Russ Cohen

Whirlpool Dividend Cut Reflects Pressure From Tariffs and Weak Demand

Whirlpool eliminates its dividend and cut its forecast citing tariffs, inflation, and debt.

Higher Prices Coming

The Wall Street Journal reports Whirlpool’s Stock Drops 20% as Company Warns Higher Prices Are Coming

For much of America, the Iran war has meant pain at the pump. For it has caused what it calls a “recession-level industry decline,” and higher appliance prices are coming as a result.

The Michigan-based maker of refrigerators and washing machines said Wednesday that it would suspend its dividend as it focuses on paying down debt. The company also cut its full-year earnings guidance roughly in half, from $6 a share to a range of $3 to $3.50. Whirlpool stock dropped by 20% in premarket trading.

Chief Financial Officer Roxanne Warner said U.S. consumer confidence nosedived to historically low levels, driven by worries over the rising cost of living, after the war began Feb. 28.

The anemic housing market has made matters worse, company officials have said. Though shoppers still replaced aging or broken appliances with modestly priced equivalents, they shied away from the company’s higher price, more profitable models.

Warner said the company was further hurt by the Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate the Trump administration’s emergency tariffs. Following the decision, she said, rivals cut their prices in anticipation of receiving refunds.

Warner said a new tariff policy announced in April, applying a flat 25% levy on the total value of imported appliances, would give Whirlpool the advantage it has long predicted over its foreign competitors. The company makes 80% of its products for the U.S. market domestically.

Whirlpool reduced its discounts on many products in April to make up for what it said were three years of cost inflation it hadn’t passed on to consumers. Atypically, its competitors swiftly followed the effective price hike with their own increases, which Warner said was a sign that higher prices were sustainable.

The company plans to increase list prices for its appliances by about 4% in July.

Whirlpool Cheers Trump’s New 25 Percent Tariffs

Well, don’t worry because Trump says China pays the tariffs. Whirlpool needs that 25 percent to have an advantage it “long predicted”.

Trump would be proud that Whirlpool do not pass on costs of Trump-sponsored inflation for three years. How patriotic.

And the announce 4 percent hike is another one of those small prices we need to pay. Please put on your MAGA hat and get in line with JD Vance.

Higher Prices Are Welcome

” … where you have to do what woke corporations want you to do to be able to live a decent life in this country. That’s not freedom. We have to choose. Do we want freedom? Do we want an American way of life? Or do we want short term satisfaction for every little thing? We’re increasingly in a situation where we are gonna have to We’re gonna have to choose between one or the other. We’re gonna have to get a little uncomfortable on some of these things. Or maybe we’re gonna have to be willing to pay a little more for certain consumer goods. We may even have to be willing to attack some of the companies financially that are waging war on the American people. That’s tough but I don’t see any other way out of this.

Vance’s Elizabeth Warren Imitation

Amazing. Except for the initial reference to woke corporations that does not tie into anything else Vance said, he now sounds like Elizabeth Warren on corporate greed.

Vance blames price-gouging companies without stating that explicitly. And he proposes attacking companies that are “waging war on the American people,” apparently for making too much money. Warren would be proud.

Importantly, “there is no way out of this” so “maybe we’re gonna have to be willing to pay a little more for certain consumer goods.” Warren would not be proud of that.

I need to make a lot of notes from that video because it must makes sense in some alternate universe.

Whirlpool Employees

Year		Global Employees	Change from Prior Year
2018		92,000			—
2019		77,000			-15,000 (-16.3%)
2020		78,000			+1,000 (+1.3%)
2021		69,000			-9,000 (-11.5%)
2022		61,000			-8,000 (-11.6%)
2023		59,000			-2,000 (-3.3%)
2024		44,000			-15,000 (-25.4%)
2025		41,000			-3,000 (-6.8%)

Those are international employees. Whirlpool does not post US totals but estimates are ~20,000.

Whirlpool is struggling to say the least.

