Berliner Boersenzeitung - US trades barbs with Canada as steel, aluminum tariffs loom

EUR -
AED 4.003446
AFN 77.037415
ALL 99.587944
AMD 427.199572
ANG 1.966642
AOA 994.130181
ARS 1162.166813
AUD 1.716357
AWG 1.962099
AZN 1.854698
BAM 1.958549
BBD 2.203252
BDT 132.586084
BGN 1.951705
BHD 0.410747
BIF 3233.337967
BMD 1.090055
BND 1.456444
BOB 7.540583
BRL 6.238496
BSD 1.091211
BTN 94.84925
BWP 14.866592
BYN 3.571112
BYR 21365.075732
BZD 2.191856
CAD 1.563558
CDF 3134.998465
CHF 0.96163
CLF 0.0264
CLP 1013.074893
CNY 7.889654
CNH 7.883157
COP 4502.613407
CRC 545.160127
CUC 1.090055
CUP 28.886454
CVE 110.419974
CZK 25.008037
DJF 194.309146
DKK 7.460499
DOP 68.615672
DZD 145.577144
EGP 55.048103
ERN 16.350823
ETB 143.325441
FJD 2.490503
FKP 0.842402
GBP 0.840318
GEL 3.024868
GGP 0.842402
GHS 16.833312
GIP 0.842402
GMD 77.929382
GNF 9463.33532
GTQ 8.398146
GYD 227.803893
HKD 8.469874
HNL 27.942204
HRK 7.533481
HTG 145.067735
HUF 399.786134
IDR 17838.915278
ILS 3.992713
IMP 0.842402
INR 94.779458
IQD 1428.377249
IRR 45785.156765
ISK 146.060474
JEP 0.842402
JMD 170.605817
JOD 0.772815
JPY 161.776681
KES 141.383322
KGS 95.32531
KHR 4361.083771
KMF 492.88673
KPW 981.049396
KRW 1582.256463
KWD 0.335826
KYD 0.89385
KZT 547.071005
LAK 23625.628066
LBP 98508.735249
LKR 321.930417
LRD 217.102082
LSL 19.803691
LTL 3.218649
LVL 0.659363
LYD 5.246217
MAD 10.559648
MDL 19.370294
MGA 5095.713924
MKD 61.446405
MMK 2289.097873
MNT 3785.195861
MOP 8.727114
MRU 43.521669
MUR 49.007393
MVR 16.852249
MWK 1889.423202
MXN 21.71046
MYR 4.846495
MZN 69.370451
NAD 19.803691
NGN 1687.102964
NIO 39.922615
NOK 11.526126
NPR 151.718217
NZD 1.883057
OMR 0.419664
PAB 1.090055
PEN 3.987757
PGK 4.427489
PHP 62.417049
PKR 305.313897
PLN 4.17363
PYG 8709.905691
QAR 3.967739
RON 4.98443
RSD 117.425295
RUB 93.199411
RWF 1531.284514
SAR 4.088087
SBD 9.265237
SCR 16.266028
SDG 652.902124
SEK 11.029104
SGD 1.453802
SHP 0.856612
SLE 24.885853
SLL 22857.907076
SOS 623.282191
SRD 39.590766
STD 22561.935292
SVC 9.537771
SYP 14172.828943
SZL 19.803691
THB 36.558532
TJS 11.92236
TMT 3.815387
TND 3.355165
TOP 2.620294
TRY 39.972759
TTD 7.421989
TWD 35.941679
TZS 2866.79274
UAH 45.371694
UGX 3995.675628
USD 1.090055
UYU 46.423637
UZS 14103.297353
VES 72.243931
VND 27801.848738
VUV 134.03035
WST 3.072315
XAF 657.182306
XAG 0.032314
XAU 0.000364
XCD 2.943148
XDR 0.818059
XOF 657.182306
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.861563
ZAR 19.765873
ZMK 9811.80347
ZMW 31.320798
ZWL 350.997228
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    66.43

