Foreign automakers threaten to pull cheapest models from US without trade deal, WSJ reports

(Reuters) – Foreign automakers have warned the Trump administration that they could pull ​their cheapest car models from the U.S. market if ‌the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) is not renewed or is watered down, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.

Trump’s economic advisers have been told that some foreign automakers ​might not be able to build and sell cheaper cars ​for the U.S. market if the USMCA no longer ⁠exists or a renewed version does not significantly reduce ​tariffs on cars and auto parts made in North America, the ​report said, citing people familiar with the discussions.

Reuters could not immediately verify the report. The White House did not immediately respond to Reuters’ ​request for comment.

The auto industry has urged the Trump administration ​to extend the USMCA, which faces a review this year. Car companies call the ‌trade ⁠deal crucial to American auto production.

Mexico and Canada have been looking to the USMCA negotiations as a way to provide relief from the steep duties Trump imposed last year, which have caused ​difficulties for automakers ​and other industries ⁠in a highly integrated North American economy.

Trump last year imposed a 25% national security tariff ​on automotive exports from Mexico and Canada, compared ​to ⁠zero under the USMCA, which Trump launched in 2020 as the “greatest trade deal ever”.

The three nations are due to finish work on ⁠the trade ​deal work by July 1, but ​the schedule has been complicated by U.S.-Canadian tensions over Trump’s tariffs.

Reporting by Fabiola ​Arámburo in Mexico City; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Kim Coghill