logo
Layoffs from Trump tariffs ripple across the auto-parts industry

Layoffs from Trump tariffs ripple across the auto-parts industry

Miami Herald16 hours ago

Elena Morales, the president of SMT Automation, had been preparing for a big year at the tiny Michigan maker of manufacturing machinery.
Morales had purchased a new building and hired staff in anticipation of installing more equipment on automotive assembly lines. Her customers, who are some of the biggest automakers and parts suppliers in the U.S., had asked her if SMT would have capacity to take on more business.
Then, President Donald Trump's tariffs hit, and everything changed.
SMT makes automated equipment for assembly lines for vehicles and parts. Instead of ordering tools that would make components for future new models or build vehicles, many of the company's customers put off such investments while waiting to see how the Trump administration's trade maneuvers play out.
When automakers delay a new model, companies like SMT get hurt. Morales said revenue dropped by 40% in the first quarter and she had to lay off 8 employees, cutting SMT's headcount to 45. Most of her firm's work is for the auto industry, she said.
"We had forecast to have a lot of work this year," Morales said. "Now, most companies are pushing back order times. The new building is empty and we have been letting people go."
What's happening with SMT and companies like it shows how rapid changes in U.S. industrial policy can roil businesses up and down the supply chain. Trump's shifting stances on trade and tariffs have upended the planning of many companies that provide parts and equipment to big automakers. Other changes, like Trump's move to reverse incentives for clean technology including electric vehicles, have left suppliers grappling with sunk costs and struggling to shift gears.
Trump is betting that the pain will be short-lived and that eventually tariffs will push more companies to follow General Motors Co.'s decision to invest $4 billion in adding production and workers in the U.S. over the next two years. That could pay off for the small players that provide equipment to U.S. factories - if they can hang on.
The auto industry built a transnational chain of suppliers in the decades after Bill Clinton signed the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1993, with metals, cars and parts flowing across borders in a finely calibrated economic balancing act. Now, car companies are having to eat the cost of tariffs while trying to decide whether to move production.
As a result, some companies that help GM and other auto giants crank out new cars are suffering. Marelli Holdings Co., a supplier for Nissan Motor Co. and Stellantis NV, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection this month. Marelli has had problems managing its debt and declining revenue, but it cited tariffs as the blow that sent it to the courts for restructuring.
"Marelli was severely affected by tariffs due to its import/export-focused business and the imposition of tariffs specifically against automotive manufacturers and suppliers," Chief Executive Officer David Slump said in a court filing.
Constant changes in U.S. tariff levels have made it hard for automakers to plan and invest, and that in turn has caused pain for the parts and machinery makers they rely on. As long as the tariff outlook remains cloudy, the pain is likely to continue, some industry observers said. Trump said on June 12 that he may raise auto tariffs again.
"If we know tariffs are high, that's one thing. If they're going to be lowered, that's another," said Dan Starkey, an attorney who works with suppliers in the Detroit area. "Everything is frozen right now, and no one is hiring."
Capital crunch
Big companies have been reining in their investment activity while they wait to see what will happen with tariffs and other Trump policies. In the first quarter, 220 Fortune 500 companies reduced capital spending, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Industrial companies especially pulled back as they confronted higher materials costs and trade uncertainty.
GM reported a 33% drop in capital spending in the first quarter, though the company said it expects investment to get back on track this year. Harley-Davidson Inc. cut its comparable outlays by the same amount. Magna International Inc., one of the world's largest auto-parts suppliers, cut fixed-asset spending by 46%. Giant German parts maker Continental AG cut spending by more than 10% in the quarter.
Magna CEO Swamy Kotagiri said in an April interview that automakers are delaying investments in new plants that would start turning out new models in two years. It may pick up once there is more certainty, but for the time being automakers and suppliers are watching their spending, he said.
Last month, GM suspended a $55 million project to make hydrogen fuel cells with Piston Automotive, a supplier owned by former Detroit Pistons basketball player Vinnie Johnson. The project was expected to employ 144 people in Detroit. GM is re-evaluating the business because of slow demand as the two companies face a Republican-led pullback in clean transportation incentives, said a person familiar with the matter.
"There is no question that there are delays in vehicle programs and a reduction in volumes," said Daniel Rustmann, an attorney representing auto suppliers for law firm Butzel Long. "Larger suppliers can weather it, but the smaller suppliers will be struggling."
Other companies have decided they would rather stop producing in the U.S. than deal with the constant flux. French technological equipment supplier Lacroix Group SA said in May that it will leave the North American market, where it employs more than 1,200 people in the U.S. and Mexico. It plans to shutter a factory in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and lay off 115 workers in July, according to a WARN Act filing with the state.
Faltering financing
The period of uncertainty has also caused job losses. The auto industry employed just over 1 million workers in the U.S. in May, down more than 22,000 jobs from a year ago, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Michigan had the largest jump in layoffs in the U.S. for the week ended May 24, with 3,259 jobs lost, mostly in manufacturing, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.
Financing is becoming a problem for some suppliers. When revenue falls, banks start cutting credit lines. Nishant Dixit, the co-founder of a startup that uses artificial-intelligence tools to help suppliers find new business and get paid faster, also has a business that buys receivables. He said he's getting more inquiries.
"The banks are drying up," Dixit said. "They aren't giving as much credit. Contracts are being delayed so companies are looking for alternative sources."
Trump also issued an executive order restricting the Community Development Financial Institutions Fund, which lends cash to small businesses in rural, native and urban communities. That has left smaller suppliers looking for alternative financing, said Bill Grice, executive director of the Michigan Minority Development Council.
SMT's bank trimmed its credit line, Morales said. Her company isn't in a cash crunch, but any new work that requires buying equipment up front would require financing, she said. SMT could sell its receivables, but Morales said she is loath to do so, because it's expensive. Eventually, she said, the industry needs a stable environment so companies can figure out where to spend their money.
"There are companies bigger than me that are struggling," she said. "The last thing they want to do is buy a machine."
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump again questions NATO's collective defense guarantee ahead of summit
Trump again questions NATO's collective defense guarantee ahead of summit

