Farm Futures logo

The cut on $75 billion of U.S. imports takes effect Feb. 14, the same time as U.S. reduces tariffs on Chinese products.

Bloomberg, Content provider

February 6, 2020

3 Min Read
President Donald Trump and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, hold up signed agreements of phase 1 of a trade deal between the U.S.
President Donald Trump and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He hold up signed agreements of the phase 1 trade deal between the two countries.Mark Wilson/Getty Images News

By Bloomberg News

China will halve tariffs on some $75 billion of imports from the U.S. later this month, reciprocating a U.S. action and likely satisfying part of the interim trade deal.

The cut will be effective from 1:01 p.m. on Feb. 14, Beijing time, according to a Ministry of Finance statement on Thursday, the same time as when the U.S. will implement reductions in tariffs on Chinese products. Punitive Chinese tariffs on American goods that were adopted from Sept. 1 last year will be lowered, with the rate on some dropping to 5% from 10%, and the others to 2.5% from 5%.

Both nations agreed to cut tariffs on each others’ goods as part of the phase-one deal signed last month. Even with the world’s two biggest economies pausing their trade war, tariffs remain on large parts of their bilateral trade with numerous other points of friction in the relationship. The ongoing coronavirus that has claimed more than 500 lives in China and sickened thousands is raising concerns that the Asian nation might have to cancel orders if the situation worsens.

China National Offshore Oil Corp. told some suppliers it won’t take delivery of liquefied natural gas cargoes it has agreed to, invoking what’s called force majeure to get out of the contracts.

The Jan. 15 deal has a clause that states the U.S. and China will consult “in the event that a natural disaster or other unforeseeable event” delays either from complying. Chinese officials are hoping the U.S. will agree to some flexibility on pledges in their phase-one trade deal, people familiar with the situation said, though it is unclear if such a request has been formally raised.

Related:Trump calls China trade deal 'big, beautiful monster'

Other retaliatory tariffs China has imposed on U.S. goods will remain, according to the statement. In the meantime, China will continue processing applications for tariff exemptions, it said.

“We don’t see any impact from this tariff cut -- the measures are in line with what the U.S. side is doing,” said Li Qiang, head of Shanghai JC Intelligence Co. While China will continue to process waivers on farm product imports, it won’t remove its punitive tariffs if the U.S. maintains its duties, he said.

The yuan extended gains after news of the tariff reduction, with the offshore rate advancing as much as 0.26% to 6.9573 per dollar. Soybean futures traded in Chicago hardly moved following the news, trading 0.6% higher. Brent futures in London inched up, rising as much as 2.4%.

In the deal, China agreed to increase its imports from the U.S., including agricultural products and services, from 2017 levels by no less than $200 billion over the next two years. China is set to release January trade data on Friday, providing a first glimpse of this year’s imports from the U.S.

Related:The Phase One China deal and cash corn basis

Economists estimate overall trade in January likely contracted due to the Lunar New Year holiday, while the outbreak of the coronavirus casts a cloud over the outlook for the coming months.

After the reduction, retaliatory tariffs on American crude oil will be lowered to 2.5% from 5%. Punitive tariffs on soybeans will go down to 27.5% from 30%, and to 30% from 35% for pork, beef, and chicken. These rates are higher as these goods were also hit with tariffs in 2018, which will remain in place.

“China hopes that both sides can comply with and implement the agreement to enhance market confidence, promote development of bilateral economic ties and facilitate global economic growth,” according to the statement.

--With assistance from Natalie Lung, Tian Chen and Niu Shuping.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story:

Miao Han in Beijing at [email protected]

To contact the editors responsible for this story:

Jeffrey Black at [email protected]

Robert Fenner, Reinie Booysen

© 2020 Bloomberg L.P.

About the Author(s)

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like