Evelyn Hockstein/ReutersTrump’s reversal left CEOs relieved but discombobulated and warning of pain ahead. “There’s a lot that goes into why things are made where they’re made, and a lot of those things are not quickly undone,” Bayer CEO Bill Anderson tells Semafor. “There need to be some new [trade] agreements made, but long-term, high walls would be very difficult for countries, companies, and consumers.” - Delta CEO Ed Bastian said the company wouldn’t take delivery of any tariffed Airbus planes. “It gets very difficult to make that math work,” he said this morning. Delta pulled its 2025 profit forecast.
- Haas Automation, a privately held precision-parts manufacturer, warned it had halted overtime, paused hiring, and slowed production and asked the White House for exemptions on important machine components and raw materials.
- Amazon began canceling orders from China, Bloomberg reported. CEO Andy Jassy told CNBC that sellers on its platform will pass tariff costs along to consumers: “Depending on which country you’re in, you don’t have 50% extra margin that you can play with.”
- “We have over the years adjusted country-of-origin on some things,” Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said on a call this morning. “We will manage that mix artfully.” The company, which imports about one-third of the products sold in its US stores from China and Mexico, rescinded its first-quarter profit guidance.
- Tariffs are expected to make Audi’s most popular car “unsellable” in the US.
Trump’s quick reversal left business leaders confused about the true purpose of the tariffs, which the White House has, at various times, said are meant to raise revenue, bring back manufacturing jobs, eliminate trade deficits, punish freeloading allies, hurt adversaries, and crack down on fentanyl. Raising meaningful revenue or revitalizing US factories would require high and sustained tariffs, not ones that can be negotiated away. “People are just frozen. The rules of the game changed,” said Connor Fitzgerald, a credit portfolio manager at Wellington Management, the $1.2 trillion investment giant. “That hasn’t played through economic data yet.” — Rohan Goswami and Liz Hoffman |