China Port Volumes Hit Record Highs on US Tariff Truce
Just two months after China's ports saw a severe slowdown in activity as U.S. importers took a wait-and-see approach to President Donald Trump's tariffs, business is booming again.
Seaports across China had their busiest week on record from June 16-22, with roughly 6.7 million 20-foot equivalent units (TEUs) shipped domestically and internationally out of ports including Shanghai, Ningbo, Shenzhen and Xiamen among many others.
More from Sourcing Journal
FedEx Faces $170M in Tariff Headwinds as US Cracks Down on De Minimis
WTO to Intervene in Trade Disputes Between Canada and China
US-Iran Clash Sparks Strait of Hormuz Blockade Threat Fears
That marks a 5.9 percent increase from the week prior, with total cargo tonnage increasing 5.6 percent to 263.8 million tons, according to data from China's Ministry of Transport.
The strong numbers follow this month's trade truce between China and the U.S. that brought combined tariff levels down to 55 percent on Chinese goods. Prior to the deal which is still yet to be formally approved by either Trump or Chinese President Xi Jinping, China's exports to the U.S. had a rough two months.
In April, when the tariffs were first announced and escalated as high as 145 percent, shipments of Chinese goods to the U.S. dropped 21 percent annually to $33 billion. The next month saw a more pronounced plunge of 34.5 percent to $28.8 billion—China's largest export decline in five years.
The U.S. is likely not the only driver of the overall jump, as Chinese exporters have also been shipping goods in droves to Southeast Asian countries like Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia, all of whom have their own tariff negotiation deadlines to adhere to with the U.S. by July 9.
The record movement of containers moved appears to bode well for dockworkers at the West Coast ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which were impacted by fewer job opportunities when Chinese exports to the U.S. sank.
A CNBC report on Tuesday said that another wave of ocean freight is on its way to the San Pedro Bay ports that would mark the highest number of container ships since January, according to the Marine Exchange of Southern California. On Friday, 64 vessels are expected to arrive at the twin ports, while another 68 should flow in Saturday. Sunday's incoming vessel total is expected to be 64.
And while blank sailings on the trans-Pacific trade lane were common through the tariff turbulence, they're expected to decrease in the coming weeks. Port of Long Beach CEO Mario Cordero told CNBC he expects 18 blank sailings at his port in June, but that this number is slated to fall dramatically to four across July and August combined.
Although the current projections indicate a return of more stable traffic to California ports, there remains no guarantee that the excess cargo out of China will continue to stay elevated throughout the summer, even as the traditional peak shipping season approaches. Across all U.S. ports, the Global Port Tracker had forecast inbound cargo volumes to remain below last year's numbers for the summer, but that came out ahead of June's trade truce resumption.
'The initial demand surge post the May 12 China-U.S. de-escalation and ahead of the Aug. 12 deadline for the reduced U.S. tariffs on China may be behind us,' said Judah Levine, head of research at Freightos. 'At the same time, carriers, expecting a stronger and more prolonged trans-Pacific container volume spike, have increased capacity on the lane by 13 percent compared to March and early April.'
Freight rates from China to the U.S. already appear to have hit their seasonal peak earlier this month amid the reports of container capacity outpacing new demand.
A Monday analysis from container shipping research firm Linerlytica indicated that the Shanghai Containerized Freight Index (SCFI) rolled back all gains it made in the past three weeks as trans-Pacific rates collapsed due to the excess capacity.
As of Friday, the Shanghai-to-U.S. West Coast rate plummeted 33 percent on a weekly basis to $2,772 per 40-foot container, just after a 27 percent drop the week prior.
'Freight rates to the U.S. West Coast have recorded their largest weekly losses in the last two weeks as their failure to retain any of their June 1 rate hikes have also put the peak season surcharge for contract customers at risk,' said the Linerlytica update. 'The early end to the trans-Pacific peak season have not yet dragged down rates on the secondary routes that remain supported by buoyant cargo volumes, while charter rates also remain firm with very limited open tonnage.'
Hashtags

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

19 minutes ago
Trump says US has signed a deal with China on trade, without giving details
BANGKOK -- The U.S. and China have signed an agreement on trade, President Donald Trump said, adding he expects to soon have a deal with India. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told Bloomberg TV that the deal was signed earlier this week. Neither Lutnick nor Trump provided any details about the agreement. 'We just signed with China the other day,' Trump said late Thursday. Lutnick said the deal was 'signed and sealed' two days earlier. It follows initial talks in Geneva in early May that led both sides to postpone massive tariff hikes that were threatening to freeze much trade between the two countries. Later talks in London set a framework for negotiations and the deal mentioned by Trump appeared to formalize that agreement. 'The president likes to close these deals himself. He's the dealmaker. We're going to have deal after deal,' Lutnick said. China has not announced any new agreements, but it announced earlier this week that it was speeding up approvals of exports of rare earths, materials used in high-tech products such as electric vehicles. Beijing's limits on exports of rare earths have been a key point of contention. The Chinese Commerce Ministry said Thursday that Beijing was accelerating review of export license applications for rare earths and had approved 'a certain number of compliant applications.' Export controls of the minerals apparently eclipsed tariffs in the latest round of trade negotiations between Beijing and Washington after China imposed permitting requirements on seven rare earth elements in April, threatening to disrupt production of cars, robots, wind turbines and other high-tech products in the U.S. and around the world. The agreement struck in May in Geneva called for both sides to scale back punitive tariff hikes imposed as Trump escalated his trade war and sharply raised import duties. Some higher tariffs, such as those imposed by Washington related to the trade in fentanyl and duties on aluminum and steel, remain in place. The rapidly shifting policies are taking a toll on both of the world's two largest economies. The U.S. economy contracted at a 0.5% annual pace from January through March, partly because imports surged as companies and households rushed to buy foreign goods before Trump could impose tariffs on them. In China, factory profits sank more than 9% from a year earlier in May, with automakers suffering a large share of that drop. They fell more than 1% year-on-year in January-May. Trump and other U.S. officials have indicated they expect to reach trade deals with many other countries, including India. 'We're going to have deal after deal after deal,' Lutnick said.


Bloomberg
34 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
US Says Signed Trade Agreement With China
'Bloomberg: The China Show' is your definitive source for news and analysis on the world's second-biggest economy. From politics and policy to tech and trends, Yvonne Man and David Ingles give global investors unique insight, delivering in-depth discussions with the newsmakers who matter. (Source: Bloomberg)
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Taiwan to impose anti-dumping duties on Chinese beer, steel for four months
TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan's finance ministry said on Friday it would impose anti-dumping duties on Chinese-made beer and hot-rolled steel for four months starting on July 3, citing substantial damage to Taiwan's industry. The duties on Chinese-made beer will be as high as 64.14% while for steel they will be as high as 20.15%, the ministry said in a statement. "These products have caused substantial damage to the domestic industry, and in order to prevent the industry from continuing to suffer during the period of the investigation, the products would be subject to temporary anti-dumping duties," the ministry said. China's Ministry of Commerce did not immediately respond to a request for comment. China has previously imposed its own anti-dumping duties on some Taiwan-made products, including last month on POM copolymers, a type of engineering plastic.