Friday, March 14, 2025 -US President Donald Trump has threatened to impose a massive tariff on European alcohol in response to the European Union’s retaliation against his steel and aluminum tariffs.
In the latest escalation of global trade tensions, Trump said his
administration would impose a 200% tariff on alcoholic beverages from the EU
unless it rescinds the 50% tariff the European government imposed Wednesday on
US spirits
The U.S. tariff comes after the European Union moved to reinstate an
import tax on American whiskey.
On Tuesday, the European Commission, the executive body of the EU,
announced it was retaliating against U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum
by lifting the suspension on previous levies on U.S. goods, including
whiskey, and imposing new ones. Those changes will take effect in April.
“The European Union must act to protect consumers and business. The
countermeasures we take today are strong but proportionate,” Ursula von der
Leyen, president of the European Commission, said Tuesday.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said Thursday on Bloomberg Television
that Trump was “totally annoyed” by the EU’s actions, leading to the latest
threat.
The U.S. still plans to announce an additional round of so-called
reciprocal tariffs in April. European countries are expected to be impacted by
those measures as well.
“Their tariffs are way up here, and our tariffs are down here. How
about: Relax. Let us balance it,” Lutnick said Thursday about the EU.
The news Thursday appeared to put pressure on European liquor stocks, which had
already been struggling recently.
Paris-traded shares of LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton, the
largest luxury brand company in the world and headed by billionaire Bernard
Arnault, the richest man in Europe, fell for a ninth day Thursday and have
dropped 14% since the end of February. Remy Cointreau eased for a
third day, bringing its loss to almost 11% in that stretch. Pernod
Ricard also weakened for a third day, and is down more than 6% since
Monday’s close.
The trade war appears to have also taken a bite out of U.S. alcohol
stocks. Shares of Jack Daniels parent Brown Forman are down more than
7% this week.
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