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Global companies likely to be hit by Trump's promised tariffs on Mexico and Canada

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(Reuters) — US President Trump said on his first day in the White House that he could impose 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico from Feb. 1. His comments sent shares of several Asian automakers and battery firms lower in trading on Tuesday.

Here are some companies outside the US that may be affected by the promised duties.

Nissan Motor

Nissan Motor (7201.T, NSANY) has two plants in Mexico where it makes the Sentra, Versa and Kicks models for the U.S. market. It produced nearly 505,000 vehicles in Mexico in the first nine months of 2024. The company did not disclose how many of those were exported to the U.S. market.

Stellantis

Stellantis (STLA, STLAM.MI) operates two assembly plants in Mexico: Saltillo, which makes Ram pick-ups and vans, and Toluca, for the Jeep Compass mid-sized SUV. The Franco-Italian group also owns two assembly plants in Ontario, Canada: Windsor, where it makes Chrysler models, and Brampton, currently under retooling and scheduled to resume production in 2025 with a new Jeep model.

Toyota Motor

Toyota Motor (TM, 7203.T) builds its Tacoma pick-up truck at two plants in Mexico. It sold more than 230,000 of them in the U.S. in 2023, representing about 10% of its total sales in that market. Toyota used to produce the Tacoma in the U.S. but now ships all of them from Mexico, which accounts for most of the production at the plants.

Volkswagen

Volkswagen’s (VOW3.DE, VWAGY) factory in Puebla is the largest auto plant in Mexico and one of the largest in the VW Group, according to the carmaker’s website. Nearly 350,000 cars were made there in 2023, including the Jetta, Tiguan and Taos, all for export to the U.S.

Audi

Volkswagen’s Audi plant in San Jose Chiapa, Mexico, makes the Q5, employing just over 5,000 people. It produced nearly 176,000 cars in 2023, its website showed. In the first half of 2024, nearly 40,000 cars were exported to the U.S., according to the Mexican Automotive Manufacturers Association.

BMW

BMW’s bmwky (BMWKY, (BMW.DE) plant in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, produces the 3 Series, 2 Series Coupe and M2, with nearly all of the output going to the U.S. and other markets worldwide, according to the carmaker. From 2027, it will produce the all-electric “Neue Klasse” model line.

BYD

Chinese EV maker BYD (1211.HK, BYDDY) has been scouting for locations to build a plant in Mexico but has said repeatedly that the factory will serve the domestic market and not produce cars to be sold in the U.S.

Honda Motor

Honda Motor (HMC, 7267.T) sends 80% of its Mexican output to the U.S. market and its Chief Operating Officer Shinji Aoyama warned in November that it would have to think about shifting production if the U.S. were to impose permanent tariffs on vehicles imported from the country.

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