
Taiwan bicycle makers in limbo as US tariff threat looms
But he wonders how much longer it will last.
The US president's initial 32 percent tariff on Taiwan stunned the island's bicycle manufacturers, who were racing to meet orders ahead of the northern summer before the new toll was announced.
Some US customers immediately cancelled or postponed shipments, only to reverse their decision when the hefty tariffs on Taiwan and many of America's trading partners were paused for 90 days.
With a global 10 percent levy still in place and no clarity on what happens once the three months are up, Taiwanese bicycle companies and US buyers are in limbo.
"They don't know what to do. There's no time to respond," said Chen, general manager of Joy Group, which makes wheels and hubs in Taichung.
Joy Group, founded by Chen's grandfather in 1971, is one of more than 900 companies assembling bicycles or making components, including wheels, pedals and frames, mostly in central Taiwan, the island's manufacturing heartland.
Some companies have received a surge in orders as US customers rush to import bicycles and components before the end of the 90-day period.
Others, like Joy Group, have seen little change in demand, which Chen put down to inventory leftover from Covid-19, when retailers stocked up to meet surging demand for bicycles.
Chen said US customers had passed on the 10 percent tariff to consumers, but a 32 percent levy could put the brakes on further orders, with inevitable knock-on effects in Taiwan.
'Hidden champions'
"If we are getting affected, then the company would need to think how to cut down... everybody will be facing the same issues," said Chen, whose company also has four factories in China.
Taiwan has long been a key player in the global bicycle industry, but it faced an existential crisis more than two decades ago when an ascendant China drew many of the island's manufacturers to its shores.
Rather than try to compete with China's cheaper, mass-produced two-wheelers, Taiwanese companies collaborated to upgrade their manufacturing techniques and produce quality bikes and components for high-end markets, mainly in Europe and the United States.
While Taiwan's export volume has fallen dramatically from around 10 million in the 1990s to 1.3 million in 2024, exacerbated by the pandemic glut, the average export price of its bicycles has risen sharply.
A traditional bike was valued at US$1,131 last year and an e-bike US$1,848, industry data and analyst reports show.
China, which exported more than 44 million bikes in 2024, had an average price of US$57.
Taiwan bicycle industry expert Michelle Hsieh said the island's success in targeting the high-end market was down to "hidden champions" in the supply chain.
Small and medium-sized companies -- a hallmark of Taiwan's manufacturing sector -- were highly specialised and flexible, Hsieh said, making them "indispensable" in the global market.
"They are making things that other people cannot make so they have that competitive advantage," said Hsieh, a sociologist at Academia Sinica in Taipei.
Trump's hopes that higher tariffs will force firms to move their production to the United States were dismissed by Taiwanese and American bicycle manufacturers as fanciful.
- 'Like a big family' -
It would be "nearly impossible" to set up a factory in the United States in the next three to five years, Taiwanese bicycle company Giant told AFP, citing higher costs, labour challenges and the lack of a "bicycle industry cluster".
"Taichung is the absolute centre of the bicycle industry," said Tim Krueger, industry veteran and chief executive of US-based Esker Cycles, which imports frames and parts from Taiwan for its mountain bikes.
"That's where the expertise in the whole world is on how to properly manufacture bicycles."
Some bike makers in Taiwan look set to benefit from the 145 percent tariff on Chinese products in the short term, with US customers seeking out Taiwanese suppliers, Hsieh said.
But Tsai Po-ming of the Cycling & Health Tech Industry R&D Center, which was set up in 1992 to help Taiwan's industry become more competitive, said there could also be negatives.
Chinese manufacturers might try to offload their lower-end bikes in Europe if Trump's tariffs fuelled inflation, Tsai told AFP.
"Consumers might feel that the prices are too high, and although our products are mid to high-end in quality, they might prefer to buy lower priced models instead," he said.
At Pacific Cycles' factory near Taipei, workers assembled fold-up bicycles mostly destined for Europe and Asia.
While the company has little direct exposure to the US market, president Eva Lin said if one of its suppliers was hurt by the tariffs, then Pacific Cycles would be affected.
"The complete industry is like a big family," she said.
"No one can escape from the impact."
