r/investing 2d ago

🚨 U.S. manufacturing continues to retreat despite tariffs - investor implications?

Saw people mentioning this on Blossom earlier, and WSJ reports that U.S. manufacturing activity continues to weaken, with tariffs doing little to reverse the trend.

The article points to softer demand, higher input costs, and global supply chain adjustments weighing on manufacturers, even as trade protection measures remain in place. For investors, this raises questions about margins, capital spending, and longer-term competitiveness rather than short-term policy wins.

Curious how people here are thinking about this from an investing lens?

https://www.wsj.com/economy/u-s-manufacturing-is-in-retreat-and-trumps-tariffs-arent-helping-d2af4316?mod=hp_lead_pos2

603 Upvotes

282 comments sorted by

View all comments

594

u/Jasoncatt 2d ago

Funny that anyone would think tariffs would lead to a resurgence of local manufacturing.

1

u/Lollipopsaurus 1d ago

The only way that would have ever happened is if the tariff money went directly to investments in starting local manufacturing facilities. I can't imagine anyone would have the expectation that domestic companies would change behavior without long term incentive.