Sickly manufacturers slump as they brace for the impact of Donald Trump's tariff turmoil

Importance Score: 72 / 100 šŸ”“

Manufacturing across the world slumped last month as firms brace for the impact of Donald Trumpā€™s latest trade wars.

As the price of gold hit a record high amid the global uncertainty sparked by Trump, a series of closely-watched business surveys showed factories from Britain and Japan to the United States saw activity shrink in March.

The figures came as the US President prepares to unleash a new wave of tariff announcements today on what he has dubbed ā€˜Liberation Dayā€™.

Fears over the announcement have sent shockwaves through financial markets and boosted gold, seen as a safe haven during times of volatility.Ā 

Yesterday it climbed to an all-time high of $3148 dollars per ounce, before falling back slightly.

Trumpā€™s aim is to revive Americaā€™s industrial base which he complains has been damaged by unfair foreign competition.

A series of closely-watched business surveys showed factories from Britain and Japan to the United States saw activity shrink in March

But in a blow to the White House, monthly US purchasing managersā€™ index (PMI) figures from the Institute for

Supply Management (ISM) suggested that a nascent recovery in the sector had been snuffed out by the tariffs.

The PMI reading of 49 in March was down from 50.3 in February ā€“ on a scale where the 50-mark separates growth from contraction. ISMā€™s Timothy Fiore said that ā€˜demand and production retreated and destaffing continuedā€™ as companies ā€˜responded to demand confusionā€™.

In Britain, a PMI reading from financial firm S&P Global showed activity shrinking at its worst pace in 17 months, with a reading of 44.9 in March.

And business confidence among factory firms dwindled to its lowest level in two-and-a-half years.

Rob Dobson, director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said the UK market was deteriorating as costs rise due to Labourā€™s National Insurance raid and minimum wage hike as well as global tensions and ā€˜potential disruption from tariffsā€™.

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source: dailymail.co.uk


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