© 2025 AFP

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


France 24
a day ago
- France 24
US inflation edges up as Trump tariffs flow through economy
The consumer price index (CPI) came in at 2.4 percent from a year ago after a 2.3 percent reading in April, the Labor Department said, with headline figures cooled by energy prices. All eyes were on US inflation data after Trump imposed a blanket 10 percent levy on imports from almost all trading partners in early April. He also unveiled higher rates on dozens of economies including India and the European Union, although these have been suspended until early July. Trump also engaged in a tit-for-tat tariff escalation with China, with both sides temporarily lowering high levies on each other's products in May. Despite the wide-ranging duties, analysts said it will take months to gauge the impact on consumer inflation. This is partly because businesses rushed to stockpile goods before Trump's new tariffs kicked in -- and they are now still working their way through existing inventory. "As that inventory level gets worked down, we'll see a larger and larger pass-through of the tariffs," Nationwide chief economist Kathy Bostjancic told AFP. Between April and May, CPI was up 0.1 percent, cooling from a 0.2 percent increase from March to April. While housing prices climbed alongside food costs, energy prices edged down over the month, the report added. The energy index fell 1.0 percent in May from a month ago, as the gasoline index declined over the month. Excluding the volatile food and energy components, so-called core CPI was up 2.8 percent from a year ago, the Labor Department said. But Bostjancic said she did not expect the inflation report on Wednesday to significantly impact the US central bank's interest rate decision next week. "The guidance remains that there's such a great degree of uncertainty of how the increased tariffs will affect prices and ultimately the economy," she said. "They need to wait and see, to see how this plays out over the coming months. And we should learn a lot more from the data through the summer and early fall," she added. The Federal Reserve has begun cutting interest rates after the Covid-19 pandemic as officials monitor their progress in lowering inflation sustainably. © 2025 AFP


Euronews
a day ago
- Euronews
Tesla stock rises as Trump-Musk feud cools and robotaxi launch nears
Tesla stock rose marginally in pre-market trading on Wednesday after CEO Elon Musk extended an olive branch to US President Donald Trump following their public feud. Shares were up over 2% by around midday CEST, at $332.76 (€290.98) 'I regret some of my posts about President @realDonaldTrump last week. They went too far,' Musk said in a post on X on Wednesday. After spending millions backing Trump's successful presidential bid, Musk heavily criticised the Republicans' new tax and spending bill, creating a rift between the two men. Musk was previously appointed by Trump to lead DOGE, the US' Department of Government Efficiency. The tech billionaire argued that the new bill, dubbed by Trump as the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act', would irresponsibly raise the public deficit and undermine DOGE's work. Musk resigned from the department in late May after saying he was 'disappointed' with spending proposals. In an escalation of the conflict last week, Musk called for Trump to be impeached and replaced with Vice President JD Vance. He also implied that Trump was linked with late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, an allegation the White House denied. As for the president, Trump threatened to terminate government contracts awarded to Musk's SpaceX firm. On Monday, the president then took a more conciliatory tone. Trump said he wished Musk 'very well' and claimed that he would retain Starlink internet service at the White House. Even so, the US President suggested that he might remove his own Tesla from White House grounds. The value of Tesla shares have been rocked by volatility as investors track the dramas playing out in Washington — and some dump stock in protest of Musk's politics. Both Argus Research and Baird downgraded ratings for Tesla stock on Monday, which has seen its value drop by more than 19% since the start of the year. Aside from the Trump-Musk feud, experts noted that risks to Tesla include the expiration of EV credits, which could dampen demand. A $7,500 tax credit for an EV purchase is set to be fully eliminated by the end of 2026, although restrictions will be applied before this. For those wishing to use the credit in 2026, they can only buy from manufacturers that haven't yet sold 200,000 EVs. This would disqualify Tesla. Other challenges include increased competition in the EV market, particularly from Chinese rivals such as BYD. Despite these storm clouds ahead, Musk's enthusiasm about robotaxis appears to be inflating the stock's value. The CEO is currently hoping to roll out the self-driving taxi service in Austin, Texas, on 22 June. In a post on his X social media platform, Musk said the date could change because Tesla is 'being super paranoid about safety'. Remember negative interest rates? Back in early 2020, as the world grappled with the COVID-19 pandemic, central banks across advanced economies rushed to slash interest rates, offering cheaper borrowing to cushion the economic blow alongside unprecedented fiscal support. In many countries, rates tumbled to near or even below zero — an extraordinary