Tag: Breaking News: Politics

  • Shoppers will pay more for bananas, coffee and toilet paper because of tariffs, trade group says

    Shoppers will pay more for bananas, coffee and toilet paper because of tariffs, trade group says


    A customer shops for produce at an H-E-B grocery store in Austin, Texas, on Feb. 12, 2025.

    Brandon Bell | Getty Images

    Shoppers will likely pay more for coffee, bananas, vanilla and toilet paper over the coming weeks as the Trump administration’s new tariffs go into effect.

    The U.S. plans to hike tariff rates on goods imported from more than 180 countries and territories in the hopes of bringing jobs back stateside. However, some “critical” ingredients and materials found in food, drinks and goods used daily by U.S. consumers are not available domestically, according to the Consumer Brands Association, an industry trade group that represents Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, Target and other consumer giants.

    “However well intended, the success of the President’s America First Trade Policy, must recognize the U.S. companies that are already doing it the right way but depend on imports for specific ingredients and inputs that cannot be sourced domestically,” Tom Madrecki, vice president of supply chain resiliency for the CBA, said in a statement. “Reciprocal tariffs that do not reflect ingredient and input availability concerns will inevitably raise costs, limit consumer access to affordable products and unintentionally harm iconic American manufacturers.”

    On CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Thursday morning, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick brushed off the idea that countries could win exemptions for specific goods. But the CBA is seeking exemptions for key ingredients and materials slapped with tariffs to keep prices down for its members and their customers.

    For one, the U.S. climate limits the production of some staples of the U.S. diet, such as coffee, cocoa and tropical fruits, according to the CBA. The U.S. was the top global importer of bananas in 2023, based on Observatory of Economic Complexity data. Nearly 40% of those bananas came from Guatemala, which will face a 10% tariff on goods exported to the U.S.

    Trader Joe’s has long bragged about not raising the price of its bananas, as seen in this photo from 2014. 

    Rj Sangosti | Denver Post | Getty Images

    Spices will also become pricier for home cooks and bakers because of climate limitations, the CBA said. For example, Madagascar accounts for more than three-quarters of U.S. imports of vanilla, which is already the second-most expensive spice in the world. Exports from Madagascar will be subject to tariffs of 47%.

    Shares of spice purveyor McCormick were down less than 1% in afternoon trading on Thursday. The company plans to offset tariffs through “some very targeted price adjustments” and a broader cost-savings program, McCormick executives said in late March.

    In other cases, decadeslong shifts in the U.S. agricultural system mean domestic supply will not be able to meet demand easily.

    For example, more than 90% of oats milled for food in the U.S. come from Canada to be turned into cereal, the CBA said. But U.S. oat acreage peaked more than a century ago and has been declining in the decades since then, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The domestic food system can no longer grow, store or transport U.S. oats at the scale necessary to meet demand, the CBA said.

    Shoppers will likely also find themselves paying more for inedible household staples. Toilet paper, diapers, lotions and shampoo could become more expensive as manufacturers pass on the increased costs for wood pulp, bamboo fibers, shea butter and palm oil, according to the CBA. For example, the U.S. imports most of its palm oil supply from Indonesia, which now faces a 32% duty.

    Markets plunged on Thursday in response to the tariff announcement. However, stocks in the consumer staples sector, which includes many of the CBA’s members, rose in afternoon trading as investors ditched riskier bets for the relative safety of household necessities.

    Shares of Procter & Gamble climbed more than 1%, while Coke’s stock was up 2%. General Mills’ shares ticked up 3%.

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  • Supreme Court rules for the FDA in flavored vapes dispute

    Supreme Court rules for the FDA in flavored vapes dispute


    A person uses a vape pen near Bryant Park on December 02, 2024 in New York City. 

    Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

    The Supreme Court on Wednesday handed a win to the Food and Drug Administration over its refusal to approve flavored e-cigarettes.

    The court threw out an appeals court ruling that found the agency unlawfully changed the rules in the middle of proceedings when it was deciding whether to approve various products.

    With e-cigarettes, or vapes, more popular than ever, the case put the FDA’s role in the approval process under scrutiny. Despite the agency’s refusal to approve many products, flavored vapes have remained widely available.

    Writing for a unanimous court, conservative Justice Samuel Alito stopped short of ruling definitively that the FDA had acted unlawfully on one particular aspect of the case: whether the agency should have considered the companies’ marketing plans as part of the approval process.

