Double whammy: U.S. pork, fruit producers
brace for second wave of Chinese tariffs
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[June 21, 2018]
By Dominique Patton and Tom Polansek
BEIJING/CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. producers
of pork, already saddled with duties enacted in an earlier round of the
escalating trade dispute with China, are bracing for further pain after
Beijing hit the products with additional tariffs due to come into effect
next month.
China implemented a 25 percent duty on most U.S. pork items on April 2,
and a 15 percent tariff on a range of fruits and nuts, in response to
U.S. tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum products.
Last week it included both categories in a second round of tariffs to be
imposed on July 6. No other products have been listed twice.
Pork now faces cumulative import duties of 71 percent, not including
value added tax, according to a formula published on the website of
China's finance ministry last week. Cumulative duties on fruit amount to
50 percent.
"The additional tariff will put us out of business," said Zhong Zheng,
founder of China-based Heartland Brothers, which sells U.S.-produced
Berkshire pork to Chinese supermarkets and restaurants.
The United States shipped $489 million worth of pork to China last year,
and had the biggest share of import volumes in the first quarter of
2018, at about 117,000 tonnes, according to Chinese customs.
But shipments have since ground to a near halt following the 25 percent
tariffs implemented in April, said U.S. meat analyst Brett Stuart,
president of Global AgriTrends.
"They've pretty much stopped our pork," he said.
Total duties on U.S. pork will reach 88 percent from next month, after
factoring in the 10 percent value added tax, according to one industry
expert's calculation.
That comes as margins at some of the biggest U.S. pork processors reach
their lowest level in three years, dragged down by surging hog prices
and mounting worries over trade with China and Mexico.
With the new duties on U.S. pork, Chinese buyers will turn to other
suppliers in Europe and Brazil, said Pan Chenjun, senior analyst at
Rabobank.
UNCERTAINTY AND CONFUSION
Compounding the pain, most in the industry were still unsure about how
to calculate the new tariffs, leaving them unprepared for the impact.
"We're trying to get confirmation of how the duties will be implemented
and we have not been able to," said Joe Schuele, spokesman at the U.S.
Meat Export Federation on Wednesday.
The industry association represents firms like Tyson Foods Inc <TSN.N>,
JBS USA [JBS.UL] and WH Group Ltd's <0288.HK> Smithfield Foods.
Smithfield and Tyson declined to comment. JBS did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
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Workers cut pork at Park Packing in Chicago, Illinois July 18, 2015.
REUTERS/Karl Plume/File Photo
The North American Meat Institute, an industry group that represents
Hormel Foods Corp <HRL.N> and others, is also still waiting to learn
the size of the tariff from the American embassy in Beijing or trade
officials, said a spokeswoman. Uncertainty about the size of the
tariff makes it harder for meat packers to plan how much pork to
process, said Bill Westman, senior vice president of international
affairs for the institute. "When you're planning your production
process, you need some lead time and you need some certainty in the
market to do it," he said.
"That's why there's some hesitation here. Do we produce for the
Chinese market when the tariffs may go up significantly July 6?"
Mark Powers, president of the Northwest Horticultural Council, who
handles trade issues for apples, pears and cherries from farms in
Washington, Oregon and Idaho, is also seeking confirmation from the
U.S. government about how the tariffs will be applied.
Chinese customers had informed him on Wednesday that the latest
tariff would replace the earlier one, he added.
A Shanghai-based produce company manager, who declined to be
identified, said he believed the new tariffs would not be compounded
on existing tariffs, and their inclusion on the latest list was a
bureaucratic "oversight".
However, he added that "the document itself is a bit vague so we
can't rule out this possibility, if the trade situation further
deteriorates".
Imposition of both duties would cause Chinese purchases to fall
sharply, he said, and air-freighted cargoes of cherries currently on
their way to China would be canceled.
China is the third-largest export market for U.S. fresh cherries,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. U.S. exporters
shipped $119 million of fresh cherries to China, just under a third
of total shipments worth $605 million in 2017.
Apple and pear shipments would be even harder hit when the season
starts this autumn as they face more competition from other markets,
said Powers.
"These tariffs amount to some serious money and it makes it
difficult to compete," he added.
(Reporting by Dominique Patton and Yawen Chen in Beijing and Thomas
Polansek and Karl Plume in Chicago. Additional reporting by Stella
Qiu. Editing by Philip McClellan)
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