants to believe that his company, which is almost a century old after being founded during the Great Depression, will weather the latest disruptions.
'I think that our business will survive,' he said, but added: 'It's trying to figure out what you're going to sell in the next six months.' — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Malaysian Reserve
an hour ago
- Malaysian Reserve
G7 agrees compromise with US over global minimum tax for firms
NEW YORK — The G7 nations have backed a compromise with the United States in the dispute over an international minimum tax agreement for large corporations, reported German news agency dpa. The agreement means that US companies would be exempt from the global minimum tax but would instead be subject to taxation under a parallel US system, according to a statement from the Canadian G7 presidency following a summit there earlier this month. It has been agreed that the arrangement proposed by Washington ensures progress in combating international profit shifting. After taking office again in January, President Donald Trump declared the global minimum tax for large companies invalid in the United States. The White House views the global tax agreement as an unacceptable infringement on national sovereignty over finances and taxation. The minimum tax idea is part of a global corporate tax reform agreed by approximately 140 countries via the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Under the agreement, all multi-nationals with annual revenues exceeding €750 million (US$880 million) must pay at least 15 per cent in taxes, regardless of where the profits are generated. German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil welcomed the compromise following talks by the Group of Seven major industrialised democracies. 'The G7 agreement makes it possible for us to further advance the fight against tax havens, tax evasion and tax dumping,' he said in a statement on Sunday. He added that the US no longer opposes the global minimum tax per se, and planned punitive measures against European companies have been dropped. 'This allows the OECD and US minimum taxes to coexist,' he said. –BERNAMA-dpa

Malay Mail
an hour ago
- Malay Mail
US Senate moves closer to vote on Trump's sweeping, controversial spending bill
WASHINGTON, June 30 — US senators were inching Sunday towards a vote on Donald Trump's 'big beautiful' spending bill, a hugely divisive proposal that would deliver key parts of the US president's domestic agenda while making massive cuts to social welfare programmes. Trump is hoping the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' will help seal his legacy, extending his expiring first-term tax cuts at a cost of US$4.5 trillion (RM19 trillion) and beefing up border security. But Republicans eyeing 2026 midterm congressional elections are divided over the package, which would strip health care from millions of the poorest Americans and add more than US$3 trillion to the country's debt. The Senate formally opened debate on the bill late Saturday, after Republican holdouts delayed what should have been a procedural vote. Senators narrowly passed the motion to begin debate, with two Republicans joining 47 Democrats in voting against it — drawing sharp rebukes from Trump. The US president has pushed his party to get the bill passed and on his desk for him to sign into law by July 4, the United States' Independence Day. On Sunday, however, he seemed to cast doubt on that timeline, and accused the opposition Democrats of delaying proceedings for political reasons. 'There are a lot of bad people in the Democrat Party,' he told Fox News in an interview aired Sunday, berating his political opponents for not backing an increase to the debt ceiling. Earlier, Trump's tone had been even sharper. 'Republicans must remember that they are fighting against a very evil, corrupt and, in many ways, incompetent (Policywise!) group of people, who would rather see our Country 'go down in flames' than do the right thing,' he said on social media. Democrats are bitterly opposed to the legislation and Trump's agenda, and have vowed to hold up the debate. They began by insisting that the entirety of the roughly 1,000-page bill be read aloud to the chamber before the debate commenced. If passed in the Senate, the bill would go back to the House for approval, where Republicans can only afford to lose a handful of votes -- and are facing stiff opposition from within their own ranks. On Sunday, Republican Senator Thom Tillis, who opposes the bill, said he would not seek reelection next year, US media reported, after Trump excoriated him for his opposition to the spending plan. Divisive cuts Republicans are scrambling to offset the US$4.5 trillion cost of Trump's tax relief, with many of the proposed cuts to come from decimating funding for Medicaid, the health insurance program for low-income Americans. Republicans are split on the Medicaid cuts, which will threaten scores of rural hospitals and lead to an estimated 8.6 million Americans being deprived of health care. The spending plan would also roll back many of the tax incentives for renewable energy that were put in place under Trump's predecessor Joe Biden. On Saturday, former Trump advisor Elon Musk — with whom the president had a public falling out this month over his criticism of the bill — called the current proposal 'utterly insane and destructive.' 'It gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future,' said Musk, who is the world's richest person, and heads electric vehicle company Tesla and space flight firm SpaceX, among others. Independent analysis also shows that the bill would pave the way for a historic redistribution of wealth from the poorest 10 per cent of Americans to the richest. The bill is unpopular across multiple demographic, age and income groups, according to extensive recent polling. Although the House has already passed its own version, both chambers have to agree on the same text before it can be signed into law. — AFP


Free Malaysia Today
2 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Trump blasts ‘communist' winner of New York Democratic primary
Zohran Mamdani's surprise win in New York's mayoral primary shocked Democrats and triggered backlash from Donald Trump's camp. (Zohran Mamdani pic) WASHINGTON : US President Donald Trump branded the winner of New York City's mayoral Democratic primary a 'pure communist' in remarks that aired Sunday, an epithet the progressive candidate dismissed as political theatrics. Zohran Mamdani's shock win last week against a scandal-scarred political heavyweight resonated as a thunderclap within the party, and drew the ire of Trump and his collaborators, who accused Mamdani of being a radical extremist. The Republican's aggressive criticism of the self-described democratic socialist is sure to ramp up over the coming months as Trump's party seeks to push Democrats away from the political centre and frame them as too radical to win major US elections. 'He's pure communist' and a 'radical leftist… lunatic,' Trump fumed on Fox News talk show 'Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo.' 'I think it's very bad for New York,' added Trump, who grew up in the city and built his sprawling real estate business there. 'If he does get in, I'm going to be president and he is going to have to do the right thing (or) they're not getting any money' from the federal government. Trump's White House has repeatedly threatened to curb funding for Democratic-led US cities if they oppose his policies, including cutting off money to so-called sanctuary cities which limit their cooperation with immigration authorities. Mamdani also took to the talk shows Sunday, asserting he would 'absolutely' maintain New York's status as a sanctuary city so that 'New Yorkers can get out of the shadows and into the full life of the city that they belong to.' Asked directly on NBC's 'Meet the Press' whether he is a communist, Mamdani – a 33-year-old immigrant aiming to become New York's first Muslim mayor – responded 'No, I am not. 'And I have already had to start to get used to the fact that the president will talk about how I look, how I sound, where I'm from, who I am, ultimately because he wants to distract from what I'm fighting for,' Mamdani said. 'I'm fighting for the very working people that he ran a campaign to empower, that he has since then betrayed.' The Ugandan-born state assemblyman had trailed former governor Andrew Cuomo in polls but surged on a message of lower rents, free daycare and buses, and other populist ideas in the notoriously expensive metropolis. Although registered Democrats outnumber Republicans three to one in New York, victory for Mamdani in November is not assured. Current mayor Eric Adams is a Democrat but is campaigning for re-election as an independent, while Cuomo may also run unaffiliated.