
Trump's tariffs on cars, copper, drugs, aluminum could hit harder than other levies
These so-called Section 232 tariffs — already announced on cars, steel and aluminium, and floated for copper and other items — further constrain businesses and US trading partners trying to navigate a constantly evolving trade environment.
Trump said Tuesday that he would impose 50 per cent tariffs on copper imports, double what he had previously floated for the valuable commodity. He also said he would soon announce tariffs 'at a very high rate' on pharmaceuticals.
Trump's announcement sent copper prices soaring, and the metal posted its highest single-day gain since 1989. The copper futures contract for September closed Tuesday up 13 per cent, at $US5.68 ($8.69) per pound.
The threats were the latest sign of the president's willingness to use sector-specific tariffs to gain leverage over trading partners and try to reshape the US economy.
The announcement came a day after Trump rolled out stiff tariff rates on imports from 14 countries via letters, all effective August 1: Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Kazakhstan, South Africa, Laos, Myanmar, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Tunisia, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Serbia, Cambodia and Thailand.
The letters are intended to ratchet up the pressure on US trade partners to come to the table before the August 1 deadline.
But as countries' negotiations are still in limbo — and some nations are still pushing for carve-outs, with varying degrees of receptiveness from the White House — sector-specific tariff rates are already squeezing trading partners and US consumers.
South Africa and Kazakhstan, two countries that Trump hit with tariff rates on Monday, are both major producers of aluminum, while Japan and South Korea, also on the list, are both major steel producers.
'Reciprocal tariffs are making headlines, but the product-specific tariffs will still have a significant impact on the domestic market,' Mike Lowell, a partner at law firm Reed Smith, told CNBC.
Last month, Trump announced that he was doubling tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to 50 per cent for most countries, effective the following day.
Steel and aluminum are essential materials for durable goods like refrigerators and cars. But they are also the chief components of smaller items Americans use every day, like zippers and kitchenware.
The steel and aluminium tariffs are a continuation of Trump's first-term trade agenda, when he implemented a 25 per cent tariff on steel and 10 per cent tariff on aluminium imports in 2018, causing near-immediate price spikes, Reuters reports.
But they are also different from his first-term tariffs in important ways. Firstly, the rates are much higher — in some cases double their previous levels. Secondly, the tariff rates today are being layered on top of other customs duties.
'The use of section 232 together with other instruments is adding further complexity to the tariff landscape and elevates the importance of country negotiations to get exemptions,' Iacob Koch-Weser, an associate director of global trade and investment at BCG, wrote last month.
Trump has repeatedly cited Section 232 of the massive 1962 Trade Expansion Act to justify his sector-specific tariffs. That measure permits the president to unilaterally adjust tariff rates when America's national security is under threat.
A different law, Section 301, is being used to impose tariffs on specific products from China. Some of these were imposed during Trump's first term, and remained largely in place during the tenure of his successor, President Joe Biden.
Another sector that has been hit hard with specific tariffs is cars and auto parts. That 25 per cent rate disproportionately impacts Japan and South Korea, two leading automotive exporters to the United States.
The White House is still considering whether to grant exemptions on the auto tariffs to some companies, partly in response to intense lobbying by industry groups, CNBC reported.
The White House in April did sign an executive order preventing the auto tariffs from being stacked with other levies, such as on aluminium and steel, bringing some relief to the auto industry.
But given that supply chains often have delayed reactions to tariffs, Trump's levy on auto parts may not be fully felt for years.
Experts have also noted that Trump's legal authority to set and adjust tariffs is more firmly established when it comes to sector-specific imports than it is for his country-specific 'reciprocal' rates.
'Section 232 tariffs are central to President Trump's tariff strategy,' said Mr Lowell, of Reed Smith.
'They aren't the target of the pending litigation, and they're more likely to survive a legal challenge and continue into the next presidential administration, which is what we saw with the aluminum and steel tariffs originally imposed under the first Trump administration,' he added.
To justify imposing country-by-country tariffs earlier this year, Trump invoked emergency powers that are currently being challenged in federal court. If the president loses that case, he may decide to fall back on sector tariffs as a different way of leveraging US economic power.
Trump has also already floated the possibility of imposing additional sector-specific tariffs on agricultural products, iPhones, trucks and other items, though no action has been reported yet.
Trump had previously ordered the Commerce Department to institute a Section 232 national security investigation into both copper and lumber imports, with results due in November.
But his Tuesday comments suggest that the steep levies could be coming much sooner.
