logo
Big automakers report US sales jump on pre-tariff consumer surge

Big automakers report US sales jump on pre-tariff consumer surge

NEW YORK: Several leading automakers including Detroit giants General Motors and Ford reported increased US car sales in the second quarter on Tuesday as consumers fast-forwarded purchases ahead of US tariffs.
Sales were particularly brisk early in the quarter as expectations of US President Donald Trump's coming tariffs dominated the news. Besides the US companies, Japanese automakers Toyota and Honda and South Korean brands Kia and Hyundai all reported increased sales compared with the 2024 stretch.
"They were able to capitalise on the tariff-induced fear and that drove sales, especially in the early part of the quarter," said Garrett Nelson, equity analyst at CFRA Research.
While the auto industry has been near the centre of Trump's efforts to reset global trade, consumers have yet to see significant price increases due to tariffs.
Featured Videos
That is because companies have relied on existing inventories that include vehicles imported before tariffs took effect. Prices are expected to rise more in the second half of 2025, but market demand and supply forces could constrain such hikes, analysts said.
GM notched a 7.3 per cent rise in vehicle deliveries to 746,588 behind a continued solid performance in pickup trucks and SUVs, as well as good sales of models geared towards customers seeking affordable vehicles.
These include the Chevrolet Equinox and Chevrolet Trax, a lower-priced vehicle imported from South Korea.
Ford, meanwhile, scored a 14.2 per cent jump in sales to 612,095, reflecting the boon from a popular programme that offered customers employee pricing on many models.
Most of Ford's leading vehicles saw higher sales, including the best-selling pickup F-series, as well as the Ford Explorer SUV.
While Ford had lower sales of its all-electric F-150 Lightning Truck and the Mustang Mach-E, it reported a jump in hybrid vehicle sales.
Higher sales had been expected for both companies, but the increases were slightly more than projected by analysts at Edmunds.com.
At Toyota, sales jumped 7.2 per cent to 666,470 autos, with double-digit gains in several vehicles, including the Toyota Camry sedan and the Toyota Tacoma pickup truck.
Honda, Kia and Hyundai reported quarterly sales increases of between five and 10 per cent.
But Nissan reported a 6.5 per cent drop in quarterly sales to 221,441, while Jeep-owner Stellantis was projected by Edmunds to have a 12.8 per cent drop to just over 300,000 vehicles.
The United States imposed 25 per cent tariffs on imported finished cars in early April.
The Trump administration also enacted a 25 per cent tariff on imported auto parts in early May, although White House officials allowed a two-year grace period and stipulated that automakers would not face duplicative tariffs due to a 25 per cent levy on imported steel and aluminium.
While retail car prices have not risen significantly, analysts at Cox Automotive last week pointed to a recent ebbing in dealer incentives as evidence of a somewhat tighter market.
Cox Automotive chief economist Jonathan Smoke has projected an eight per cent rise in prices due to tariffs, adding that "we don't think consumers or fleet buyers are able and willing to accept that added cost," he said at a briefing last week.
Smoke predicted that uncertainty about the economy and whether the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates could lead many buyers to defer purchases.
Nelson said automakers have to be "very careful" with price hikes.
"Things have cooled off from where they were at the beginning of the quarter," he said. "Everything we're seeing suggests that consumers are still very price sensitive."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump targets Malaysia and Thailand in new AI chip crackdown on China
Trump targets Malaysia and Thailand in new AI chip crackdown on China

Malay Mail

time28 minutes ago

  • Malay Mail

Trump targets Malaysia and Thailand in new AI chip crackdown on China

WASHINGTON, July 5 — US President Donald Trump's administration plans to restrict shipments of AI chips from companies like Nvidia Corp. to Malaysia and Thailand as part of an effort to crack down on suspected semiconductor smuggling into China. A draft rule from the Commerce Department seeks to prevent China — to which the US has effectively banned sales of Nvidia's advanced AI processors — from obtaining those components through intermediaries in the two Southeast Asian nations, according to a Bloomberg report citing people familiar with the matter. Officials plan to pair the Malaysia and Thailand controls with a formal rescission of global curbs from the so-called AI diffusion rule, which drew objections from US allies and tech companies during President Joe Biden's term. Washington would maintain semiconductor restrictions targeting China that were imposed in 2022 and ramped up several times since, as well as more than 40 other countries covered by a 2023 measure designed to address smuggling concerns. The regulation would mark the first formal step in Trump's promised overhaul of his predecessor's AI diffusion approach, though the draft measure is far from a comprehensive replacement and doesn't address questions about security conditions for US chips in overseas data centers. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told lawmakers that the US will 'allow our allies to buy AI chips, provided they're run by an approved American data centre operator, and the cloud that touches that data centre is an approved American operator.' Nvidia, the dominant maker of AI chips, declined to comment, while spokespeople for the Thai and Malaysian governments didn't respond to requests for comment. Washington officials have debated for years which countries should be able to import American AI chips, balancing the desire for global adoption of US technology against concerns that chips could reach China or benefit Chinese AI companies through remote access. Southeast Asia is a key focus, with companies including Oracle Corp. investing aggressively in data centres in Malaysia, where trade data shows chip shipments have surged in recent months despite Malaysian officials pledging to scrutinise imports under US pressure. Semiconductor sales to Malaysia are also a focal point of a court case in Singapore, where prosecutors have charged three men with defrauding customers about the ultimate destination of AI servers that may have contained advanced Nvidia chips. The export curbs on Malaysia and Thailand would include measures to ease pressure on companies with significant business operations there, including allowing firms headquartered in the US and friendly nations to continue shipping AI chips without seeking a license for a few months after the rule is published. The licence requirements would still include certain exemptions to prevent supply chain disruptions, as many semiconductor companies rely on Southeast Asian facilities for crucial manufacturing steps like packaging chips for use in devices.

