
Port of Los Angeles feeling the impact from ebb and flow of tariff shifts
When Gene Seroka, the executive director of the Port of Los Angeles, held his monthly news briefing on Monday – his first since a 90-day tariff truce between China and the US took effect on May 14 – he let the numbers speak for themselves.
Advertisement
They had a lot to say about the uncertainty wrought by US President Donald Trump's erratic tariffs policy and trade tensions with China, where nearly 45 per cent of the port's business comes from.
In April, Seroka said, the port moved 9.5 per cent more container units than the same period last year, the third best April on record, surpassed only by the pandemic-driven surges of 2021 and 2022.
While exports fell by 3 per cent year-on-year, imports enjoyed a 5 per cent increase from the same period last year.
Good news? Hardly. As Seroka told reporters, the figures presage something of a tariff-tinged shipping panic.
Advertisement
'That boost is largely due to importers getting a last push of cargo before the tariffs hit,' he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Standard
an hour ago
- The Standard
HK spirits import value surpasses wine for first time since 2007
Download The Standard app to stay informed with news, updates, and significant events - The upgraded app is now available on both iOS and Android platforms.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong stablecoin law draws mainland attention as Citic anticipates tokenisation boom
Hong Kong's move to legalise stablecoins – cryptocurrencies that maintain a fixed value by being pegged to a reference asset – is grabbing the attention of mainland institutions, as a leading Chinese brokerage predicts a boom in tokenised real-world assets (RWA) in the city. Advertisement While Beijing has remained largely quiet on Hong Kong's new stablecoin bill in the two weeks since it was passed, paving the way for the issuance of such assets in the city, discussions about the market and geopolitical implications have intensified on the mainland. Analysts at Citic Securities wrote in a note published on Tuesday that stablecoins could help mainland companies roll out their RWA projects in Hong Kong, as they could serve as stabilising tools that increase market liquidity. The new law would also help the city develop interfaces for digital currency payment and settlement, according to the note led by analyst Yang Zeyuan. Ying Ying, an analyst at Chinese brokerage CSC Financial, also wrote in a research note that Hong Kong has entered a stage of 'accelerated growth' of tokenised RWAs. Stablecoins are backed one-to-one with fiat currency like the US dollar. The world's largest stablecoin is Tether, or USDT. Photo: AFP Stablecoins, which are typically backed one-to-one with fiat currency such as US dollars, have recently drawn widespread attention, as financial regulators around the globe have started to focus on the specialised cryptocurrencies, which some see as potentially destabilising. The same week Hong Kong passed its stablecoin bill, the US Senate advanced its own bill called the Genius Act, which also focuses on these assets.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Alibaba, JD.com sales surge during 618 shopping festival on the back of subsidy programme
Preliminary 618 retail data from Taobao and Tmall Group (TTG), Alibaba's domestic e-commerce unit, showed sales of categories that benefit from government subsidies – including consumer electronics products and home appliances – surged 283 per cent during the campaign's initial checkout period from May 13 to May 26, compared with the initial checkout period of its Singles' Day campaign last year. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post. For sales of home appliances and electronics rose about 380 per cent year on year in the first hour of its 618 campaign, which started on May 30, according to the latest data on the company's website. Both major e-commerce platforms were among the first to join the central government's renewed trade-in programme. The 2025 programme enables consumers who already claimed subsidies during last year's roll-out to receive new rebates. The data from Alibaba and reflects improved domestic retail spending, as the national subsidy programme offers each consumer a rebate of up to 2,000 yuan (US$278) per item. Eligible goods include consumer electronics products, such as personal computers and smartphones , as well as a range of home appliances from refrigerators and washing machines to televisions and air conditioners.