policy shift reflecting the urgency of avoiding a prolonged recession. Fast forward five years, and no major economy currently operates with rates at or below zero. But Switzerland could soon change that. Switzerland could soon become the first advanced economy to re-enter the era of negative interest rates. A confluence of weakening price pressures and a subdued economic outlook has sparked growing expectations that the Swiss National Bank (SNB) will resume ultra-loose monetary policy, potentially cutting interest rates below zero in the coming months. Last week, the Swiss Federal Statistical Office reported that consumer prices fell by 0.1% in May 2025 compared to a year earlier, marking the first deflationary print since March 2021. The decline was broad-based, with notable year-on-year contractions in transport costs (-3.7%), food and non-alcoholic beverages (-0.3%), healthcare (-0.2%), and household goods and services (-2.6%). While a modest bout of deflation is not in itself alarming, it underscores the fragility of domestic demand and presents a challenge for the SNB's inflation target. The central bank defines price stability as annual inflation between 0% and 2%. "Swiss inflation could remain close to 0%, which represents the lower end of the SNB's price stability range," said Niklas Garnadt, economist at Goldman Sachs. The expert identified declining inflation expectations, falling energy prices, and potential trade frictions as downside pressures on the price outlook going forward. The SNB, which currently holds its policy rate at 0.25%, meets on 19 June, and economists are expecting another rate cut of 25 basis points. According to Goldman Sachs' base case, the SNB will lower its policy rate to -0.25% by September, in two successive cuts. Yet, there is a 40% chance, the bank noted, that policymakers may opt for more aggressive easing, with two 50 basis point cuts taking the rate back to -0.75% — the lowest in its history. Although the SNB also has foreign exchange operations at its disposal, economists expect interest rate cuts to take precedence in the near term. There are some reasons for this preference, according to Goldman Sachs. "The SNB has prior experience managing the impact of negative rates," Garnadt said. Moreover, domestic inflation is more responsive to interest rates than currency movements. And finally, Switzerland remains on the US Treasury's watchlist for currency manipulation, potentially constraining foreign-exchange intervention activity. That said, foreign exchange interventions have not been ruled out entirely. During the post-2008 low-inflation years, the SNB frequently bought foreign currency to stem franc appreciation. The SNB is again navigating familiar territory, balancing the need to support inflation against the risks of overreliance on unconventional measures. While Switzerland's economic fundamentals remain relatively strong, the renewed threat of deflation could push the central bank to breach interest-rate lower bounds again.


Euronews
a day ago
- Euronews
World's biggest TikTok star leaves US after being detained by ICE
Khaby Lame, the world's most popular TikTok personality, has left the US after being detained by immigration agents in Las Vegas for allegedly overstaying his visa. The Senegalese-Italian influencer, whose legal name is Seringe Khabane Lame, was detained Friday at Harry Reid International Airport but was allowed to leave the US without a deportation order, a spokesperson for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) confirmed in a statement. Lame, 25, arrived in the US on 30 April and 'overstayed the terms of his visa,' the ICE spokesperson said. His detainment and voluntary departure - which allows those facing removal from the US to avoid a deportation order on their immigration record, which could prevent them from being allowed back into the US for up to a decade - from the US comes amid President Donald Trump's escalating crackdown on immigration. This includes raids in Los Angeles that have sparked days of protests against ICE, as the president tests the bounds of his executive authority. Many from the world of entertainment have reacted to Trump's deployment of the National Guard to LA, calling the actions as 'Un-American' and 'a fucking disgrace'. Governor Gavin Newsom also announced his plans to sue the federal government over the National Guard deployment, calling it 'an unconstitutional act.' "This is exactly what Donald Trump wanted. He flamed the fires and illegally acted to federalize the National Guard. The order he signed doesn't just apply to CA (California). It will allow him to go into ANY STATE and do the same thing. We're suing him." Khaby Lame was born in Senegal then moved to Italy as a young child and was raised in a poor area of the town of Chivasso, outside of Turin. When COVID hit, the then 22-year-old lost his job in a factory and was forced, like millions of Italians, to stay home. Lame took to social media to pass the time and quickly rose to international fame without ever saying a word in his videos, which would show him reacting to absurdly complicated 'life hacks." He has over 162 million followers on TikTok alone. His internet fame quickly evolved. He signed a multi-year partnership with designer brand Hugo Boss in 2022 – the same year he became an Italian citizen. In January, he was appointed as UNICEF goodwill ambassador. Last month, he attended the Met Gala in New York City, days after arriving in the US.