U.S., China firms scramble as new tariffs
hurt business
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[May 31, 2019]
By Brenda Goh and Lisa Baertlein
SHANGHAI/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Shanghai
wine importer Alex Chen has spent the last 10 days moving all his
American wines - from chardonnays to zinfandels - out of warehouses in
the city's free trade zone before they are hit with an extra tariff that
kicks in on Saturday.
On both sides of the Pacific, importers and exporters are scrambling as
further tariffs of 15% come into effect, on top of the 10% duties
imposed last September. The new tariffs will force them to raise prices,
take a further hit on margins, or, if they can, find alternatives.
Chen figures he has stock to last three months, after which - barring an
easing in the increasingly bitter U.S.-China trade war - he plans to
focus on partnerships with wine suppliers from places such as Chile or
Australia.
China's added tariffs on American wines would leave no margin for
importers like his firm, Alexander Wine Co., he said.
"This will collapse the market for U.S. wines."
The 10-month-old trade war between the world's two largest economies
escalated early this month, with U.S. President Donald Trump imposing a
new round of tariffs, prompting China to respond and forcing companies
in the cross-fire into a scramble to raise prices or shift strategy.
Harlan Stone, chief executive of Connecticut-based Metroflor, said he
sent e-mails to his distributors to inform them of his plans to raise
prices on his China-made vinyl flooring by 13.5% after Trump hiked
tariffs on Chinese goods on May 9.
Stone said he and his distributors had shouldered the initial 10% tariff
last year.
"Over the long term, we believe the market can absorb the 10%, but we
know the marketplace can’t absorb the additional 15," said Stone, who
sources the luxury vinyl tile he sells in the United States from
factories on China's eastern coast.
"This will go straight to the consumer and no one knows whether their
buying habits will stay the same. There is risk."
FINDING ALTERNATIVES
The trade war is changing the flow of global goods, with U.S. companies
shifting purchases of affected products including furniture,
refrigerators and car tires to countries such as Vietnam and South
Korea, analysis by S&P Global Market Intelligence's trade data firm
Panjiva showed last month.
Trump, incensed by a surge of illegal immigrants across the southern
border, vowed on Thursday to impose a tariff on all goods coming from
Mexico, threatening to further disrupt global trade flows.
Chinese purchases of U.S. products have also suffered. Total U.S.
agriculture product shipments to China dropped 44%, or $2.1 billion, in
the first quarter of 2019 versus the same period in 2018, according to
United States Department of Agriculture data.
Those figures include a 45% drop in U.S. breakfast cereal shipments, and
a 34% decline beef imports, and a 20% cut in U.S. pork purchases.
Imports of pet food dropped 35%, wine and beer fell 20%, and Chinese
purchases of U.S. tree nuts such as almonds dropped 47%.
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Employees work on a vinyl flooring production line in Zhangjiagang
Yihua Rundong New Material Co., Ltd in Zhangjiagang, Jiangsu
province, China, May 20, 2019. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
Some importers in China told Reuters they were opting to source more
pork and beef from countries including Argentina or Spain, as
selling U.S. products grew less competitive.
Shanghai-based wholesaler Gusto Fine Foods scrapped plans to put
Berkshire pork from the United States on the list of produce it
offers to high-end restaurants and hotels in China last year after
the tariffs hit.
"The importer told us right away that due to tariffs, the next time
you buy it from me, my cost is going to go up 30-40%," said Dmytro
Soroka, Gusto's operations manager.
"And we were like, forget about that one, there are other pork
suppliers out there. There's Spain, there's South America ... The
price going up will only make other products that we carry from
different origins more interesting to our customers."
MARKET SLUMP
Others, such as U.S. wine distributors with a focus on China, said
they were finding it tough to be optimistic in the current climate.
Michael Honig, president of Napa Valley's Honig Vineyard & Winery,
said prior tariff increases undid 10 years of investment in China.
In 2016, his small family winery sold about 1,000 cases in China.
That dropped to zero last year.
"We had this wonderful trajectory up, now it’s down in the
basement," said Honig, who worries U.S. producers could be locked
out of the competitive Chinese market for years.
U.S. wine exports to China were $59 million in 2018. That was down
13% in volume and off almost 25% in value compared to 2017,
according to the Wine Institute.
David Amadia, president of Ridge Vineyards, which sells about 2% of
its 90,000-case production to China, said the suddenness of the
latest round of retaliatory tariffs left him no time to send
shipments ahead of the deadline.
Instead, he may work with his importer to shift supplies to Hong
Kong, where wine is duty free and 2018 U.S. exports totaled $130
million. "That's become the fall-back for wineries," Amadia said.
(Additional reporting by Gavin Maguire in Singapore, Hallie Gu in
Beijing and Beijing Newsroom, and Shanghai Newsroom.; Editing by
Lincoln Feast.)
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