Carmakers lead European stocks lower after Donald Trump’s tariff warning

Micheal

A yellow Volkswagen Taigun compact sport utility vehicle on display at an event with a gradient background transitioning from red to blue and the Volkswagen logo

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Carmakers led a decline in European stocks on Thursday after US President Donald Trump threatened to hit EU goods with 25 per cent tariffs.

The broad Stoxx Europe 600 fell 0.6 per cent in early trading, while Germany’s blue-chip Dax index, which includes several big exporters, dropped 1 per cent.

Trump made the threat on Wednesday during the first meeting of his cabinet since he took office last month, saying the EU was “formed to screw the United States”.

“We have made a decision and we’ll be announcing it very soon,” Trump said when asked about his plans for EU tariffs. “It’ll be 25 per cent generally speaking, and that will be on cars and all other things.”

Germany’s Volkswagen and Mercedes-Benz fell 2 per cent, while Porsche lost 2.3 per cent. Paris-listed carmaker Stellantis dropped 2.3 per cent.

European stocks have climbed this year in part because the region has so far avoided the worst-case trade war scenario.

“The latest tariffs headlines are a reality check for the autos sector and the broader EU market,” said Emmanuel Cau, analyst at Barclays.

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