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Business live
Carmaker shares fall after Trump’s 25% tariff; poorer families set to be £500 worse off after spring statement
Live  
Carmaker shares fall after Trump’s 25% tariff; poorer families set to be £500 worse off after spring statement
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Headlines
Spring statement  
Reeves’s statement will leave poorest £500 a year worse off, finds thinktank
Reeves’s statement will leave poorest £500 a year worse off, finds thinktank
Spring statement  
Rachel Reeves accused of balancing books on back of UK’s poorest
Trade  
Donald Trump announces new 25% tariffs on cars from overseas
US  
Trump floats easing tariffs on China in return for TikTok deal
Retail industry  
Next reports £1bn in annual profits for first time but warns on UK economy
Travel  
Aviation watchdog to look at rules on ‘resilience’ after Heathrow closure
Money  
Major UK investors join push for retail giants to pay workers ‘real living wage’
Chocolate  
Surging cost of cocoa leads UK shoppers to shell out more for smaller Easter eggs
‘People have been pushed to the brink’  
Welfare cuts spark fear in Blackpool
Tax avoidance  
Whistleblowers will earn share of HMRC proceeds, says Reeves
Explainer  
Spring statement 2025: what does it mean for your finances?
Banking  
Nigel Farage settles dispute with NatWest Group two years after accounts closure
Football  
Chelsea fans call for investigation into Todd Boehly’s links with ticket resale website
Consumer affairs  
School dinner payment app criticised for £10 refund fee
OBR  
Watchdog warns of Trump tariff uncertainty as it downgrades UK growth
Advertisement
Today's agenda
Shares in car companies have fallen after Donald Trump announced plans to impose sweeping 25% tariffs on cars from overseas last night.

The latest eruption in the Trump trade wars has hit investor confidence, and angered US trading partners around the world.

In Japan, shares in Toyota Motor have lost 2.04%, Honda Motor fell 2.48%, while Nissan Motor slipped 1.68%.

In South Korea, Hyundai Motor’s shares have fallen more than 4% – only days after it tried to placate Trump by announcing a $21bn investment in the US.

German carmakers are being rocked by the announcement of new auto tariffs at the US border, too.

Shares are being hit in early trading in Frankfurt, where BMW are down 4.2%, Volkswagen has lost 3.3% and Mercedes-Benz has dropped 4.1%.

Shares in the UK luxury carmaker Aston Martin have tumbled more than 6% at the start of trading in London, to what looks to be a record low.

The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, described the move as “bad for businesses, worse for consumers”.

Trump has also threatened further tariffs if the EU worked with Canada “in order to do economic harm to the USA”, which may fuel fears of a tit-for-tat trade conflict that would hurt the global economy.

Writing on his own social media platform, Truth Social, he said if they did so, “large scale Tariffs, far larger than currently planned, will be placed on them both in order to protect the best friend that each of those two countries has ever had!”

As the dust settles after yesterday’s spring statement, analysis shows that lower-income households are set to become £500 a year poorer over the current parliament.

The Resolution Foundation has been crunching the data since Rachel Reeves updated us on the nation’s finances, and concluded that poorer households will be most affected by the various tax and benefit changes in this parliament.

Over the next five years the average income across the poorest half of working-age households is projected to decline by 3%, or £500. That has only happened before during the early 1990s recession (1989 to 1994-95) and the financial crisis (2007-08 to 2012-13).

Ruth Curtice, the chief executive of the Resolution Foundation, said: “High debt servicing costs, weak tax receipts, and the need to reassure jittery markets, meant the chancellor had to announce tax rises or spending cuts in her spring statement.

“She chose to focus the bulk of her consolidation on welfare cuts. These cuts have been justified on the basis of getting people into work, but it is questionable how much of a jobs boost they’ll deliver. After all, the bulk of the cuts are to disability benefits which aren’t related to work, and the cuts take effect from 2026, three years before the government’s employment support programme kicks into gear.

“While the OBR’s outlook for growth today got gloomier, it is far more optimistic about Britain’s medium-term economic prospects. The chancellor will hope that reality catches up with the OBR, rather than the OBR falling back to reality, otherwise more tough choices await.

“The outlook for living standards remains bleak. Britain’s poor economic performance, combined with policies that bear down hardest on those on modest incomes, mean that 10 million working-age households across the bottom half of the income distribution are on track to get £500 a year poorer over the course of the parliament.”

Yesterday the chancellor announced welfare cuts of £4.8bn, with official figures showing that 3 million households could lose £1,720 a year in benefits. That could yet lead to a rebellion among Labour MPs when it comes to a vote.

The agenda
• 
8.30am GMT: Bank of England policymaker Swati Dhingra speaks on a panel in South Africa
• 9am GMT: Resolution Foundation event assessing the spring statement
• 12.30pm GMT: Updated US Q4 GDP report
• 12.30pm GMT: US weekly jobless claims

We'll be tracking all the main events throughout the day …
Nils Pratley on finance
Reform of cash Isas is still on the agenda. Quite right, too
Reform of cash Isas is still on the agenda. Quite right, too
Opinion
Analysis  
Rachel Reeves does reasonable job of justifying fiscal prudence but welfare cuts cast shadow
Rachel Reeves does reasonable job of justifying fiscal prudence but welfare cuts cast shadow
Editorial  
The Guardian view on Labour’s plan for stability: austerity in disguise
Will Rachel Reeves’s tough decisions pay off? Our panel on the spring statement
Media
UK  
Noel Clarke propositioned young woman in toilet cubicle, court told
Noel Clarke propositioned young woman in toilet cubicle, court told
Internet safety  
Banning us from social media is ‘neither practical nor effective’, UK teenagers say
Spotlight
Coca-Cola plastic waste in oceans expected to reach 602m kilograms a year by 2030
Environment  
Coca-Cola plastic waste in oceans expected to reach 602m kilograms a year by 2030
Analysis published by non-profit group Oceana comes amid fears over human health risks posed by the spread of microplastics
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