San Francisco Chronicle​

time28 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Trump again questions NATO's collective defense guarantee ahead of summit

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — President Donald Trump on Wednesday once again raised questions about America's commitment to defend its allies should they come under attack as he prepared to join a NATO summit in the Netherlands. Just as he did during his first term in office, Trump suggested that his backing would depend on whether U.S. allies are spending enough on defense. He's demanded that European allies and Canada dedicate 5% of GDP to their security. On the eve of the meeting in The Hague, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that his commitment to Article 5 of NATO's founding treaty – the organization's collective security guarantee – 'depends on your definition.' 'There's numerous definitions of Article 5. You know that, right?' Trump said. 'But I'm committed to being their friends.' He signaled that he would give a more precise definition of what Article 5 means to him once he is at the summit. As a candidate in 2016, Trump suggested that he as president would not necessarily heed the alliance's mutual defense guarantee. In March this year, he expressed uncertainty that NATO would come to the United States' defense if needed. What Article 5 says Article 5 is the foundation stone on which the 32-member North Atlantic Treaty Organization is built. It states that an armed attack against one or more of the members shall be considered an attack against all members. It also states that if such an armed attack occurs, each member would take, individually and in concert with others, 'such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area.'' That security guarantee is the reason previously neutral Finland and Sweden sought to join NATO after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and why Ukraine itself and other countries in Europe also want in. When it has been invoked Article 5 was only invoked once, in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terror attacks on the United States, paving the way for NATO's biggest ever operation in Afghanistan. But NATO allies have also taken collective defense measures, including joining the U.S. to fight the Islamic State group in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as help keep the peace in the Balkans. The Three Musketeers-like pledge of all for one, one for all, is at the heart of NATO's deterrent effect. To question it too loudly might invite an adversary to test it. European officials have said that Russia is planning to do just that. The impact of Article 5 on Ukraine NATO's credibility hinges on Article 5 and its commitment to offer membership to any European country that can contribute to security in Europe and North America. But Ukraine, currently in the middle of war with Russia, might oblige all 32 member countries to spring to its defense militarily, potentially igniting a wider war with a nuclear-armed country. Trump is vetoing its membership for the foreseeable future. Article 5 becomes problematic when the territory of a member is unclear. For instance, Russian forces entered Georgia in August 2008, a few months after NATO leaders first promised the country it would join, along with Ukraine.

