President Donald Trump’s trade war with China has US companies shifting purchases of tariff-targeted products like furniture, refrigerators and car tires to countries such as Vietnam, South Korea, Taiwan and Mexico, according to a new analysis released on Wednesday.
Trump’s decision to slap tariffs of 10 to 25 per cent on about $250 billion of Chinese goods has roiled US retailers and manufacturers, who are scrambling to avoid potentially crippling cost increases.
Overall US imports of containerised freight from China fell 6.4 per cent during the first quarter as buyers worked off product stockpiled ahead of tariff increases and rerouted orders to lower-cost countries, S&P Global Market Intelligence’s trade data firm Panjiva said in the report.
US imports of Chinese-made furniture by retailers such as IKEA, Home Depot, Target Corp and Room to Go fell 13.5 per cent in the first quarter. That was partly offset by a 37.2 per cent rise in shipments from Vietnam and a 19.3 per cent increase in imports from Taiwan, Panjiva said.
The change also affected home appliances.
Imports of Chinese refrigerators fell 24.1 per cent during the quarter, when shipments from South Korea and Mexico jumped 31.8 per cent and 32 per cent, respectively, Reuters reported.
“A major factor in that shift has been a rearrangement in supply chains by Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics,” Panjiva said in the report.
The auto industry has also been rethinking trade routes.
Tyre imports from China slumped 28.6 per cent during the first three months of the year. At the same time, US sea ports saw a 141.7 surge in product from Vietnam and an 11.1 per cent increase in tyre shipments from South Korea. Hankook Tire and Nexen are among the suppliers picking up the new business, Panjiva said.
US companies are also shifting factory investments in the wake of the China trade tiff, which a trio of economists estimate has already cost US consumers and companies $19.2 billion.
Ohio-based Cooper Tire & Rubber Co in December said it formed a joint venture with Sailun Vietnam Co Ltd. to build a truck and bus radial tyre factory near Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City.
“We are excited about this addition to our manufacturing footprint, which diversifies our sourcing to protect against risk, including tariffs,” Cooper Chief Financial Officer Christopher Eperjesy said in February, when the company announced a $34 million write-down on the value of a joint venture manufacturing project in China.