Whirlpool Notes

  • Whirlpool Corporation employs approximately 20,000 people in the United States. prosperousamerica.org
  • This figure comes from recent company statements and reports (as of 2025–early 2026). It includes about 14,000 manufacturing workers across roughly 10–11 U.S. production plants. whirlpoolcorp.com
  • Whirlpool is a major steel user due to appliance manufacturing (e.g., washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranges). It sources ~96% of its U.S. steel domestically.
  • Individual appliances typically contain dozens to low hundreds of pounds of steel (e.g., a washing machine might have 100–200+ lbs, varying by model). With Whirlpool producing/selling millions of units annually (primarily in North America and Latin America), total steel use is likely in the hundreds of thousands of tons per year globally, with a significant portion in the U.S.
  • Steel costs are frequently cited as a major input (along with resins, copper, and aluminum) that can impact margins, especially with tariff or price fluctuations. whirlpoolcorp.com
  • Aluminum is used in components like heat exchangers, housings, and some panels, but in smaller volumes than steel.
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Sourcing Details

  • Disclaimer in company materials: Whirlpool explicitly notes that “Domestic and imported components are used in the manufacturing of products.” They do not publish a detailed public breakdown of specific foreign parts or exact percentages due to competitive sensitivity. whirlpoolcorp.com
  • Common foreign-sourced items (based on industry norms for appliances and Whirlpool’s 10-K risk disclosures):
  • Electronics and controls: Circuit boards, sensors, displays, and smart/connected features (often from Asia, e.g., China).
  • Motors and compressors: Especially specialized or energy-efficient models (sourced from various global suppliers, including in Mexico, China, and other countries; Whirlpool has historically had ties to Brazilian compressor tech via past Embraco ownership).
  • Semiconductors and electronic components: Frequently cited in supply chain disruption reports (global shortages have impacted Whirlpool).
  • Other parts: Plastics/resins, certain wiring harnesses, valves, pumps, fans, and specialized hardware where cost or technology favors overseas suppliers.
  • Major foreign production/supply footprints: Mexico (several plants and suppliers, used for both local and export), China, and other Asian/European sources for components. They have shifted some production (e.g., certain lines from U.S./China to Mexico for supply chain efficiency). whirlpoolcorp.com

Should Whirlpool Praise Tariffs?

Whirlpool praises tariffs on appliances.

But Whirlpool does not praise tariffs on steel, aluminum, electronics, motors, compressors, semiconductors, plastics, and other parts.

Whirlpool would be much better off if Trump eliminated all tariffs.

Instead, Whirlpool complained it had to eat inflation for three years.

Small Price to Pay

Along with prices increases on gasoline, jet fuel, fertilizer, aluminum, steel, diesel, airline tickets, tools, autos, and countless intermediate goods, a four percent price in appliances is a small price for consumers to pay.

Please make a note of that.

Specifically, please note this: “Or maybe we’re gonna have to be willing to pay a little more for certain consumer goods. We may even have to be willing to attack some of the companies financially that are waging war on the American people. That’s tough but I don’t see any other way out of this.

Is that a great midterm election proposal or what? It’s quite patriotic. Republicans need to run with it.

Q: Why?
A: Jobs. Just look at all the manufacturing jobs we are going to gain.

Q: Where?
A: I posted the results previously.

Manufacturing Is the Biggest Net Loser in Jobs, 5 Quarters Total

Manufacturing Jobs Gains and Losses by Quarter Details

Manufacturing Jobs Gains and Losses by Quarter Details

  • 2024 Q3: -79,000
  • 2024 Q4: -55,000
  • 2025 Q1: -37,000
  • 2025 Q2: -69,000
  • 2025 Q3: -100,000

Wait, I thought you said gains.

I did. Those losses are all the fault of Biden and Obama.

The gains are coming.

Reflections on Tariffs

Trump’s tariffs are an expansion of Biden’s tariffs, which were themselves a continuation of Trump’s tariffs.

So regarding manufacturing, please give Trump credit for 2024 as well.

There is no doubt Trump’s tariffs have clobbered small businesses.

Well, that’s OK because this is all a small price to pay for stopping Iran from getting a bomb that we already prevented, and also to revive manufacturing that needs revival from tariffs.

Meanwhile please reflect on the fact that Whirlpool employs 20,000 people in the US while 347 million people use appliances.

Allegedly, we are all better off if 347 million people pay a little more for literally everything. It might even save a few jobs at Whirlpool (or not when we employ more robots to counter union wages).

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