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US Trade Tariffs, Commodity Prices Costing Cummins $100 M

By Barbara Brosher, IPB News | Published on in Business, Government, Statewide News
Exports to China make up about 10 percent of the company’s sales revenues. (WFIU/WTIU News)

Indiana-based engine manufacturer Cummins says it’s overall earnings will be impacted by ongoing US trade disputes.  The company reached a quarterly revenue record this week of $6.1 billion.  As Indiana Public Broadcasting’s Barbara Brosher reports, Cummins says recent tariffs and increased commodity prices are costing it about $100 million.

About 80 percent of the equipment manufactured at Cummins’ Seymour plant goes to global markets. That means the increasing list of tariffs the U.S. is placing on Chinese goods and vice versa is having a significant effect on the company.

Director of External Communications Jon Mills says the company is still trying to figure out how to mitigate those costs.

“It’s going to impact our customers, and really when you look at what the tariffs are at the very basic level, it’s a tax,” Mills says. “And, that tax will get passed down inevitably. And, it gets passed down from the businesses, the customers, the supply chain, all the way down to the consumer. So not only will it have an effect on our company, it will have an effect on quite possibly the economy.”

Cummins CEO Tom Linebarger wrote in a New York Times opinion piece last week that jobs in Seymour and other Cummins facilities across the country could be at stake if the tariffs continue.