Car imports probe gives GM, Ford shares tiny lift

Reuters 

(Reuters) - Shares of and inched only marginally higher before the bell on Thursday after the administration launched a national security probe into which could lead to new tariffs on foreign competitors while also stirring trade tensions.

The probe prefaces mid-term elections in U.S. industrial heartlands later this year and is seen as part of Trump's "America First" push to win back lost to overseas competitors.

Pointing to a mixed bag of effects on U.S. producers after the metals tariffs, analysts were cautious about predicting major gains for U.S. firms and workers from the process.

"Measures like this are ultimately about protecting American in states that voted for rather than national security," Morningstar said in a note.

"We don't see these tariffs (if proposed) lasting forever and we think (they) will ultimately cost American jobs."

shares gained around half a percent while those in GM were up less than 0.1 percent in premarket trade in New York, compared to falls of 1.8 to 2.8 percent for German carmakers BMW, and

Shares of U.S. parts suppliers and Lear Corp, which could also be affected by the probe, were yet to begin trading on Thursday while those in German competitor fell 1.6 percent.

The imported 8.3 million vehicles in 2017 worth $192 billion, including 2.4 million from Mexico, 1.8 million from Canada, 1.7 million from Japan, 930,000 from and 500,000 from Germany, according to statistics.

At the same time, the exported nearly 2 million vehicles worldwide worth $57 billion.

(Reporting by in Bengaluru; editing by Patrick Graham)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, May 24 2018. 17:55 IST