'Today, we're doing copper,' Trump said of the commodity that makes up most of the electrical wiring in American homes.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News AU
6 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Tulsi Gabbard details bombshell claims of Obama-era cabal's 'treasonous conspiracy' against Donald Trump
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard detailed "striking" findings from declassified documents released Friday, claiming to showcase "overwhelming evidence" that an Obama-era cabal laid the groundwork for what would be the years-long Trump-Russia collusion probe after the 2016 election. "The implications of this are frankly nothing short of historic," Gabbard said on this week's "Sunday Morning Futures." "Over 100 documents that we released on Friday really detail and provide evidence of how this treasonous conspiracy was directed by President Obama just weeks before he was due to leave office after President Trump had already gotten elected. This is not a Democrat or Republican issue. This is an issue that is so serious it should concern every single American because it has to do with the integrity of our democratic republic," she continued. Documents shared by Gabbard's office claimed that before the 2016 election, there was no evidence showing Russia tried to directly alter vote counts. However, members of the intelligence community later suggested that Russian President Vladimir Putin wanted to help Trump win. Gabbard argues the narrative shift was politically motivated rather than based on new findings. "Creating this piece of manufactured intelligence that claims that Russia had helped Donald Trump get elected contradicted every other assessment that had been made previously in the months leading up to the election that said exactly the opposite, that Russia had neither the intent nor the capability to try to 'hack the United States election,'" Gabbard told host Maria Bartiromo. "So the effect of what President Obama and his senior national security team did was subvert the will of the American people, undermining our democratic republic and enacting what would be essentially a years-long coup against President Trump, who was duly elected by the American people." Evidence released by Gabbard's office implicated then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, former CIA Director John Brennan, former FBI Director James Comey and former National Security Adviser Susan Rice, among others, in addition to the former president. Gabbard confirmed her intent to send all the uncovered documents to the Department of Justice and the FBI for a criminal referral. When asked if she expects to see prosecutions, she vowed to do "all that [she] can" to ensure accountability. "We have whistleblowers, actually, coming forward now after we released these documents because there are people who were around, who were working within the intelligence community at this time who were so disgusted by what happened," she shared. "We're starting to see some of them come out of the woodwork here because they… want to see justice delivered… there must be indictments. Those responsible, no matter how powerful they are and were at that time, no matter who was involved in creating this treasonous conspiracy against the American people, they all must be held accountable." Some Democrats, including Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut, who is the top member of his party on the House Intelligence Committee, have criticized Gabbard's claims as "baseless." Fox News Digital previously reached out to Obama, representatives for the former president, Clapper, Comey, Brennan, Rice, Lynch and McCabe for comment and did not receive a response. Originally published as Tulsi Gabbard details bombshell claims of Obama-era cabal's 'treasonous conspiracy' against Donald Trump

AU Financial Review
36 minutes ago
- AU Financial Review
ASX futures down after record week
Australian shares are expected to open lower on Monday, with futures pointing to a 0.4 per cent drop for the S&P/ASX 200, trimming some of last week's 2.1 per cent gain – the local market's strongest weekly performance since May. Wall Street ended mixed on Friday as earnings results disappointed and concerns grew over Donald Trump's push for new tariffs on European goods. The Dow fell 142 points, while the S&P 500 was flat and the Nasdaq edged higher. Back home, attention turns to the Reserve Bank of Australia, with Tuesday's meeting minutes and a Thursday speech from governor Michele Bullock set to shape expectations ahead of the August board meeting. Markets had been pricing in a rate cut this month, but were caught off guard when the RBA held steady at 3.85 per cent. A jump in the unemployment rate, from 4.1 to 4.3 per cent, has since added weight to the case for easing. 'If markets can get their head around the fact that a rate cut is more likely than not, and Michele Bullock is seen to keep the door open to that this week, then markets may well continue on their merry way,' said Stephen Miller, an investment strategy adviser at GSFM. This week's agenda Minutes from the RBA's shock decision to hold rates at 3.85 per cent will be released on Tuesday, before Bullock delivers a major speech in Sydney on Thursday. A string of results from US companies will be announced this week including those from Alphabet, Tesla, Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and General Motors. Locally, company earnings will be released from the likes of AMP, Woodside Energy, Fortescue and Whitehaven.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
US politics live: Jeffrey Epstein's former lawyer says co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell is the key, and ‘knows everything'
Welcome to another week of politics in the United States. This one promises to be as dramatic as ever. President Donald Trump is still seeking to shift Americans' focus away from the Jeffrey Epstein case. To that end, the Department of Justice has now moved to release grand jury testimony from the prosecutions of both Epstein and his chief co-conspirator, Ghislaine Maxwell. Mr Trump hopes that will mollify his supporters. However, even if the courts decide that information can be released, it will only represent a small fraction of the so-called 'Epstein files', as high profile lawyer Alan Dershowitz pointed out today. 'Grand jury information is narrowly tailored by prosecutors only to provide sufficient evidence to result in an indictment,' Mr Dershowitz, who represented Epstein in the past, told Fox News Sunday. 'What's much, much more important is discovery information, depositions and other things that came out of the Ghislaine Maxwell case, (and) that came out of other cases that were pending in front of federal judges. 'All of that should be revealed as well.' He cited the case of Britain's Prince Andrew as an example. And Mr Dershowitz said Maxwell, who is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence for her part in Epstein's sex trafficking crimes, was 'the Rosetta Stone'. 'She arranged every single trip with everybody. She knows everything,' he said, suggesting Maxwell could testify before Congress. Mr Trump has been on something of a social media spree today. In one post, he claimed the Epstein controversy had actually helped his approval ratings, particularly among Republican voters. 'My Poll Numbers within the Republican Party, and MAGA, have gone up, significantly, since the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax was exposed by the Radical Left Democrats and, just plain 'troublemakers',' he said. 'They have hit 90 per cent, 92 per cent, 93 per cent, and 95 per cent, in various polls, and are all Republican Party records. The General Election numbers are my highest, EVER!' The President did not cite any specific poll. Mr Trump has also been returning to a few of his past hits in the culture wars. For example, he's called for NFL franchise the Washington Commanders and baseball team the Cleveland Guardians to change their names back to the Redskins and Indians, respectively. Both franchises previously changed their names because of concerns they were insensitive towards Native Americans. 'My statement on the Washington Redskins has totally blown up, but only in a very positive way,' said Mr Trump. 'I may put a restriction on them if they don't change the name back to the original 'Washington Redskins' and get rid of the ridiculous moniker 'Washington Commanders'. I won't make a deal for them to build a stadium in Washington. 'Cleveland should do the same with the Cleveland Indians.' On a more substantive matter, the White House is reportedly frustrated with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. One Trump official, who was not named, told Axios that Mr Netanyahu has been acting 'like a madman' and 'bombs everything all the time'. 'Netanyahu is sometimes like a child who just won't behave,' another official said. Slightly patronising, you might say.