Finance

‘Big price to pay!’: Trump blasts 3M after ordering the N95 mask maker to boost US production

Trump rallySAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

  • President Donald Trump blasted 3M in a tweet on Thursday night, suggesting the maker of N95 respiratory masks was dropping the ball as novel coronavirus rages across the US.
  • “We hit 3M hard today after seeing what they were doing with their Masks,” Trump tweeted. “Big surprise to many in government as to what they were doing — will have a big price to pay!”
  • Earlier on Thursday, Trump revealed he had signed a Defense Production Act order that requires the industrials titan to make more masks for the nation.
  • While 3M has doubled production to 100 million masks a month since January, demand continues to outstrip its capacity.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

President Donald Trump slammed 3M on Thursday night, suggesting the maker of N95 respiratory masks — the gold standard for healthcare providers facing a deluge of novel coronavirus patients — was dropping the ball.

“We hit 3M hard today after seeing what they were doing with their Masks,” Trump tweeted. “‘P Act’ all the way,” he continued, referring to his signing of a Defense Production Act order that requires the industrials titan to produce more masks for the country.

“Big surprise to many in government as to what they were doing — will have a big price to pay!” he added.

3M stock slid about 3% in pre-market trading, wiping more than $2 billion from its market capitalization. The decline outpaced a 1.3% drop in Dow Jones Industrial Average futures.

Read more: BlackRock’s $1.7 billion Obsidian hedge fund plunged in March as the coronavirus threw fixed-income markets into turmoil

Trump announced his invoking of the act — which requires companies to accept and prioritize government contracts for national security and other reasons — during a White House briefing earlier on Thursday. “Hopefully they’ll be able to do what they are supposed to do,” he said.

N95 masks remain in short supply among healthcare providers and other frontline workers. Global cases of coronavirus passed the 1 million mark this week; the US accounts for more than a fifth of that figure.

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