    That issue will now be decided by the lower court.

    But Alito said that the FDA’s decisions were otherwise sound, noting that the companies’ own applications are “strong evidence that regulated entities had adequate notice of the sort of comparative analysis the FDA anticipated.”

    The FDA, then under the Biden administration, appealed to the Supreme Court after the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that it had incorrectly handled the approval requests made by manufacturers, thereby violating the federal Administrative Procedure Act.

    The agency has won similar cases in other courts.

    Triton Distribution, which makes e-liquids for vape pens with flavors like Signature Series Mom’s Pistachio and Suicide Bunny Mother’s Milk and Cookies, is one of the companies involved. The other is Vapestasia, which has sought approval for Iced Pineapple Express, Killer Kustard Blueberry and other flavors.

    The FDA has said flavored vapes pose a health risk because they could encourage young people to use tobacco.

    The companies could face potential civil and criminal penalties for marketing products without approval. They argued the FDA got it wrong in denying the approvals, saying that flavored vapes can be used to help people stop smoking.

    Their lawyers said the FDA changed its standard for considering flavored vapes in the middle of the process without giving applicants adequate warning.

    The agency responded in court that it evaluates each application on its merits and that the companies had failed to provide sufficient evidence for their claims.

    The FDA began regulating vape products in 2016 after they were already on the market. At the time, the agency said it would not take enforcement actions while companies sought approval.

    It subsequently concluded that the potential benefits of helping adult smokers quit do not outweigh the potential health risks to young people, who are most attracted to nontobacco-flavored vapes.

    The FDA has given its approval to menthol-flavored e-cigarettes, as well as some that are tobacco-flavored.



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  • Tequila maker says tariffs won’t affect his prices. Here’s why he plans to absorb costs

    Tequila maker says tariffs won’t affect his prices. Here’s why he plans to absorb costs


    Suerte Tequila’s dedicated factory and agave farm in Jalisco Mexico.

    Courtesy: Suerte Tequila

    While some tequila makers have warned they might have to implement price hikes to offset tariffs, Colorado-based Suerte Tequila said it has been able to keep overhead prices low enough that it will absorb the levies if necessary.

    The Jalisco-made tequila label will not pass costs on to customers.

    “Absorbing the cost of the tariff goes right along with our philosophy and the way that we were setting up and designing and growing our business,” said Laurence Spiewak, Suerte Tequila CEO.

    Suerte Tequila is a small-batch, single-estate, handcrafted tequila that launched in 2012. One year into operation, Suerte acquired majority ownership of its factory in Mexico from the distiller’s family, Spiewak told CNBC.

    Along with its distillery, Suerte is one of a few registered tequila brands that owns its agave fields and has long-term partnerships with growers, which Spiewak said give it an edge against the competition.

    “99% of brands our size do not own their own factory in Mexico and are co-packing or co-manufacturing with a whole different price structure,” Spiewak said.

    Another reason Spiewak said he doesn’t understand the industry bracing consumers for price hikes is that agave prices have been falling. “Agave prices are down tremendously, so why would we raise prices?” he asked.

    IWSR in its 2024 analysis of agave noted that prices hit a record 32 pesos (USD $2) per kilogram in 2022, but by February 2024, prices fell to 5 pesos (USD $0.30) per kilogram.

    “Tequila margins are stronger than ever,” Spiewak added.

    Spiewak’s tone is a shift in departure from larger industry players like Jose Cuervo tequila-maker Becle and Don Julio producer Diageo, which have warned about possible price hikes.

    Becle previously said it could face an $80 million impact to its balance sheet this year if President Donald Trump moved forward with tariffs on Mexican products. A Jefferies analyst estimated Diageo, meanwhile, could see group sales decline by as much as 1.5%.

    “I completely understand why [larger brands] are up in arms about a 25% tax on business,” Spiewak said. “Our whole cost structure and pricing, I mean everything when it comes to manufacturing, packaging and then exporting from Mexico into the U.S. and importing here is completely different.”

    While Spiewak said owning the land allows his company to control overhead production costs that keep prices low, Brian Rosen, chairman at adult beverage investment firm InvestBev, said Suerte’s real competitive advantage is its independence.

    “Any of these forward-facing companies that have shareholders and boards of directors are getting hammered because the shelf pull is slowing down, while at the same time the price is going up and at the same time as Americans are drinking less,” Rosen said. “Someone’s got to take a bullet and these smaller companies don’t have any of that kind of pressure.”