Trump Administration Moves To Curb AI Chip Exports To Malaysia, Thailand
Trump Administration Moves To Curb AI Chip Exports To Malaysia, Thailand

BusinessToday

timean hour ago

  • BusinessToday

Trump Administration Moves To Curb AI Chip Exports To Malaysia, Thailand

The Trump administration is drafting new export controls that would restrict shipments of advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chips from companies like Nvidia Corp to Malaysia and Thailand, in a renewed effort to curb alleged smuggling of semiconductors into China, according to sources familiar with the matter. Bloomberg reported that the draft rule, still under review by the Commerce Department, is aimed at closing loopholes that US officials believe may be allowing restricted chips to reach China via intermediaries in Southeast Asia. The move builds on earlier Biden-era restrictions but reflects a broader push by the Trump administration to tighten control over the flow of critical technology. Under the proposed measure, US chipmakers would face new licensing requirements to export AI processors to the two countries. However, the rule is expected to include temporary exemptions and carveouts for companies based in the US and allied nations, as well as safeguards to avoid disrupting semiconductor supply chains, particularly in chip packaging and assembly, where Southeast Asia plays a vital role. The crackdown comes amid a sharp increase in AI chip shipments to Malaysia and growing US concerns over data centre projects in the region, including those backed by Oracle Corp. Prosecutors in neighbouring Singapore have also charged individuals over alleged misrepresentation of chip destinations, with AI servers possibly rerouted from Singapore to Malaysia. Nvidia, while not implicated, is at the centre of these efforts given its dominance in the AI chip market. Though US allies and tech firms have pushed back on some aspects of the previous AI diffusion rules, Washington appears determined to preserve and strengthen chip curbs targeting China. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick recently testified that AI chips could still be sold to allies but only if deployed via US-approved cloud and data centre operators. Malaysia and Thailand have not publicly responded to the draft rule. Nvidia declined to comment. If implemented, the regulation would mark the Trump administration's first formal step in reshaping US AI export policy, one that could have wide-ranging implications for Southeast Asia's growing role in the global semiconductor ecosystem. Related

Made in US no more? Trump phone website scrubs language
Made in US no more? Trump phone website scrubs language

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Made in US no more? Trump phone website scrubs language

The Trump company initially said the new phone would launch in September. The website no longer includes a firm timeline, according to The Verge. — Bloomberg The Trump Organization is no longer claiming that its new smartphone will be made in the US. When the company announced the phone in June, it said the device would be 'proudly designed and built in the United States.' Experts cast doubt on that claim and said it was likely the phone would be manufactured by a Chinese company. The Trump Organization has now removed all language indicating the phone would be made in the US from the Trump Mobile website, according to The Verge, a tech news site. The wording has been replaced with pro-American slogans, such as 'Premium Performance. Proudly American.' and 'designed with American values in mind.' The site also says there are 'American hands behind every device,' The Verge said. The Trump Organization didn't respond to the site's request for comment. The company is owned by President Donald Trump, according to CNBC. President Trump isn't involved in the Trump company's day-to-day operations, the firm has said, according to CNN. The business is run by his eldest sons. The new phone will be gold colored, cost US$499 (RM 2,106) and will be known as the T1. Experts told multiple news outlets when the phone was announced that the US simply doesn't have smartphone manufacturing capabilities right now. And even if the phone could be produced in the US, components would still come from overseas. Either way, the new Trump-branded phone would be affected by President Trump's tariffs, according to Fortune . The Trump company initially said the new phone would launch in September. The website no longer includes a firm timeline, according to The Verge. The site now says only that the device will be available 'later this year.' – News Service

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store