The Wall Street Journal’s Gavin Bade reported that “President Trump on Monday moved to reduce tariffs on heating and cooling equipment and certain heavy industrial and agricultural goods, as well as cutting levies on products from abroad made with American metals.”
“In a proclamation, Trump said he would lower tariffs applied to HVAC systems, bulldozers, forklifts and other mobile industrial equipment, and agricultural equipment such as harvesters to 15%. Those tariffs, imposed on steel, aluminum and copper goods, previously stood at 25%,” Bade reported. “Trump also lowered tariffs to 10% on products that are made in another country but consist of at least 85% U.S. steel, aluminum or copper, measured by weight.”
“The move is the latest by the Trump administration to limit the collateral damage of its trade wars, which have raised the prices for many inputs used in manufacturing, as well as equipment for farmers, construction companies and consumers,” Bade reported. “Trump in April overhauled his steel and aluminum tariffs, and previously exempted scores of food and agricultural goods from his other global levies.”
Bloomberg’s Derek Wallbank reported that “the changes take effect June 8 and would run through the end of 2027. The temporary relief will ‘spur near-term investments that will rebuild the Nation’s industrial base,’ the (White House) fact sheet said.”
Ag Machinery Industry Could Stabilize in Second Half of 2026, Experts Say
FarmFuture’s Andy Castillo reported that “between tariffs, rising oil prices, labor shortages and globalizing crop production, agricultural machinery manufacturing is facing persistent headwinds. What’s the downstream impact for farmers? Declining inventory and presumably higher prices for some equipment.”
“As raw material costs go up, almost 90% of dealers predict prices could increase by 1% to 6% through the end of this year, according to a report by industry magazine Farm Equipment,” Castillo reported. “Second-quarter earnings reports from machinery manufacturing companies reflect these challenges, with lower year-over-year agricultural equipment sales. The North American large-ag-equipment market is expected to decline by 15% to 20%. Machinery brands, which operate in a global business environment, are slackening output to cut operational costs.”
But “for the second half of 2026, experts predict the ag machinery industry will stabilize as farmers who have delayed purchases replace their aging fleets. That’s starting to happen, according to the Association of Equipment Manufacturers latest ag machinery industry report,” Castillo reported. “Combine sales ticked up 3.4% year over year in April, while tractor sales fell by about 1%.”
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