    Compared with the broader spirits industry in 2024, tequila and mezcal were the only spirits category that saw sales growth, with the U.S. importing $5.2 billion worth of tequila and $93 million worth of mezcal from Mexico, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the U.S.

    Suerte’s tequila shipments grew 55.8% in 2024 compared with the year prior. That’s continued in 2025, growing 43% year-over-year through February, Spiewak said.

    “The key to our success is maintaining focus in a very noisy space,” Spiewak said. “Raising prices on consumers already looking to spend doesn’t make sense for us right now.”



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  • Shares of conservative cable channel Newsmax soar another 179% after massive debut

    Shares of conservative cable channel Newsmax soar another 179% after massive debut


    A NEWSMAX television crew member steam irons a backdrop during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, on Saturday, February 24, 2024.

    Tom Brenner | The Washington Post | The Washington Post | Getty Images

    Shares of conservative cable channel Newsmax soared nearly 180% Tuesday, a day after the stock’s dizzying debut on the New York Stock Exchange.

    Newsmax shares have risen more than 1,500% since its Monday debut, when it opened at $14 per share. It closed at $233 per share on Tuesday.

    The skyrocketing stock not only brought the company’s market capitalization to nearly $30 billion — surpassing the market cap of legacy media companies like Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox Corp — it also propped up the returns of its investors.

    Traditional media IPOs are hard to come by, especially given the significant changes to companies’ business models in recent years, and Newsmax’s meteoric debut was unexpected. The highly anticipated stock debut of CoreWeave on Friday — the biggest tech IPO since 2021 and first pure-play artificial intelligence offering — saw a tempered start in comparison.

    Founder and CEO Christopher Ruddy, who owns roughly 39.2 million Class A shares of the company and 81.4% of voting stock, joined the billionaire ranks after the initial public offering. As of the market close, Ruddy’s stake was worth more than $9 billion.

    Interactive Brokers founder and billionaire Thomas Peterffy is Newsmax’s second-largest shareholder with 23 million shares — worth more than $5 billion as of Tuesday — owned through a limited-liability company, Conyers Investments.

    Peterffy invested $50 million in Newsmax in 2019, according to an individual familiar with the deal. He declined to comment on his investment to CNBC. Peterffy has appeared on Newsmax before and is a prominent GOP donor.

    On Tuesday, Newsmax sent out an email to investors highlighting its stock rise on the opening day of trading.

    “Americans for a long time have been voting with their remote controls, downloads, apps to say they want Newsmax. Now investors powerfully are buying Newsmax shares because they like us, they value us and they want us to keep growing,” Ruddy said in a statement to CNBC.

    Rising red tide

    Fox News and Newsmax television studios are seen in the Fiserv Forum on the day before the Republican National Convention begins, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 14, 2024.

    Joe Raedle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Newsmax, which launched its right-wing cable network in 2014, has gained traction during President Donald Trump‘s second term and is the fourth most-watched cable news channel after Fox News, MSNBC and CNN, according to Nielsen.

    Ruddy said on Monday that Newsmax counts Republican and Democratic lawmakers as both contributors and viewers. “We believe we’re conservative with an independent news mission, and we ask tough questions of the Trump administration.”

    Last week, Ruddy posted on X that he received a call from Trump, adding “I shared with Potus my new saying: ‘A rising Trump lifts all boats!’”

    “This shows there continues to be financial support for all things MAGA. There is room for a multiplicity of voices on the right in a way we haven’t seen emerge on the left,” said Jonathan Miller, a former senior News Corp. executive who currently serves as CEO of Integrated Media, which specializes in digital media investments.

    Newsmax transitioned from a digital media outlet to a cable channel because Ruddy saw an opportunity to grab market share from Fox News, he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Monday.

    Still, its viewership pales in comparison to the dominant conservative channel Fox.

    Between Dec. 30 and March 20, Newsmax had an average of 309,000 prime-time viewers and 211,000 daytime viewers, according to Nielsen data. Fox News attracted an average of nearly 3.1 million prime-time viewers and roughly 2 million daytime viewers during the same period.

    The trading Tuesday continued a stunning rise for the pure-play cable TV stock. Even as news and live sports grab the biggest audiences, the industry has suffered in recent years as consumers flee cable bundles in favor of streaming.