Trump Rages Through Night Over Leak of Humiliating Iran Flop
Trump Rages Through Night Over Leak of Humiliating Iran Flop

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Rages Through Night Over Leak of Humiliating Iran Flop

President Donald Trump is posting through the pain after a preliminary assessment by his own intelligence community cut short his victory lap over the U.S. strikes on Iran. A classified report leaked to CNN and The New York Times on Tuesday revealed that Trump's much-touted attacks on three Iranian nuclear enrichment sites over the weekend did not kill the country's nuclear program. At worst, they likely set the program back by a few months, which counters the president's repeated claims of 'complete and total obliteration.' Trump was livid at the two news outlets and let them know that in a late-night Truth Social post. 'FAKE NEWS CNN, TOGETHER WITH THE FAILING NEW YORK TIMES, HAVE TEAMED UP IN AN ATTEMPT TO DEMEAN ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL MILITARY STRIKES IN HISTORY,' he wrote. 'THE NUCLEAR SITES IN IRAN ARE COMPLETELY DESTROYED! BOTH THE TIMES AND CNN ARE GETTING SLAMMED BY THE PUBLIC!' Trump also posted a bizarre video of stealth bombers taking off as a 'bomb Iran' song played in the background; just a number of posts made by Trump throughout the night pushing his 'obliterated' narrative. The president announced on Saturday night that American warplanes dropped bunker buster bombs at Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan, marking the U.S.'s entry into the Israel-Iran conflict. 'I can report to the world that the strikes were a spectacular military success,' Trump said in a weekend address. 'Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.' Administration officials have repeatedly parroted Trump's claims of 'obliteration,' but an early report by the Defense Intelligence Agency, an arm of the Pentagon, found that Iran's uranium stockpile was not destroyed and its centrifuges were largely intact after the attack. 'So the assessment is that the U.S. set them back maybe a few months, tops,' a source familiar with the assessment told CNN. The assessment also found that U.S. strikes sealed off entrances to two of the nuclear facilities but failed to damage their underground buildings, according to the Times. Iran rubbed salt in Trump's wound by declaring that its nuclear program will 'resume without interruption' after the attacks. 'When I see CNN, all night long, they're trying to say, 'Well, maybe it wasn't really as demolished as we thought.' It was demolished,' Trump told reporters earlier on Tuesday, calling on CNN and MSNBC to apologize to the pilots who dropped the bombs. 'These cable networks are real losers,' he said. 'You're gutless losers. I say that to CNN because I watch it—I have no choice. I got to watch it. It's all garbage. It's all fake news.' Trump officials were quick to shut down the leaked assessment. Chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell cited an unnamed DIA official who said: 'This is a preliminary, low confidence report and will continue to be refined as additional intelligence becomes available. We are working with the appropriate authorities to investigate the unauthorized disclosure of classified information.' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt similarly fumed at CNN, branding their bombshell reporting as 'fake news' even as she confirmed the existence of the assessment. 'This alleged 'assessment' is flat-out wrong and was classified as 'top secret' but was still leaked to CNN by an anonymous, low-level loser in the intelligence community,' she wrote in an X rant. 'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear program,' she added. 'Everyone knows what happens when you drop fourteen 30,000 pound bombs perfectly on their targets: total obliteration.'

