President Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on autos not made in the U.S. and certain auto parts are sending more tremors through an industry already being pummeled by steel and aluminum import duties and on-again, off-again 25% levies on Canada and Mexico. The new tariffs, announced Wednesday, are likely to jack up new vehicle prices and will also impact the used car market. Trump has been itching to tax foreign autos for years. In his first term, he declared auto imports a threat to national security giving him the authority to impose tariffs on them. It’s the latest in a number of auto industry maneuvers by Trump during his first weeks back in the White House. Auto companies are also navigating the reversal of fuel economy standards, dialed down greenhouse gas emission standards and a host of electric vehicle policy rollbacks. Here’s what to know. What makes tariffs so difficult for the auto industry to grapple with? As automakers expanded globally, so too did their production, manufacturing and supply chains. Responding to the rapidly shifting U.S. trade policy has become complex and confusing. It would be impossible for auto manufacturers to reroute the sourcing overnight of thousands of parts that are imported to the U.S., and uprooting their assembly operations would take years. The network of auto manufacturing and supply are planned and developed over a span of years, and the industry may suffer collateral damage in Trump’s escalating trade wars. “It adds to the uncertainty facing all automakers as the industry’s supply chain is inherently global and has optimized around moving components across national borders where free trade agreements have existed in the past,” said John Paul MacDuffie, professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania. That means auto companies are likely to feel pain from the tariffs at different levels, said Sam Fiorani, analyst at AutoForecast Solutions, which studies the industry. “While European manufacturers chiefly deal in luxury vehicles and their buyers can afford some price adjustments, it’s the companies like Toyota, Mazda, and Subaru who import large percentages of their fleets that will take a beating,” Fiorani said. “Throwing tariffs on the parts of vehicles built in Mexico and Canada that aren’t sourced from the United States will hurt the profits of General Motors, Stellantis, and Ford over the next few quarters, costing them billions,” he added. What does this mean for car buyers and new car prices? New vehicles were selling for over $47,000 last month on average, according to auto-buying resource Edmunds. Tariffs could drive new car prices up by several thousand dollars, industry analysts say, though it is difficult to know by exactly how much given the scattershot nature of Trump’s proposed trade policies during his short time in office. Those buying cars in the U.S. looking for deals should should research which brands have more supply on dealership lots, the result of less popular models or brands stacking up. Last month, top-selling auto companies in the U.S. averaged 58 days’ supply of inventory, Edmunds says. Ford, Stellantis and Hyundai had some of the most inventory available, while Toyota, Honda and Nissan had some of the least. Automakers and their suppliers are only now recovering from years of instability brought on by pandemic-forced production halts, a sweeping semiconductor shortage and low inventory on dealership lots. That meant prices were sky-high, incentives were low and few deals were to be had. During […]