    “We hate the bundle. The bundle is terrible for the cable industry. It’s terrible for consumers,” Ruddy said Monday, referring to the traditional pay TV package of a multitude of channels that once dominated the industry.

    Despite remaining profitable and raking in cash for media companies, the bundle has been losing subscribers at a fast clip as consumers opt for cheaper streaming options rather than the notoriously pricey package of channels.

    Ruddy pointed to this in his comments, noting that consumers who want access to networks like ESPN — which capture the bulk of viewers, and in turn, higher fees — are still stuck paying for a package of channels they may not want or need.

    Newsmax started receiving fees from pay TV distributors in recent years to carry its network after primarily receiving advertising revenue to support the business as it built its audience.

    Ruddy said Monday that Newsmax’s fees have been increasing. He added that Newsmax is also available on streaming and has podcasts — offerings that are typical of all media businesses currently.

    — CNBC’s Hayley Cuccinello contributed to this article.

    Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of MSNBC and CNBC.

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  • Conservative cable channel Newsmax spikes more than 700% in first trading day on NYSE

    Conservative cable channel Newsmax spikes more than 700% in first trading day on NYSE


    Fox News and Newsmax television studios are seen in the Fiserv Forum on the day before the Republican National Convention begins, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 14, 2024.

    Joe Raedle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Newsmax went public on the New York Stock Exchange on Monday, as the conservative cable news network audience has grown after the election of President Donald Trump and other right-wing politicians.

    The network began trading under the symbol “NMAX” late Monday morning, opening at $14 a share after pricing at $10 a share. It soared more than 700% in volatile trading on Monday.

    Newsmax’s stock closed at $83.51 for the day.

    In September, Newsmax announced its plans for an initial public offering in early 2025. On Friday, the company said it raised $75 million through the sale of 7.5 million shares of Class B common stock at a price of $10 per share.

    A pure-play TV network IPO in the U.S. is a rarity, with Dealogic data showing there hasn’t been one comparable to Newsmax in recent decades. Newsmax’s IPO comes at a time when traditional cable TV has suffered as consumers flee the bundle in favor of streaming. Now, news and live sports nab the biggest audiences and most advertising revenue dollars.

    The debut also comes as the audience for right-wing prime-time content has grown with the rise of Trump and other right-leaning politicians in recent elections.

    Christopher Ruddy, the company’s founder and CEO, said Monday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” that he saw an opportunity to join the mix since Fox Corp.’s Fox News didn’t have a competitor in the “center right market.”

    “I think there was a demand for more competition against Fox,” Ruddy said Monday. Ruddy founded Newsmax in 1998 as a digital offering before it became a cable TV network in 2014.

    While the cable news landscape is dominated by Fox News, CNN and MSNBC, Newsmax has grown its audience in recent years and is offered through most major pay-TV providers.

    Ruddy on Monday said that Newsmax is the “No. 4 cable news channel in the United States, right behind CNN.” Nielsen confirmed Monday that Newsmax ratings have “consistently” been in the fourth spot behind Fox News, MSNBC and CNN.

    Still, Newsmax’s audience has yet to reach the breadth of Fox News, according to Nielsen data. Between Dec. 30 and March 20, Newsmax had an average of 309,000 primetime viewers and 211,000 daytime viewers. Fox News attracted an average of nearly 3.1 million primetime viewers and roughly 2 million daytime viewers during the same period.

    Overall, Newsmax ranks in the top 20 among cable network average viewership in both prime time and daytime, Nielsen said Monday.

    “I think it’s a pretty big achievement for a 10-year-old, new cable company,” Ruddy said Monday on “Squawk Box.”

    As its popularity has risen, Newsmax has negotiated receiving licensing fees from cable TV providers. In its early days, Newsmax relied on advertising revenue. In 2023, it resolved a dispute with DirecTV — which led to it being dropped from the pay TV provider for a short period — after pushing to receive fees.

    As the company went public, Ruddy downplayed the pro-Trump leanings of Newsmax — which reached a $40 million settlement last year with Smartmatic over the network’s false claims that the voting machine company helped to rig the 2020 presidential election in favor of former President Joe Biden.

    “We believe we’re conservative with an independent news mission, and ask tough questions of the Trump administration,” Ruddy said Monday on “Squawk Box.”

    In a post on social media platform X on Tuesday, Ruddy said he received a call from Trump and that the conversation touched on various topics, including the company’s upcoming IPO. “I shared with Potus my new saying: ‘A rising Trump lifts all boats!’” Ruddy wrote.



