Where others see uncertainty, middle-market businesses also see opportunity.
According to a
The survey found that the No. 1 priority for 91% of U.S. companies with between $25 million and $1 billion of annual revenue is limiting the damage from new tariffs. At the same time, 92% of the same firms view the policies as an opportunity to innovate and restructure.
“That’s an overwhelming majority saying that tariff management is a top priority,” Ken Gavrity, president of
He noted encouraging signs in the firms’ answers about how they’re managing the tariffs. “Nowhere in the top five was ‘pausing my growth initiatives,'” Gavrity said.
Since early April, the Trump administration has sporadically imposed, paused and made exceptions to a series of historically high tariffs on almost 90 U.S. trading partners.
The new costs for businesses, combined with an atmosphere of unpredictability, caused many firms to
“You’re definitely hearing people start to mention a slowdown,” Edward Barry, CEO of Capital Bank in Rockville, Maryland, told American Banker last month. “I have heard that other banks are seeing their loan pipelines start to come in a bit from what they thought earlier in the year.”
A
But unlike HSBC’s respondents, most of the business leaders who talked to
To seize those opportunities, companies were adapting to the new tariffs in a number of ways. The most common tactic, used by 60% of companies, was to adjust their supply chains. Another 53% said they were passing the costs onto their customers, and 47% shifted the burden to their vendors.
“All of these companies are going to have to understand their cost structures better,” Gavrity said. “They’re going to have to be much more dynamic regularly, because the current view would be, ‘I’d love stabilization, I just don’t know when I’m going to get there. So I have to be change-ready.'”
“Recent events are clearly having an impact on markets and client sentiment,” Gorman said in April. “So far in the second quarter — that is, since the tariff announcements — we have seen our clients pause transactional activity, waiting to see how things play out.”
For its middle-market survey,
Midsized companies are an important driver of local economies, and can provide a helpful temperature check on U.S. commerce in general, Gavrity said.
“These are $400 million-revenue companies that are making super-important things that we all touch every day,” he said. “People just don’t know their names because they don’t generally have the retail brands. But they’re huge GDP providers, huge employers, and how they go — the community is massively affected.”
As such companies try to adapt in the face of uncertainty,
“We’re still cautiously optimistic because our clients are still cautiously optimistic,” Gavrity said.