• China caves on 125% tariff for major US export after White House predic

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Fri May 2 06:28:31 2025
    XPost: alt.business.import-export, alt.politics.republicans, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns

    China waived a 125% tariff on ethane imports from the U.S. on Tuesday, according to a report from Reuters.

    China had initially imposed the tariff earlier this month as part of its retaliation against President Donald Trump's Liberation Day tariff
    campaign. China is responsible for purchasing roughly half of America's
    ethane exports each year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

    Chinese companies that rely on U.S. ethane include Satellite Chemical, SP Chemicals, Sinopec, Sanjiang Fine Chemical and Wanhua Chemical Group,
    while the key U.S. exporters are Enterprise Products Partners and Energy Transfer.

    Ethane joins a growing list of products that China has granted tariff exemptions for amid the ongoing trade war with Washington.

    Last week, Chinese officials granted exemptions for pharmaceuticals,
    microchips and aircraft engines and were asking firms to identify critical goods they need levy-free.

    News of the ethane tariff's removal comes after U.S. Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent insisted that Trump's tariffs were putting major pressure on
    Beijing. Speaking at the White House on Tuesday morning, Bessent said the tariffs stand to cost China millions of jobs if it doesn't change course.

    "I think that over time we will see that the Chinese tariffs are
    unsustainable for China," Bessent told reporters. "I've seen some very
    large numbers over the past few days that show if these numbers stay on, Chinese could lose 10 million jobs very quickly. And even if there is a
    drop in the tariffs that they could lose 5 million jobs."

    "So remember that we are the deficit country," Bessent said. "They sell
    almost five times more goods to us than we sell to them. So the onus will
    be on them to take off these tariffs. They're unsustainable for them."

    President Donald Trump announced widespread tariffs against a host of
    countries April 2, after routinely condemning other countries' trade
    practices and accusing them of engaging in unfair trade practices against
    the U.S.

    The administration later walked back its initial proposal, and announced
    April 9 it would immediately hike tariffs on Chinese goods to 145%, but
    scale back reciprocal tariffs on other countries for 90 days to a baseline
    of 10%. In response, China proceeded to boost its tariffs on U.S. goods to 125%.

    Bessent also signaled that a trade deal with India, and possibly other
    Asian countries, could emerge in the near future.

    "They have been the most forthcoming in terms of doing the deals," Bessent said. "As I mentioned, Vice President Vance was in India last week. I
    think that he and Modi made some very good progress. So I could see some announcements on India."

    https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/china-caves-125-tariff-major-us- export-after-white-house-predicts-beijing-cant-keep-up

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From george@21:1/5 to useapen on Fri May 2 14:41:36 2025
    XPost: alt.business.import-export, alt.politics.republicans, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns

    In <XnsB2D2EECDF8294BX@135.181.20.170> useapen wrote:

    China waived a 125% tariff on ethane imports from the U.S. on Tuesday, according to a report from Reuters.

    China had initially imposed the tariff earlier this month as part of its retaliation against President Donald Trump's Liberation Day tariff
    campaign. China is responsible for purchasing roughly half of America's ethane exports each year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

    Chinese companies that rely on U.S. ethane include Satellite Chemical, SP Chemicals, Sinopec, Sanjiang Fine Chemical and Wanhua Chemical Group,
    while the key U.S. exporters are Enterprise Products Partners and Energy Transfer.

    Ethane joins a growing list of products that China has granted tariff exemptions for amid the ongoing trade war with Washington.

    Last week, Chinese officials granted exemptions for pharmaceuticals, microchips and aircraft engines and were asking firms to identify critical goods they need levy-free.

    Make them take all the dead wind generators back for recycling.

    News of the ethane tariff's removal comes after U.S. Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent insisted that Trump's tariffs were putting major pressure on
    Beijing. Speaking at the White House on Tuesday morning, Bessent said the tariffs stand to cost China millions of jobs if it doesn't change course.

    "I think that over time we will see that the Chinese tariffs are unsustainable for China," Bessent told reporters. "I've seen some very
    large numbers over the past few days that show if these numbers stay on, Chinese could lose 10 million jobs very quickly. And even if there is a
    drop in the tariffs that they could lose 5 million jobs."

    "So remember that we are the deficit country," Bessent said. "They sell almost five times more goods to us than we sell to them. So the onus will
    be on them to take off these tariffs. They're unsustainable for them."

    Trump and his team have been right all along.

    President Donald Trump announced widespread tariffs against a host of countries April 2, after routinely condemning other countries' trade practices and accusing them of engaging in unfair trade practices against
    the U.S.

    The administration later walked back its initial proposal, and announced April 9 it would immediately hike tariffs on Chinese goods to 145%, but
    scale back reciprocal tariffs on other countries for 90 days to a baseline
    of 10%. In response, China proceeded to boost its tariffs on U.S. goods to 125%.

    Bessent also signaled that a trade deal with India, and possibly other
    Asian countries, could emerge in the near future.

    "They have been the most forthcoming in terms of doing the deals," Bessent said. "As I mentioned, Vice President Vance was in India last week. I
    think that he and Modi made some very good progress. So I could see some announcements on India."

    https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/china-caves-125-tariff-major-us- export-after-white-house-predicts-beijing-cant-keep-up


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)