Boardroom

Board series: Retaliation – The world responds to U.S. Tariffs

As President Trump ramps up his tariff policies in an effort to protect U.S. industries, key trading partners—including Canada, Mexico, the European Union (EU), and China—have announced retaliatory measures. These responses range from reciprocal tariffs to export restrictions on critical raw materials and industrial goods, posing significant risks to U.S. businesses. Understanding these developments and their implications is crucial for corporate executives navigating supply chain disruptions, pricing volatility, and international trade negotiations.

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Board series: ESG backlash and the backlash to it

Headlines have proliferated on corporate rollbacks of promises, goals, and investment in ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) and Sustainability—in the U.S. and globally. This can be a range of topics – be it emissions reduction goals, waste reduction goals, and, most dramatically, Diversity Equity & Inclusion (DEI). We are seeing an intensifying pressure on U.S. corporate leaders to limit their legal exposure to concepts that were only recently championed as critical to their success.

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Board series: Navigating U.S. tariffs as a global company

In 2024 alone, over 3,000 trade restrictions were implemented globally. This global trend is reflected predominantly in President Trump’s protectionist trade agenda. With their complex international footprint, global companies like Caterpillar, Komatsu, Unilever, Nestlé, BMW, Mercedes, Toyota will either face the impact of tariffs or retaliatory measures. While President Trump’s policies create cost and uncertainty, they also call for adaptation, domestic investment, restructuring, joint ventures, automation, and process innovation. Finally, new climate-related compliance requirements add more complexity to global trade flows with China and Europe.

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Board series: 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum create economic and operational shocks

In February 2025, President Trump reinstated the full 25% tariff on steel imports and increased aluminum tariffs to 25%, eliminating all previous exemptions and alternative agreements. This action expanded the tariffs to include key downstream products and terminated all general approved exclusions. Analysts expect these tariffs to lead to price hikes in vehicles, canned and other consumer products, and construction projects especially. But, if the first round of steel and aluminum tariffs are indicative, U.S. producers generally saw economic gains, job creation, while international companies faced increased costs and market uncertainties. For CPG, Industrial, Automative, and Construction sectors especially, proactive agility and consistent monitoring will be necessary to reduce exposure to global supply chain volatility and increased costs.

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Board series: Is the U.S. stuck in the shadow of China’s energy transition leadership?

With a whole-of-government national security approach, Trump’s America-first policies have intensified competition with China. For good reason, headlines abound on the escalation of trade wars with China – a 10% levy is in effect on goods from China, as well as negotiations with Canada and Mexico -, new tariffs announced on aluminum and steel. What’s falling to the backdrop in his trade policy upheaval, is the neglect of the economic advantages of beating China in renewable tech. Clean energy technology contributed to a record $1.6 trillion to China’s economy in 2023. Consequently, the U.S. and its businesses are losing out on material economic gains.

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Board Series: The Amazon dilemma – will Bezos do better in Trump 2.0?

Jeff Bezos’ relationship with President Trump appears much improved in Trump’s second term, at least at face value. Bezos, now a key global leader in IT infrastructure and cloud, supply chain, e-commerce, and space ventures, attended Trump’s 2025 inauguration alongside other business executives. He has even expressed enthusiasm about the administration’s space agenda. Additionally, he has downplayed concerns over Elon Musk’s ties to Trump, trusting Musk to act in the public interest. The bigger question remains – with so much exposure in its global operations to trade barriers and tariffs, how will Amazon thrive during Trump’s second administration?

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Board Series: Are you ready for EUDR? Europe’s enhanced deforestation regulation is here

With the EU’s deforestation laws coming online this month, CPG and Industrial companies will need to ensure that select commodities in their supply chains do not contribute to deforestation. The commodities scoped into the regulation include wood, rubber, palm oil, soy, beef, cattle, and cacao. In advancing this regulation, the EU aims to reduce its impact on climate change, greenhouse gas emissions, and biodiversity loss. Companies will have to quickly adapt their commercial operations to ensure compliance and think strategically to gain a competitive edge in doing so.

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Tariffs, Energy Crisis, and AI – an industrial executive view

From Paramita Das’s lens as a leading global executive in industrials and critical minerals, we asked her the most pressing questions on the future of ESG and Sustainability. Be it the rise of AI and automation, tariffs, the rolling out of China+1, or other geopolitical issues, business leaders will have to be ready for a myriad of new challenges in 2025 and beyond.

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Board series: A snapshot of Trump 2.0 policy priorities

With an “American First” philosophy, President Trump will bring structural shifts to U.S. domestic economy and America’s approach to trade, foreign policy, and investment flows. As Trump takes office today, he will push aggressively to sign what he can immediately. Business will feel immediate pressure and have to navigate peripheral clatter. This will be especially true for businesses that are resource- and knowledge-intensive with global operations. Expect greater deregulation, sweeping tax reform, enhanced competition with China, and a reconfiguration of global supply chains due to broad tariffs, levies, duties, and import/export bans. Corporate directors will have to ensure readiness to absorb major policy shocks and redirects in Q1 and well beyond.

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Board series: Confronting our climate reality – LA fires

Uncontrolled wildfires continue to menace and destroy communities in Los Angeles under a rare red flag warning. Even with the deadly fires still raging across a large swath of Southern California, the estimated damages have made the fires the region’s worst natural disaster in decades. The issues mount – lack of water, cascading electrical outages, un-insurability, privatization of first responder support, finger pointing between local, state, and federal levels. With all of this in mind, the LA fires demonstrate a new vulnerability for Americans. Residents and business leaders alike must call into question closely held assumptions on normalcy in one of the biggest and most prosperous U.S. cities

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