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Blooming U.S. business interest in Cuba wilts under Trump

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HAVANA, (Reuters) - Packed into a remote corner of a pavilion, just 13 U.S. companies took stands at Cuba’s sprawling trade fair this year, in a sign of how firms’ interest in doing business on the island has dwindled in the first year of Donald Trump’s presidency.

Last year, amid enthusiasm following a detente in relations agreed between former President Barack Obama and Cuban leader Raul Castro in 2014, 33 U.S. companies took stands at the fair, the premier event on Cuba’s business calendar.

The mood was very different at this year’s edition, which took place last week in Havana. While China brought a record company delegation, and more than 150 Spanish businesses packed into five pavilions, the handful of U.S. businessme­n were downbeat.

“I’ve never seen it this deserted,” said Jay Brickman, vice president of Florida-based shipping company Crowley Maritime Corp, who has been attending the fair for 15 years. “People have really gotten discourage­d, and feel they maybe should be investing their time someplace else.”

U.S. companies embraced Cuba in the wake of the detente, jostling for a foothold in an opening market of 11 million consumers.

Thanks to travel-related exemptions to the embargo, U.S. airlines restored regular flights. Starwood Hotels, a subsidiary of Marriott Internatio­nal Inc, took over management of a Cuban hotel and cruise operators like Floridabas­ed Carnival Cruise Line included Cuba in their itinerarie­s.

But worsening U.S. relations as well as growing awareness of the difficulty of doing business in Cuba put a dampener on that.

Trump in June ordered

tighter trade and travel restrictio­ns including a ban on business with the military, which controls vast swathes of the economy. The regulation­s were unveiled on Wednesday.

“This is a huge step backwards,” said former U.S. Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez, the Cubanborn head of the U.S.-Cuba Business Council. “We had made so much progress.”

An unfolding diplomatic crisis over allegation­s of attacks on U.S. diplomats in Havana is adding to the gloom.

Cuba Trade magazine, based in Miami, last month cut its issuance from monthly to bi-monthly, citing the deteriorat­ing business environmen­t under Trump. Several Cuba business conference­s in the United States have also been canceled since June, including an agricultur­e conference in Chicago.

Following the Obama detente, U.S. farmers hoped for legislatio­n allowing them to access credit for exports to Cuba. But Trump has made it clear he is not about to ease, let alone lift, the embargo.

“We need to get the diplomatic issue off the table first,” said Louisiana Agricultur­e Commission­er Mike Strain, adding U.S. food exports to Cuba could total $1 billion if relations were normalized.

Even before Trump took office, some of the interest fizzled as companies realized doing business in Cuba was hard with its red tape, shortage of hard currency, poor telecommun­ications and labor restrictio­ns.

Online payments company PayPal Holdings Inc sent its chief executive in Obama’s delegation on his historic visit to Cuba in March 2016. It had been interested in making its Xoom money transfer service available in Cuba but said operationa­l challenges were too great.

“When we are able to deliver the speed, convenienc­e and security our customers have come to expect from Xoom, we will launch in Cuba,” a PayPal spokeswoma­n told Reuters.

Still, some companies made headway. After receiving all the necessary licenses under Obama, the Puerto Rican dealer for U.S. heavy equipment maker Caterpilla­r Inc last week agreed to open a distributi­on center in Cuba’s Mariel special developmen­t zone.

Future deals with Mariel, which boasts tax and customs breaks, will not be possible, as it features on a list published Wednesday of 180 government entities that Americans are now banned from doing business with. “The Mariel restrictio­n particular­ly sticks out because it is the most dynamic and exciting opportunit­y in Cuba,” said James Williams, president of lobby group Engage Cuba.

The diplomatic crisis has also complicate­d the logistics for U.S. businesses. The Trump administra­tion in September expelled 15 Cuban diplomats, including all those dealing with U.S. businesses.

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