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Tariff ‘Earthquake’ Sends Shipping Industry Into Crisis Mode
Tariff ‘Earthquake’ Sends Shipping Industry Into Crisis Mode · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Global shipping executives gathered this week in Long Beach, California, for a major annual conference, expecting to discuss market trends and supply chain challenges.

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Instead, they found themselves in crisis mode.

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump upended decades of mostly free trade with the two biggest US trading partners, slapping 25% tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada. The White House also layered another 10% duty on China on top of an identical hike a month before.

The move sent shock waves through global trade, igniting fears of recession, skyrocketing consumer prices and logistical chaos. While beefing up tariffs has long been one of Trump’s signature issues, veteran shippers at the S&P Global’s TPM25 conference in Long Beach said they didn’t expect him to follow through so fully.

“It’s like an earthquake,” said Cindy Allen, chief executive officer of consultant Trade Force Multiplier, who spoke on a conference panel about navigating Trump’s second term. “You do your best to prepare, but then when it comes it’s an 8.0 on the Richter scale. It’s a shock,” she said in an interview.

Deepening the uncertainty, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said Wednesday that Trump is set to announce changes to the tariffs on the North American trading partners later in the afternoon.

“What he is thinking about is which sections of the market that can maybe — maybe he’ll consider giving them relief,” Lutnick said told BTV. While some categories will still face the 25% levy, others may be spared. However, a broader trade review in April could bring another round of tariffs, he said.

Trump has threatened higher tariffs for years, and the possibility of a major increase was universally understood. At the twin ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach — the largest US gateway for Chinese imports — cargo volumes have ballooned in recent months, a sign that importers were moving in shipments ahead of potential trade restrictions.

The pattern is familiar: During Trump’s first term, port traffic spiked as businesses raced to stockpile goods, only to drop once tariffs on Chinese imports started taking effect. Half a continent away, freight rates between the US and Canada have jumped since Trump’s latest election in November, said Dean Croke, an analyst at DAT Freight and Analytics.