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  • Vaccine stocks fall after key FDA official resigns in protest of RFK Jr.

    Vaccine stocks fall after key FDA official resigns in protest of RFK Jr.


    Rafael Henrique | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Shares of major vaccine makers dropped on Monday after a key U.S. health official resigned in protest of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s views on immunization.

    The departure of Peter Marks, the Food and Drug Administration’s top vaccine regulator, has raised fresh fears about whether the Trump administration will quickly approve and promote critical shots. In his position, Marks oversaw the introduction of Covid-19 vaccines and rules for the use of emerging treatments like cell and gene therapies.

    Shares of Moderna and Novavax dropped more than 11% and 6%, respectively, in early trading. Meanwhile, the SPDR S&P Biotech ETF slid nearly 5%. Shares of Pfizer, which has broader businesses to insulate it from damage to its vaccine portfolio, lost about 2%.

    Some Wall Street analysts said Marks’ departure could undermine the FDA’s mission of ensuring safe and effective treatments reach patients in the U.S. That could put even more pressure on a struggling biotech sector.

    “Taking a step back, we view this departure as a significant negative for the BioPharma and Biotech sectors, as FDA’s independence rooted in sound scientific rigor is critical for their efficient functioning,” analysts at BMO Capital Markets wrote in a note Monday.

    Peter Marks, director of the center for biologics evaluation and research at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), speaks during a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, May 11, 2021. 

    Greg Nash | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    In his resignation letter obtained by CNBC on Friday, Marks criticized Kennedy’s “misinformation and lies” about immunization. He said a growing measles outbreak that started in Texas came as a consequence of “undermining confidence in well-established vaccines.”

    “As you are aware, I was willing to work to address the Secretary’s concerns regarding vaccine safety and transparency by hearing from the public and implementing a variety of different public meetings and engagements with the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine,” Marks wrote. “However, it has become clear that truth and transparency are not desired by the Secretary, but rather he wishes subservient confirmation of his misinformation and lies.”

    The Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Kennedy, a prominent vaccine skeptic, has already taken steps that public health experts say could deter routine immunizations in the U.S. He has downplayed the importance of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine and promoted unproven treatments to counter the measles outbreak. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is also carrying out a study into long debunked links between vaccines and autism, led by a researcher with a history of spreading misinformation about shots.

    Analysts at Leerink Partners wrote in a Monday note that the effect of Marks’ resignation on biotech and pharmaceutical stocks will depend in part on who replaces him at the FDA and whether Republicans in the White House and Congress start to lose patience with his approach. Other analysts also stressed that Marks is only one official at the agency and noted that new FDA Commissioner Marty Makary has a track record of supporting proven treatments.

    “Though many believe the Marks resignation is a very bad omen for the Healthcare industry and innovation at large, it may be a bit premature to cast too dark of a shadow on the entirety of Pharma and Biotech,” wrote Mizuho Securities analyst Jared Holz.

    — CNBC’s Angelica Peebles and Annika Kim Constantino contributed to this report



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  • FCC says it’s investigating Disney and ABC over DEI efforts

    FCC says it’s investigating Disney and ABC over DEI efforts


    The main gate at The Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California, on Sept. 25, 2023.

    Mario Anzuoni | Reuters

    The Federal Communications Commission has alerted the Walt Disney Company and its ABC unit that it will begin an investigation into the diversity, equity and inclusion efforts at the media giant.

    The FCC, the agency that regulates the media and telecommunications industry, said in a letter dated Friday that it wants to “ensure that Disney and ABC have not been violating FCC equal employment opportunity regulations by promoting invidious forms of DEI discrimination.”

    “We are reviewing the Federal Communications Commission’s letter, and we look forward to engaging with the commission to answer its questions,” a Disney spokesperson told CNBC.

    FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, who was recently appointed by President Donald Trump, began a similar investigation into Comcast and NBCUniversal in early February. The inquiry comes after Trump signed an executive order looking to end DEI practices at U.S. corporations in January. The order calls for each federal agency to “identify up to nine potential civil compliance investigations” among publicly traded companies, as well as nonprofits and other institutions.

    “For decades, Disney focused on churning out box office and programming successes,” Carr wrote in the letter to CEO Bob Iger. “But then something changed. Disney has now been embroiled in rounds of controversy surrounding its DEI policies.”

    An FCC spokesperson didn’t comment beyond the letter.

    Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.



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  • Why GM stock is getting hit the hardest by Trump auto tariffs

    Why GM stock is getting hit the hardest by Trump auto tariffs


    The GM logo is seen on a water tank of the General Motors assembly plant in Ramos Arizpe, in Coahuila state, Mexico, on Feb. 11, 2021.

    Daniel Becerril | Reuters

    As auto stocks reacted to the latest tariff announcement out of Washington, D.C., on Thursday, General Motors took the brunt of the hit.

    Shares of GM were down more than 6% in mid-morning trading, far underperforming the likes of Ford and Stellantis, which shed about 2% and 1%, respectively. Tesla stock was up about more than 5%.

    The divergence stems from the amount of vehicles that GM imports, and its exposure to Mexico in particular.

    “Tesla and Ford appear to be the most shielded given location of vehicle assembly facilities although Ford does face incremental exposure on imported engines,” Deutsche Bank analysts wrote in a note Thursday. “GM has the most exposure to Mexico.”

    President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced his administration would impose 25% tariffs on “all cars that are not made in the United States” and some automobile parts. The executive order signed Wednesday allows for some leniency for components that are compliant with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, but it was not immediately clear what relief that might offer the North American automotive industry.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    General Motors stock falls after Trump tariff announcement.

    Mexico accounted for 16.2% of vehicle imports into the U.S. as a percentage of sales in 2024, according to GlobalData. That was the largest share of any country, about double the shares of South Korea and Japan, which ranked second and third in terms of import volume, respectively.

    Roughly 52% of GM vehicles sold in the U.S. during the first three quarters of 2024 were assembled in the U.S., according to research by Barclays analyst Dan Levy. That leaves 30% assembled in Canada and Mexico, and another 18% brought in from other countries.

    Levy also pointed out that GM relies heavily on Mexico and South Korea for production of some of its small crossovers, including its Equinox and Blazer vehicles.

    “Roughly half of GM’s US sales are produced in the US, but imported parts are a concern,” he said.

    During the same period, 57% of Stellantis vehicles and 78% of Ford vehicles sold in the U.S. were assembled stateside. Levy reported Stellantis assembled 39% of its U.S.-sold units in Canada and Mexico, and Ford, just 21%.

    Wolfe Research’s Emmanuel Rosner said the tariffs primarily affect foreign-brand automakers, but noted that 15% of GM’s U.S. vehicles come from South Korea.

    John Murphy from Bank of America said in comparison to the broader automotive market, GM is “relatively exposed to the tariffs” and may need to rebalance.

    GM stock is down 13% year to date. Shares fell sharply in late January after investors worried that the automaker did not address concerns about tariffs in its most recent earnings report.



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  • U.S. health department plans to slash 10,000 jobs as RFK Jr. upends agencies

    U.S. health department plans to slash 10,000 jobs as RFK Jr. upends agencies


    Robert F. Kennedy Jr., US secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), during a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, March 24, 2025. 

    Samuel Corum | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to slash 10,000 full-time employees across different departments, as he works to reshape the nation’s federal health agencies, the department said Thursday.

    Those job cuts are in addition to about 10,000 employees who opted to leave HHS since President Donald Trump took office, through voluntary separation offers. Combined, they will lead to the federal health department shedding about a quarter of its workforce, shrinking it to 62,000 employees.

    HHS is a $1.7 trillion agency that oversees vaccines and other medicines, scientific research, public health infrastructure, pandemic preparedness and food and tobacco products. The department also manages government-funded health care for millions of Americans – including seniors, disabled people and lower-income patients who rely on Medicare, Medicaid, and the Affordable Care Act’s markets.

    The department will cut jobs at divisions responsible for offering insurance to the poorest Americans, approving new drugs, and responding to disease outbreaks, according to The Wall Street Journal, which earlier reported the cuts.

    The major restructuring comes as the U.S. grapples with one of the worst measles outbreaks in more than two decades, and as bird flu spreads in wild birds worldwide and is causing outbreaks in poultry and U.S. dairy cows, with several recent human cases.

    HHS will also drop five of its 10 regional offices, but it said essential health services won’t be affected.

    “We aren’t just reducing bureaucratic sprawl. We are realigning the organization with its core mission and our new priorities in reversing the chronic disease epidemic,” Kennedy said. “This Department will do more – a lot more – at a lower cost to the taxpayer.”

