Honda, Japan
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Japanese automaker Honda is warning that U.S. auto tariffs are expected to carve a "huge" hole in its operating profit within its current fiscal year, as it manages uncertainty stemming from the trade environment and slowing electric vehicle adoption.
Tariffs could cost Japan's second-largest automaker up to 650 billion yen this financial year—equivalent to $4.4 billion and almost half last year’s profit. Reporting results Tuesday, Honda forecast a roughly two-thirds slide in operating profit for the year through March 2026,
The first batch of car pricing data since new vehicle tariffs went into effect show an increase as a global trade war upends the industry.
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Inquirer Business on MSNHonda projects 70 percent drop in FY 2025 net profitHonda Motor Co. said Tuesday that its group net profit in the current fiscal year through next March is forecast to plunge 70.1 pct from the previous year to 250 billion
Honda's forecast is the latest signal of the difficulty car makers are having navigating tariffs alongside the rise of Chinese EV producers.
Japanese auto giant Honda missed fourth-quarter earnings estimates as operating profit plunged 76%, with the company bracing for the full impact of U.S. tariffs. Honda's fourth quarter ends March 31.
Honda said its plan to build an EV supply chain in Alliston, Ont. — which was first announced in April 2024 — would be paused for about two years, due to uncertainty caused by tariffs.
An East Lansing consultant group categorizes impact in three tiers, with Mercedes, Land Rover and Ford Mach-e among models facing highest cost increases despite recent Trump policy adjustments.
The development won’t affect jobs at Honda’s Alliston, Ont., plant, but it comes at a turbulent for the province’s automotive industry
Some companies have not spoken out about what tariffs are costing them, but they have announced some changes in the pricing of their products. Related: Apple CEO sends blunt message on tariffs impact Ford is one company that's been forced to take action in response to tariffs,