Companies That Held Transfers in 2025 After Trump Tariff Are Recalculating Margins Now, and the Bill Is Starting to Arrive in the Cart Right at the Beginning of the Year
January is usually that “dangerous” month for prices. It’s when many companies update their pricing tables, renegotiate contracts, review costs, and take advantage of the beginning of the year to adjust what has been squeezed. In 2026, this adjustment ritual gained an extra ingredient: tariffs linked to the Trump administration, which were absorbed by some companies for months and are now beginning to show up more strongly in retail.
The political discourse may even celebrate “little impact on inflation” in the short term. However, costs don’t disappear. They only change places, moments, and packaging. And when margins are tight for too long, the chance of someone pressing the adjustment button increases, even if gradually, product by product.
The Lag Effect of Tariffs: When Costs Stand Still, They Come Back With Interest
There’s a detail that makes this story trickier than it seems. A tariff doesn’t have to become a price on the same day. In 2025, several companies had stock purchased beforehand, contracts signed, or simply chose to absorb part of the increase to avoid losing volume.
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Mercado Livre has just started selling medications with delivery in up to three hours to your door, and this move could completely change the way Brazilians buy medicines on a daily basis.
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In Dubai, rising tensions from the war in the Middle East are causing super-rich individuals to leave the Gulf and direct their fortunes to a new financial refuge in Asia.
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“No one will make us change the Pix,” says Lula after the US report.
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Lula responds directly to Trump and says that Pix is from Brazil and will not change under pressure from anyone, after a report from the United States pointed out the Brazilian payment system as an American trade barrier.
But holding costs money. Margins thin out, cash flow complains, and the company starts to calculate with another ruler: “How much can I pass on without losing customers?”
That’s when the beginning of the year becomes the perfect stage. Collection changes, catalog adjustments, insurance renewals, subscription price changes, batch switches. Consumers don’t always perceive the reason, but they feel the result.
And there’s another factor that stalled many decisions: uncertainty. When the legal or political landscape can still change, many companies play defensively and wait. But waiting also has its limits.
What Has Appeared in the Numbers and Why It Raised Alarm
Some price indicators started beeping right at the beginning of the year. One of them, a digital price index measuring online commerce values, recorded in January the highest monthly advance in its history, with strong fluctuations in categories such as electronics, furniture, and household items.
Another signal came from the industry: sentiment and cost surveys showed increasing pressure on inputs, with companies reporting higher prices in the supply chain and the expectation of pass-throughs throughout the year.
Amidst all this noise, Axios gathered market signals and regional reports indicating that many companies were preparing to adjust prices in the first half of the year, especially those that remained “frozen” in 2025 to protect market share and not irritate consumers.
Now, an important point: not every January spike becomes a trend. Price series can be volatile. There may have been promotions that ended, mix changes, seasonality, post-holiday adjustments. But when several different indicators start pointing in the same direction, it’s hard to call it a coincidence.
The Internal War in Companies: Sales Against Finance
The most interesting behind-the-scenes aspect isn’t even the number. It’s the fight within the company.
On one side, the sales team. Their mindset works like this: if they pass on too much, they lose volume. And without volume, the company loses market share, relevance, and becomes an easy target for competition.
On the other side, the finance team. Their perspective is different: absorbing costs eats into margins. And without margins, the company loses stamina, investment capacity, and in some cases, even the viability of the product.
When tariffs increase input costs, this dispute becomes more intense. The result is usually a compromise: gradual pass-through, in waves, in specific categories, sometimes with small and repeated adjustments instead of a single increase that draws attention.
And there’s an extra piece that heightens the drama: the fear of demand reacting poorly. In times when people are already sensitive to price, passing through costs becomes a test of nerves. No one wants to be the first to raise prices and become the villain, but everyone needs to breathe.
What Does This Mean in Practice for 2026
The most honest reading is simple: the impact of tariffs may be arriving slowly, but it is arriving. And when it comes slowly, it’s harder to trace and “blame” for a single adjustment. It appears as stubborn inflation, one that doesn’t explode but also doesn’t retreat easily.
If the pass-through continues, we are likely to see:
- Categories with more exposed global supply chains feeling it first, such as electronics and items with imported components.
- Adjustments distributed throughout the year, not a single shock.
- More companies trying to offset costs through services, fees, extended warranties, shipping, and subscriptions.
- “Silent” adjustments through reduced promotions, packaging changes, and specification modifications.
In the end, the story isn’t about politics on one side and consumption on the other. It’s about the mechanics of cost finding a way to go from within the company to the final price.
economy, inflation, commerce, tariffs, retail, Trump tariffs, prices in 2026

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