Four Days Left Until Chartwell Retirement Residences (TSE:CSH.UN) Trades Ex-Dividend
Four Days Left Until Chartwell Retirement Residences (TSE:CSH.UN) Trades Ex-Dividend

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Four Days Left Until Chartwell Retirement Residences (TSE:CSH.UN) Trades Ex-Dividend

Regular readers will know that we love our dividends at Simply Wall St, which is why it's exciting to see Chartwell Retirement Residences (TSE: is about to trade ex-dividend in the next 4 days. The ex-dividend date is one business day before the record date, which is the cut-off date for shareholders to be present on the company's books to be eligible for a dividend payment. The ex-dividend date is an important date to be aware of as any purchase of the stock made on or after this date might mean a late settlement that doesn't show on the record date. Meaning, you will need to purchase Chartwell Retirement Residences' shares before the 30th of June to receive the dividend, which will be paid on the 15th of July. The company's next dividend payment will be CA$0.051 per share. Last year, in total, the company distributed CA$0.61 to shareholders. Looking at the last 12 months of distributions, Chartwell Retirement Residences has a trailing yield of approximately 3.4% on its current stock price of CA$17.96. Dividends are a major contributor to investment returns for long term holders, but only if the dividend continues to be paid. So we need to check whether the dividend payments are covered, and if earnings are growing. Trump has pledged to "unleash" American oil and gas and these 15 US stocks have developments that are poised to benefit. If a company pays out more in dividends than it earned, then the dividend might become unsustainable - hardly an ideal situation. An unusually high payout ratio of 297% of its profit suggests something is happening other than the usual distribution of profits to shareholders. A useful secondary check can be to evaluate whether Chartwell Retirement Residences generated enough free cash flow to afford its dividend. Over the last year it paid out 51% of its free cash flow as dividends, within the usual range for most companies. It's good to see that while Chartwell Retirement Residences's dividends were not covered by profits, at least they are affordable from a cash perspective. Still, if the company repeatedly paid a dividend greater than its profits, we'd be concerned. Extraordinarily few companies are capable of persistently paying a dividend that is greater than their profits. View our latest analysis for Chartwell Retirement Residences Click here to see the company's payout ratio, plus analyst estimates of its future dividends. Businesses with strong growth prospects usually make the best dividend payers, because it's easier to grow dividends when earnings per share are improving. If earnings decline and the company is forced to cut its dividend, investors could watch the value of their investment go up in smoke. That's why it's comforting to see Chartwell Retirement Residences's earnings have been skyrocketing, up 110% per annum for the past five years. Chartwell Retirement Residences also issued more than 5% of its market cap in new stock during the past year, which we feel is likely to hurt its dividend prospects in the long run. It's hard to grow dividends per share when a company keeps creating new shares. Another key way to measure a company's dividend prospects is by measuring its historical rate of dividend growth. In the last 10 years, Chartwell Retirement Residences has lifted its dividend by approximately 1.3% a year on average. It's good to see both earnings and the dividend have improved - although the former has been rising much quicker than the latter, possibly due to the company reinvesting more of its profits in growth. Has Chartwell Retirement Residences got what it takes to maintain its dividend payments? Growing earnings per share and a normal cashflow payout ratio is an ok combination, but we're concerned that the company is paying out such a high percentage of its income as dividends. It might be worth researching if the company is reinvesting in growth projects that could grow earnings and dividends in the future, but for now we're not all that optimistic on its dividend prospects. With that being said, if dividends aren't your biggest concern with Chartwell Retirement Residences, you should know about the other risks facing this business. For example, we've found 3 warning signs for Chartwell Retirement Residences (1 shouldn't be ignored!) that deserve your attention before investing in the shares. Generally, we wouldn't recommend just buying the first dividend stock you see. Here's a curated list of interesting stocks that are strong dividend payers. Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team (at) article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store