Big retailers’ hardball tariff playbook: Haggle, diversify, raise prices
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. America’s biggest retailers are deploying every weapon they have to navigate President Trump’s fast-escalating trade war, from leaning on suppliers for discounts to finding alternate product sources. In some cases, that includes price increases for consumers.
Much of the action so far has focused on goods from China, which the Trump administration hit with a 10% tariff in February and another 10% in March. Some suppliers say Walmart, Home Depot and other retailers are pushing a variation of the same demand: Make a price concession or shift production out of China. Otherwise, the suppliers risk losing some business.
The sometimes-tense deliberations among retailers and suppliers show how Trump’s trade agenda is already rippling through global supply chains, with billions of dollars of consumer spending at stake. “Companies are completely under the gun and panicking," said Joe Jurken, founder of the ABC Group in Milwaukee, which helps U.S. businesses manage supply chains in Asia.
He has received a flood of inquiries from manufacturers facing pressure from retailers to move production out of China, he said. Some of the requests have raised the ire of Chinese officials. Authorities in China summoned Walmart for a meeting in recent days after some suppliers complained the largest U.S.
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