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    10.37

    +0.19%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    23.33

    +0.47%

  • SCS

    0.0050

    10.995

    +0.05%

  • RIO

    0.5680

    63.608

    +0.89%

  • RELX

    0.6200

    49.55

    +1.25%

  • NGG

    1.0600

    64.27

    +1.65%

  • AZN

    -0.0600

    77.54

    -0.08%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    9.7

    +1.55%

  • GSK

    0.6800

    40.17

    +1.69%

  • BTI

    0.1700

    41.53

    +0.41%

  • BCC

    -0.6300

    98.72

    -0.64%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.44

    +0.38%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.94

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    23.7

    +0.97%

  • BP

    0.1450

    33.535

    +0.43%

US trades barbs with Canada as steel, aluminum tariffs loom
US trades barbs with Canada as steel, aluminum tariffs loom / Photo: ROBERTO SCHMIDT - AFP/File

US trades barbs with Canada as steel, aluminum tariffs loom

The United States and Canada traded angry tariff warnings Tuesday, as trade tensions soared and President Donald Trump doubled down on provocative plans to annex his country's northern neighbor.

Text size:

Despite a compromise arising after a day of threats and counter-threats, Canada and other US trading partners will still be hit at midnight by a blanket 25 percent levy imposed on all steel and aluminum imports.

The move comes with "no exceptions or exemptions," a White House spokesperson told AFP.

The steel and aluminum levies threaten to affect everything from electronics to vehicles and construction equipment -- and have manufacturers scrambling to find cost-effective domestic suppliers.

Early Tuesday, Trump threatened to double the rate on imports of both metals from Canada, after its province of Ontario imposed an electricity surcharge on three US states.

Canadian Prime Minister-elect Mark Carney, in turn, vowed that his incoming administration would hit back with "maximum impact."

But Ontario has since halted the surcharge after talks with Washington.

Wall Street stocks slumped for a second straight day after major indexes fluctuated over Trump's tariff threats.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer are set to meet in Washington Thursday "to discuss a renewed USMCA ahead of the April 2 reciprocal tariff deadline," according to a US-Canada joint statement.

This refers to a North American trade pact that also includes Mexico.

Canada, historically among the closest US allies, had been facing aggressive rhetoric and found itself the target of Trump's ire on trade -- alongside unprecedented questioning of and threats to its sovereignty.

Canada supplies half of US aluminum imports and 20 percent of US steel imports, says industry consultant EY-Parthenon.

- Electricity, autos -

On Tuesday, Trump said on Truth Social that if Canada uses electricity as a bargaining chip "they will pay a financial price for this so big that it will be read about in History Books for many years to come!"

He also threatened to boost tariffs on cars from April 2, saying this would "essentially, permanently shut down the automobile manufacturing business in Canada."

Trump has vowed reciprocal levies as soon as April 2 to remedy trade practices Washington deems unfair, raising the potential for more products and trading partners to be specifically targeted.

Reacting to Trump's announcement on MSNBC, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said the US president made "an unprovoked attack on our country, on families, on jobs."

Trump, meanwhile, backed up his tariff threats by saying again that Canada should be absorbed.

The "only thing that makes sense" is for Canada to join the United States as a 51st state, he said. "This would make all Tariffs, and everything else, totally disappear."

- Costs and opportunities -

Former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said on X that Trump's tariff threats on Canada would be "a self-inflicted wound to the US economy that we cannot afford, at a moment when recession risks are rising."

Trump, however, played down fears over the economy, saying he does not see a recession coming while dismissing losses on Wall Street.

If some companies were bracing for a damaging period of higher production costs, others sensed an opportunity.

Drew Greenblatt, owner of Baltimore-based metal product manufacturer Marlin Steel, said incoming levies on imported steel have already boosted his new orders.

"We only use American steel, so we're thrilled with the tariffs," he told AFP, adding that these helped him gain an edge over a competitor.

For Robert Actis, whose firm makes stucco netting used in construction, the expanded scope of incoming levies is a relief.

Currently, a business like his imports wire for manufacturing, facing added tariff costs. But foreign-made finished products could enter the US market.

With incoming levies covering a range of finished metal products too, Actis said this levels the playing field.

But higher import costs will likely ripple through the economy.

A major US maker of steel products warned American steel prices would surge to match the elevated costs of foreign goods.

Supply constraints nudge prices up too, making items like nails, for example, more expensive as much of their cost is in original steel.

Purchasers in industries like homebuilding would therefore end up spending more and could pass costs to consumers, making homes less affordable.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)