Business

China to impose extra tariffs of 10%-15% on various US farm products

(Reuters) – China on Tuesday swiftly retaliated against fresh U.S. tariffs, announcing 10%-15% hikes to import levies covering a range of American agricultural and food products, and placing 25 U.S. firms under export and investment restrictions.

COMMENTS:

OLE HANSEN, HEAD OF COMMODITY STRATEGY, SAXO BANK

“From a pricing perspective, this is happening at a very bad time for U.S. corn prices, which were already under some selling pressure from hedge funds that in the past few months accumulated very large and extended bets on higher prices.

“This will continue to increase China’s dependency on Brazil corn and soybeans while causing a great deal of stress among U.S. farmers who are about to make their spring planting decisions in the coming weeks.”

CHARU CHANANA, CHIEF INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, SAXO, SINGAPORE

“While the moves from China may not be particularly bold, there is a reason to believe that China wants to be on the negotiating table with Trump rather than sitting back and absorbing the blows. The move still brings risks of an escalation first in trade tensions before resolution.

“China’s actions could also be indicative of the fact that they may be more confident of responding to domestic headwinds now, especially as they catch up to the AI race. There will be increased focus on what policy stimulus come through from the twin sessions.”

TOMMY XIE, HEAD OF GLOBAL MACRO RESEARCH, OCBC BANK, SINGAPORE

“Exchange rate is a relative concept, and so is tariff. As long as other countries are also levied tariffs, or have such expectations, it won’t be that bad. The thing to worry about is only one person gets tariffs. If the United States charges everyone, it will be considered as paying protection fee.”

CHARLES WANG, FOUNDER, DRAGON PACIFIC CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, SHENZHEN

“The U.S. is facing various challenges, and the trade war will only make things worse. They include inflation, relations between the U.S. and Europe and China.

“For China, we have reduced trade dependency with the U.S. from 23% to around 13%, so the direct impact is limited. In addition, China’s economy is recovering, and the parliamentary meeting will provide more signals for supporting the economy.

Therefore, I don’t think the stock market trajectory will be changed. There’re some curbs on the Hong Kong market, which, if anything, needs a small correction. But it’s OK. Not a big deal.”

LIU JINLU, AGRICULTURAL RESEARCHER AT GUOYUAN FUTURES, BEIJING

“This news has raised concerns about tightening domestic agricultural supplies, benefiting the sector. China’s 10% tariff on U.S. soybeans will increase costs and reduce U.S. imports, leading China to boost imports from Brazil and other countries.

https://media.zenfs.com/en/reuters-finance.com/36ded97d75a8dc35e35a4c48d1195e42

2025-03-03 23:13:02

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button