    The department said the cuts will save the government about $1.8 billion per year. The federal government spent roughly $6.8 trillion in fiscal 2024.

    Here are the employees the Trump administration plans to cut, according to the Journal:

    • 3,500 full-time employees from the Food and Drug Administration, or about 19% of its workforce
    • 2,400 workers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or roughly 18% of its staff
    • 1,200 employees from the National Institutes of Health, or about 6% of its workforce
    • 300 workers from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or roughly 4% of its employees

    As part of the restructuring, Kennedy is consolidating the department’s 28 current divisions into 15 new ones, which HHS said will “centralize core functions” such as human resources, information technology, procurement, external affairs and policy.

    Among them is a new subdivision called the Administration for a Healthy America, which will combine offices in HHS that address addiction, toxic substances, mental health and occupational safety, among others, into one central office. That includes the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health, Health Resources and Services Administration, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

    HHS said combining those agencies will “improve coordination of health resources for low-income Americans” and will focus on areas including primary care, maternal and child health, mental health, environmental health, HIV/AIDS and workforce development.

    The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, which is responsible for national disaster response and pandemic preparedness planning, will move under the CDC. Currently, ASPR is its own operating division in HHS. 

    Kennedy remakes U.S. health policy

    Before he was confirmed, Kennedy pledged to end what he calls “corporate corruption” at federal health agencies and purge staff when he stepped into his role in the Trump administration.

    He had said he would clear out “entire departments” at the FDA, saying that workers who stand in the way of approval of several controversial or dubious treatments should prepare to “pack their bags.”

    Kennedy, a prominent vaccine skeptic, has made early moves that could impact immunization policy and further dampen uptake in the U.S. at a time when childhood vaccination rates are falling.

    He has said he will review the childhood vaccination schedule and is reportedly preparing to remove and replace members of external committees that advise the government on vaccine approvals and other key public health decisions, among other efforts.

    His so-called Make America Healthy Again platform also pledges to end the chronic disease epidemic in children and adults. Kennedy has been vocal about making nutritious food, rather than drugs, central to that goal.



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  • Dollar Tree says it’s winning over higher-income shoppers and may offset tariffs with price hikes

    Dollar Tree says it’s winning over higher-income shoppers and may offset tariffs with price hikes


    Dollar Tree said Wednesday that it’s gaining market share with higher-income consumers and could raise prices on some products to offset President Donald Trump‘s tariffs.

    The discount retailer’s CEO, Michael Creedon, said the company is seeing “value-seeking behavior across all income groups.” While Dollar Tree has always relied on lower-income shoppers and gets about 50% of its business from middle-income consumers, sustained inflation has led to “stronger demand from higher-income customers,” Creedon said on an analyst call.

    Dollar Tree’s success with higher-income shoppers follows similar gains from Walmart, which has made inroads with the cohort following the prolonged period of high prices.

    Trump’s tariffs on certain goods from China, Mexico and Canada — and the potential for broad duties on trading partners around the world — have only added to concerns about stretched household budgets. While Dollar Tree will use tactics like negotiating with suppliers and moving manufacturing to mitigate the effect of the duties, it could also hike the prices of some items, Creedon said.

    Dollar Tree has rolled out prices higher than its standard $1.25 products at about 2,900 so-called multi-price stores. Certain products can cost anywhere from $1.50 to $7 at those locations.

    The retailer weighed in on higher-income customers and the potential effect of tariffs as it announced its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings. Dollar Tree also said it will sell its struggling Family Dollar chain for about $1 billion to a consortium of private equity investors.

    Dollar Tree said its net sales for continuing operations — its namesake brand — totaled $5 billion for the quarter, while same-stores sales climbed 2%. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $2.11 for the period.

    It is unclear how the figures compare with Wall Street estimates.

    For fiscal 2025, Dollar Tree expects net sales of $18.5 billion to $19.1 billion from continuing operations, with same-store sales growth of 3% to 5%. It anticipates it will post adjusted earnings of $5 to $5.50 per share for the year.

    Creedon said the expected hit from the first round of 10% tariffs Trump levied on China in February would have been $15 million to $20 million per month, but the company has mitigated about 90% of that effect.

    Additional 10% duties on China imposed this month, along with 25% levies on Mexico and Canada that have only partly taken effect, would hit Dollar Tree by another $20 million per month, Creedon said. The company is working to offset those duties, but did not include them in its financial guidance due to the confusion over which tariffs will take effect and when.

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