Baltimore Sun

China rushes to fill U.S. orders ahead of tariffs

Trump’s levies on $200B in imports to start Monday

- By Kyunghee Park, Daniela Wei and Matt Townsend

The race is on to get Chinese goods into the United States before President Donald Trump’s tariffs bite. At sea and in the sky, the president’s trade war with China has ignited a freight frenzy.

Hyundai Merchant Marine Co.’s vessels leaving China for the U.S. are full, deliveries to California ports are surging and cargo rates for journeys across the Pacific are at a four-year high.

The levies that kick in Monday have amplified the busy pre-holiday season as Chinese manufactur­ers rush everything from toys to bikes to car parts into American stores before tariffs hit. At Air China Ltd., freight to the U.S. is booming.

In Jiangsu province on China’s East Coast, E.D. Opto Electrical Lighting Co. dispatched a batch of car lights by sea to Los Angeles in late August, earlier than planned.

“It takes about 25 days, so I hope we can make it,” said export manager Melissa Shu. The company is racing A Chinese freight frenzy is underway before U.S. tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports kick in on Monday. to complete an order for another U.S. customer who’s prepared to pay extra for air freight if it means dodging the new tariffs, she said.

Starting Monday, a 10 percent duty applies to $200 billion of Chinese imports — Trump’s biggest salvo yet in a trade war between the world’s largest economies that now directly hits U.S. consumers. After that, American importers have until the end of the year to stockpile Chinese products before the tariff leaps to 25 percent.

As companies accelerate shipments from China to beat those deadlines, American consumers could get a leg-up: Anticipate­d price hikes on household goods at retailers like Walmart Inc. and Target Corp. might be held off in the short term. In China, this front-loading of exports helped push China’s trade surplus with the U.S. to a record in August.

Trump has threatened duties on a further $267 billion of made-in-China goods, which would hit nearly all other consumer products, including mobile phones, shoes and clothes. That escalation could spur U.S. companies to pre-emptively load up on those goods, too, Deutsche Bank said in a report this week.

The National Retail Federation in the U.S. warned that duties will lead to higher prices and even product shortages.

In the industrial hub of Dongguan in southern China, toy maker Lung Cheong Group, which supplies Hasbro Inc., is getting squeezed by American customers watching their calendars.

“More clients in the last two months are asking if we can deliver goods ahead of the scheduled time to avoid the upcoming tariffs,” said Chairman Lun Leung. For small high-tech toys that have higher retail selling prices, some clients are willing to upgrade from sea freight to air, he said.

Such expedited orders are helping to fill ports along the West Coast.

Imports to Northern California’s Port of Oakland surged 9.2 percent in August. That was the busiest August in the port’s 91-year history. At the Port of Long Beach, imports of containers rose 9.4 percent this year through August. That comes after a record 2017.

Spot freight rates from Shanghai to Los Angeles, the biggest U. S. port, reached $2,362 per 40-foot container in the week ended Sept. 13, the highest weekly level since December 2014, according to the Drewry World Container Index.

The threat of the looming tariffs is supercharg­ing business at Hyundai Merchant Marine, South Korea’s biggest shipping company, and APL, one of the largest shippers on the trans-Pacific route, during the industry’s peak season, representa­tives for the companies said.

“We have a rush game with the tariff,” said Rahul Kapoor, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce in Singapore.

While Monday’s tariff may come too soon for some U.S. companies importing Chinese products, they still have a window of more than three months before duties surge Jan. 1.

 ?? QILAI SHEN/BLOOMBERG NEWS ??
QILAI SHEN/BLOOMBERG NEWS

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