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How Tariffs Could Crush Auto Profits

German auto and truck maker Daimler AG (NASDAQOTH: DDAIF) cut its 2018 profit expectations, warning that new tariffs on vehicles exported from the United States to China are likely to hurt sales of the high-profit Mercedes-Benz SUVs it builds in Alabama for global markets.

It's yet another sign that ongoing trade disputes between the U.S. and other countries may not work out as well as the Trump Administration has hoped. More broadly, Daimler's profit warning is also a warning to investors in other automakers: The end of the global auto-sales boom may not be far away.

A dark blue Mercedes-Benz GLS, a large luxury crossover SUV, with mountains in the background.
A dark blue Mercedes-Benz GLS, a large luxury crossover SUV, with mountains in the background.

Made in USA: The Mercedes-Benz GLS luxury SUV is one of several Mercedes vehicles built in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and exported to other markets, including China. Image source: Daimler AG.

What Daimler said: Lowering 2018 guidance

In a statement on Thursday, Daimler said it is lowering its 2018 pre-tax earnings expectations for three of its five business units, and for the company overall.

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  • Daimler now expects 2018 earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) at its Mercedes-Benz Cars unit (the luxury-vehicle brand) to be slightly lower than its 2017 result, at 9.2 billion euros. Prior guidance called for it to come in slightly higher.

  • Full-year EBIT at Mercedes-Benz Vans (the Mercedes-brand commercial-vehicle unit) will be significantly lower than 2017's result, at 1.18 billion euros. (Prior guidance: Slightly lower.)

  • Full-year EBIT at Daimler Buses (which makes commercial and school buses under several brands) will be roughly equal to 2017's result, at 243 million euros. (Prior guidance: Slightly higher.)

  • EBIT forecasts for the Daimler Trucks and Financial Services units are unchanged: 2018 results for both are still expected to be significantly above 2017 levels. (2.38 billion euros and 1.97 billion euros, respectively.)

As a result, Daimler said its overall EBIT will be slightly lower than its 2017 result, at 14.68 billion euros. Its earlier forecast had called for 2018's EBIT to be slightly higher than 2017's.

Trump's trade war could hurt other automakers

President Trump has said that trade imbalances between the U.S. and other countries threaten America's national security. He has proposed to place tariffs on several categories of imported products, including vehicles. Separately, he has also promised to impose tariffs on a wide range of Chinese goods, a promise that produced a threat of retaliation from China.

It's that latter threat (from China) that Daimler is citing here. The German automaker isn't alone in its concerns. Volvo Cars has a brand-new factory in South Carolina, built with the expectation that its products will be exported from the U.S. to other countries, and Volvo Cars CEO Hakan Samuelsson warned on Wednesday that plans to hire 4,000 workers at that new factory are now at risk, according to a Reuters report.

European automakers aren't the only ones that stand to lose if China imposes new tariffs on vehicles imported from the United States. Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) exports several key vehicles, including the high-profit Lincoln Navigator and Ford Mustang, from the U.S. to China; higher tariffs will force Ford to raise prices in China, hurting the Blue Oval's already-suffering sales in the world's largest new-vehicle market.

In a separate but related development, Daimler has banded together with BMW AG and Volkswagen AG to propose that existing vehicle tariffs between the U.S. and the European Union be abolished entirely. (The EU currently imposes a 10% tax on vehicles imported from the U.S.; Trump has threatened a retaliatory tariff.) That would help all three of them, of course -- but it would also likely help Ford and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, both of which are significant players in the European market.

The takeaway for auto investors: Tariffs could clobber profits

Auto sales around the world have boomed since the 2008-2010 recession, and auto investors have ridden that boom to nice profits. But as Daimler's warning reminds us, most global automakers are dependent on (relatively) free trade: If the president's trade war leads to retaliatory tariffs that drive retail prices for many vehicles higher, this long-lived auto boom could quickly turn into a bust.

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John Rosevear owns shares of Ford. The Motley Fool recommends BMW and Ford. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.