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Nora Eckert and Nathan Gome  

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By Nora Eckert and Nathan Gomes

(Reuters) -General Motors' second-quarter core profit fell 32% to $3 billion on Tuesday, as the automaker continued to confront challenging tariff policies, which it said sapped $1.1 billion from the results.

The largest U.S. automaker by sales said it expects the tariff impact to worsen in the third quarter and stuck to a previous estimate that trade headwinds threaten to hit the bottom line by $4 billion to $5 billion. GM said it could take steps to mitigate at least 30% of that impact.

The automaker's revenue in the quarter ended June 30 fell nearly 2% to about $47 billion from a year ago. Its quarterly adjusted earnings per share fell to $2.53 compared with $3.06 a year earlier. Analysts on average expected adjusted profit of $2.44 per share, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Shares fell about 3% in premarket trade.

GM was among corporations that revised annual guidance due to the impact from President Donald Trump's tariffs, lowering it to an annual adjusted core profit of between $10 billion and $12.5 billion. The company on Tuesday stood by that forecast.

Beyond tariffs, GM’s underlying business in the quarter was solid. Sales in the U.S. market – its main profit center – rose 7%, while the company continued to command strong pricing on its pickup trucks and SUVs. GM swung back to a small profit in China, after losing money there a year earlier.

Analysts said GM may need to cut investment in future projects or find other ways to trim spending to offset the effect of tariffs.

Jeep-maker Stellantis on Monday warned that tariffs would significantly affect results in the second half of 2025, and said tariffs cost it about 300 million euros in the first half of the year. Shares of rival Ford Motor, and U.S.-traded shares of Stellantis fell about 1% in premarket trading Tuesday.

The automaker took several steps in recent months to bolster its combustion-engine operations through increased investment in its U.S. factory base, calling into question its goal of ending the production of gas-powered cars and trucks by 2035.

GM announced in June that it would invest $4 billion at three U.S. facilities in Michigan, Kansas, and Tennessee, including a plan to move production of the Cadillac Escalade and increase output of its two big pickup trucks.

"We are positioning the business for a profitable, long-term future as we adapt to new trade and tax policies," GM CEO Mary Barra said in a release.

Automakers are increasingly shifting their focus to bolstering the core lineup of gas trucks and SUVs, as the growth rate of EV sales has slowed. Demand for battery-powered models already has slowed after rapid growth earlier this decade.

The trend is intensified by the pending disappearance of government support for the battery-powered models. Sweeping tax and budget legislation approved by Congress will eliminate $7,500 tax credits for buying or leasing new electric vehicles and a $4,000 used-EV credit at the end of September. Trump also signed tax and budget legislation that eliminates fines for failures to meet fuel economy rules, a move that makes it easier to build more gas-powered vehicles.

(Reporting by Nora Eckert in Detroit and Nathan Gomes in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur, Nick Zieminski and Mike Colias

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