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Canada's retaliation for Trump tariffs is greatest issue, says Japan's Komatsu

The top service danger of the Trump presidency for heavyduty devices maker Komatsu is not the tariffs he has threatened, however Canada's potential retaliatory responsibilities on Americanmade mining machines, the head of the Japanese business said.

The view of an international maker flags the possible knock-on impact of Trump's promise for tariffs on imports from Canada, China and Mexico when he takes workplace, especially if the targets choose to retaliate with trade barriers by themselves.

Komatsu, the world's second-largest construction machinery company after Caterpillar, earns more than a. quarter of its sales from The United States and Canada and uses about 8,000. staff in the United States.

The risk of vindictive tariffs by Canada, the largest. export location for the mining devices Komatsu makes in the. United States, is my most significant concern when Trump's second term. begins next month, Chief Executive Hiroyuki Ogawa informed Reuters.

We are an exporter in America, Ogawa said, including that. Komatsu's U.S. exports have actually exceeded imports by about $1. billion a year because its 2017 acquisition of Milwaukee-based. mining machinery maker Pleasure Global.

We're basing our company on free trade, Ogawa stated. A. tariff war might land a one-two punch on us.

The impact of the threatened tariffs on U.S.-bound. elements such as sheet metal from China is not very big and. might be reduced if essential by moving supply sources. somewhere else, such as from Southeast Asia, within two to three. months, he added.

Apart from trade policies, Trump's vow to maximise fossil. fuel usage would serve as a positive counterbalance to shrinking. demand for heavy machinery in the United States due to. oversupply in the rental market, Ogawa stated.

Komatsu will keep buying the United States regardless. of who the president is, Ogawa stated, vowing to invest about $80. million for a mining devices service centre in Arizona and $65. million for ABS, a Detroit-based battery maker bought in 2015.

Ogawa expects a difficult service landscape in the next. fiscal year starting in April, with worldwide demand most likely to remain. flat. He pointed out concerns about rising repaired expenses and fewer. opportunities for cost walkings as supply chains go back to normal.

Komatsu projections operating profit of 573 billion yen

(source: Reuters)