Dewalt Power Tools will be on display at Home Depot in New York City on May 2, 2025.
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The companies behind some of America’s most well-known brands are warning that tariffs will rise hundreds of millions of dollars as the major deadline approaches Friday.
When the White House says it will start to impose higher import taxes on foreign countries, businesses are preparing for the much-anticipated Friday deadline. Nowadays, companies from various industries say this shaking in global trading practices is expensive.
Tool Maker Stanley Black and Decker On Tuesday, he said it expects an annual hit of $800 million from changes to tariff-related policy. According to financial director Patrick Harinan, the costs associated with the measures the company is taking to mitigate the impact of taxation are not included.
For Mary Calendar and Slim Gym parents Konagra BrandHigher tariffs are expected to increase the cost of goods by 3%, which amounts to an annual increase of over $200 million.
Although most of the Chicago-based company’s production is in the US, management says it must continue to address tariffs on steel and aluminum that increase packaging costs.
TeslaHe said that tariff-related costs increased by Trump’s former ally Elon Musk. About two-thirds of that are linked to the electric car manufacturer’s automotive business, while the rest comes from the energy arm.
“While we are doing our best to manage these impacts, we are in an unpredictable environment on the tariff front,” Treasury Secretary Vaibhav Taneja told analysts and investors last week about Tesla’s revenue calls.
These pressures are spreading throughout the automotive industry. General Motors The recent quarterly interest and pre-tax revenues said the Detroit-based automaker suffered a $11 billion hit that earned a choke on the net impact of tariffs.
Whirlpool washer and dryer for sale at Howard’s electronics stores in Torrance, California.
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Air conditioner manufacturer Career Global He said Tuesday that it is expected to spend around $200 million to offset the impact of tariffs. The same day, appliance maker Vortex North American sales and revenues were damaged in the second quarter as Asian competitors rushed to export goods to the US ahead of higher tariffs.
Also, on Tuesday, Proctor & Gamble It presented financial guidance for 2026, showing higher pre-tax costs of $1 billion as a result of tariffs on goods from China, Canada and other globally. The makers of Tide detergent and Gillette Razor Blades are hoping to headwinds of 39 cents per share in 2026, which closes next June.
Inflation focus
Still, US consumers have yet to experience meaningful bumps against inflation as a result of higher tariffs. This could be attributed to domestic companies absorbing current cost hikes, but many economists have warned that businesses could soon grow to shoppers after the deadline for this week’s trade talk.
As a result, the “core” consumer price index, excluding volatile food and energy prices, should rise at an annual rate of 3.2%, from 2.1% in the third quarter to 3.2%, according to Nancy Lazar, Chief Global Economist at Piper Sandler.
Foreign exporters have covered “very few” covers of tariffs, and “gets off easily,” Lazar said in a recent note to clients.
Still, not all American companies take a handoff approach and engulf the higher costs.
Carpet manufacturer operation chief Paul Decock Mohawk IndustriesLast week, he said it was implementing an 8% price hike. If tariffs raise costs further, he said, there may be further price increases in the sector.
“We will continue to work with our customers and suppliers to manage the impact of tariff costs as the situation evolves,” said De Cock in the revenue call for the Georgia-based company.
Mohawk encourages consumers to consider domestically produced alternatives, he said. The company is also expanding the capacity of its Quartz countertops made in Tennessee, which will result in an increase in supply of non-duty goods, De Cock added.
The White House aims to ease corporate concerns about the looming deadline for tariffs, a central tenet of last year’s Trump campaign. For example, Treasury Secretary Scott Bescent told CNBC on Tuesday that countries facing high tariff rates can lower them by negotiating deals with the US.
“As long as the country moves forward and tries to negotiate in good faith for days to weeks, you’d think it’s not the end of the world,” he said.
– CNBC’s Ali McCadden and Kevin Breuninger followed this report.