Long gone are the days when an imported car meant a foreign car. And no company proves the point more than General Motors. The Detroit stalwart imported more cars into the US last year than any other automaker, even Japan’s Toyota. Nearly half of the vehicles GM sold in the US last year — 1.23 million autos — were built abroad, according to researcher GlobalData. That includes many of its most affordable models, like the Korean-made Chevrolet Trax and Buick Envista SUVs, whose low prices depend on cheap production. Now, no American automaker stands to lose more in President Donald Trump’s trade war. Trump has slapped 25% tariffs on imported autos, arguing it’s a response to unfair barriers that American-made cars face in other countries. But the tariffs have GM scrambling to manage levies of up to $5 billion this year, which despite some offsets will slash 2025 earnings before interest and taxes by about 20%, the company estimates. Other US automakers — the very companies Trump says he’s trying to help — will suffer as well, if not quite as much as GM. Except for Tesla and startups like Lucid and Rivian, they all build cars elsewhere to sell in the US. Ford on Monday said it is facing a $2.5 billion tariff hit this year, which it aims to offset with $1 billion in cost savings. “It used to be that when you bought a Toyota, it was made in Japan and when you bought a Chevy, it was made here in the US,” said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. “Now, some Toyotas are made in Japan and some are made in the US. And if you buy a Chevy, it might have been made overseas.” Read the full story here — Keith Naughton in Southfield, Michigan - For more, subscribe to Hyperdrive, Bloomberg’s newsletter on the future of the auto world.
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