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EU Trade with US Hits Record Despite Tariff Tensions, Study

BERLIN, July 3 (Reuters) - The trade of goods between the EU and the U.S. reached a record €875 ​billion ($1.00 trillion) last year despite mounting tariff pressures, ‌but the headline figures mask serious damage in key sectors, a study by the German Economic Institute (IW) showed on Friday.

European ​Union exports to the United States rose 7.7% ​to €580 billion, while U.S. imports into the EU ⁠climbed 2.2% to €295 billion, pushing the EU's trade ​surplus to nearly €285 billion.

At first glance, these record figures ​might suggest that the tariffs introduced under President Donald Trump and political tensions have left the underlying economic relations largely unaffected ​or have even unintentionally intensified them.

However, this first ​impression is misleading, said IW economist Samina Sultan.

Certain sectors are already ‌suffering ⁠significantly, particularly the automotive sector.

EU car and parts exports to the U.S. fell 20.4% in 2025, with Germany - which accounts for nearly two-thirds of EU auto exports ​to the ​United States - ⁠posting an 18.9% drop.

Ireland bucked the trend with a 52.7% surge in exports, driven ​by tariff-exempt pharmaceutical and chemical products.

Transatlantic services ​trade ⁠also hit a record €865 billion, though the EU ran a €178 billion deficit in that category.

Intellectual property fees - covering ⁠software licenses, ​patents and trademarks - accounted for ​more than 40% of EU service imports from the U.S., rising 13.7%.

($1 = ​0.8730 euros)

Reporting by Maria Martinez, Editing by Miranda Murray

Source: Reuters


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