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Asia automakers are leading the decline, as Trump tariffs have a negative impact on this region.

Stocks of Japanese, South Korean and Japanese car manufacturers and their suppliers were among the biggest decliners in Asia Monday as exporters throughout the region were hit by U.S. president Donald Trump's introduction sweeping tariffs against Mexico, Canada, and China.

Trump's move, although widely anticipated, has knocked down some of the biggest manufacturers in the world. Investors are concerned about the prospect of a weakening of demand from the top economy of the world and, even more concerning, a possible slowdown in global growth.

The auto industry was among those hardest hit. Many Japanese and South Korean automakers, as well as their suppliers, have operations and export cars to the United States from Mexico.

Toyota, the largest automaker in the world, and its smaller rival Nissan both fell by more than 5%. Honda's shares fell by more than 7%.

Nissan has two factories in Mexico where it produces the Sentra and Versa models for the U.S. Makoto Uchida, the Chief Executive of Nissan, said in November that it exports around 300,000 cars to the U.S. each year.

Honda exports 80% its Mexican production to the U.S. Honda's chief operating officer Shinji aoyama warned that it might have to shift its production if permanent tariffs were imposed by the U.S. on imported cars.

Kia Motors, a South Korean company with a plant in Mexico, has fallen by nearly 7%. South Korean battery companies and battery material makers that had planned to build factories in Canada for GM, Ford, and other companies to supply, plunged. POSCO Future M sank 9.1%, and EcoPro BBM fell 8.7%.

Trump has imposed tariffs of 25% on Mexican imports, 10% on Chinese goods and the majority of Canadian imports. Chinese stocks in Hong Kong fell on Monday as the mainland Chinese markets were closed for Lunar New Year.

Mexico and Canada have promised to impose retaliatory duties, with Justin Trudeau, the Canadian Prime Minister, announcing 25% of tariffs on $155 billion worth of U.S. products.

BHP, Rio Tinto, and Fortescue, Australia's biggest iron ore mining companies, were down between 2 to 5 percent on Sunday on the prospect that tariffs will stunt global growth.

Rio Tinto's Canadian aluminum business was seen as the most vulnerable due to its exposure to tariffs. Analysts estimate that around 1,35-1.6 millions metric tons of aluminium are sold into the U.S., and would be diverted to other markets. Analyst Glyn Lawcock at Barrenjoey estimates that the tariffs will have a 4% effect on its EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization).

The shares of Taiwanese technology companies with factories in Mexico have fallen. Foxconn is down 8%; Quanta around 10%; and Inventec 8%. (Reporting from David Dolan in Tokyo and Melanie Burton in Melbourne. Ben Blanchard is in Taipei. Hyun Joo Ji in Seoul. Editing by Shri Navaratnam.)

(source: Reuters)