logo
Vietnam avoids 46pc US tariff under new trade deal, but Beijing warns against targeting China

Vietnam avoids 46pc US tariff under new trade deal, but Beijing warns against targeting China

Malay Mail14 hours ago
HANOI, July 3 — Vietnam's trade deal with the US averts the most punishing of Donald Trump's 'reciprocal' levies but has provoked new friction between Washington and Beijing.
Vietnam has the third-biggest trade surplus with the US of any country after China and Mexico, and was targeted with one of the highest rates in the US president's 'Liberation Day' tariff blitz on April 2.
The deal announced yesterday is the first full pact Trump has sealed with an Asian nation, and analysts say it may give a glimpse of the template Washington will use with other countries still scrambling for accords.
The 46 per cent rate due to take effect next week has been averted, with Vietnam set to face a minimum 20 per cent tariff in return for opening its market to US products including cars.
But a 40 per cent tariff will hit goods passing through the country to circumvent steeper trade barriers — a practice called 'transshipping'.
Washington has accused Hanoi of relabelling Chinese goods to skirt its tariffs, but raw materials from the world's number two economy are the lifeblood of Vietnam's manufacturing industries.
'From a global perspective, perhaps the most interesting point is that this deal again seems in large part to be about China,' said Capital Economics.
It said the terms on transshipment 'will be seen as a provocation in Beijing, particularly if similar conditions are included in any other deals agreed over coming days'.
Beijing's foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said today 'negotiations and agreements should not target or harm the interests of third parties'.
'Wouldn't celebrate just yet'
Shares in clothing companies and sport equipment manufacturers — which have a large footprint in Vietnam — rose on news of the deal in New York.
But they later declined sharply as details were released.
'This is a much better outcome than a flat 46 per cent tariff, but I wouldn't celebrate just yet,' said Hanoi-based Dan Martin, from Asian business advisory firm Dezan Shira & Associates.
'Everything now depends on how the US decides to interpret and enforce the idea of transshipment,' he added.
'If the US takes a broader view and starts questioning products that use foreign parts, even when value is genuinely added in Vietnam, it could end up affecting a lot of companies that are playing by the rules.'
A Vietnam foreign ministry spokesman told reporters today that negotiators were still 'in detailed discussion to concretise agreements'.
But there are scant details about the transshipment arrangements in the deal, which Trump announced on his Truth Social platform.
'The announced deal gives Vietnam a level of certainty that most other US trading partners do not have,' said American Chamber of Commerce in Hanoi chief Adam Sitkoff.
But, he said, 'assessing the pros and cons of the deal is difficult without seeing further details about what the tariffs actually mean'.
'The answers to these questions can be the difference between celebrating or crying.'
'The looming question'
Bloomberg Economics forecast Vietnam could lose a quarter of its exports to the US in the medium term, endangering more than two per cent of its gross domestic product as a result of the agreement.
'The Vietnamese government will now find itself under pressure to ensure that country-of-origin rules are enforced,' explained Jack Sheehan, head of regional tax at Asian legal and tax firm DFDL.
But uncertainty over how transshipping will be 'defined or enforced' is likely to have diplomatic repercussions, said Bloomberg Economics expert Rana Sajedi.
'The looming question now is how China will respond,' she said. 'Beijing has made clear that it would respond to deals that came at the expense of Chinese interests.'
'The decision to agree to a higher tariff on goods deemed to be 'transshipped' through Vietnam may fall in that category,' added Sajedi.
'Any retaliatory steps could have an outsized impact on Vietnam's economy.' — AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dollar holds firm against euro, yen as US trade pressure mounts
Dollar holds firm against euro, yen as US trade pressure mounts

New Straits Times

time18 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

Dollar holds firm against euro, yen as US trade pressure mounts

TOKYO: The dollar held gains on Friday after President Donald Trump got his signature tax cut bill across the final hurdle and pressure mounted on countries to secure trade deals with the United States. The greenback rallied from multi-year lows against the euro and British pound hit earlier in the week after stronger than expected US jobs data pushed out the timing for potential rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. New Zealand's kiwi dollar, a common proxy for risk appetite, rose 0.2 per cent to US$0.608 after US stocks climbed to new record levels. The Republican-controlled House of Representatives narrowly passed Trump's "One, Big, Beautiful Bill" of spending and tax cuts that is estimated to add US$3.4 trillion to the nation's US$36.2 trillion debt. With the US closed for Independence Day, attention turns to Trump's July 9 deadline when sweeping tariffs take effect on countries like Japan that have not yet secured trade agreements. "The dynamic is raising questions about fiscal sustainability and bond market stability," said Kyle Rodda, senior financial markets analyst at referring to the bill's passage. "However, for now, those risks are being looked through as the markets embrace signs of labour market resilience and hopes for further US trade deals." The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against major peers, had its worst first half since 1973 as Trump's chaotic roll-out of sweeping tariffs stoked concerns about the US economy and the safety of Treasuries. Trump said the US will start sending letters to countries on Friday specifying what tariff rates they will face, a shift from earlier pledges to ink individual deals. Against the yen the dollar was traded at 144.69 yen, down 0.2 per cent from late in the US trading day when it surged 0.8 per cent. The euro added 0.1 per cent to US$1.1769, while sterling traded at US$1.3668, up 0.1 per cent. The Australian dollar fetched US$0.6577, up 0.1 per cent in early trade. US Labor Department's closely watch employment report on Thursday showed that nonfarm payrolls increased by 147,000 jobs in June, well ahead of economists' forecast in a Reuters poll for a rise of 110,000. Market expectations that the Fed will leave rates unchanged at its July meeting rose to a 95.3 per cent probability, up from 76.2 per cent previously, according to the CME's Fedwatch tool. Economists continue to expect the Fed would not start cutting rates again until September or even later.

How will Trump's ‘Big Beautiful Bill' roll back clean energy tax breaks and shift US climate strategy?
How will Trump's ‘Big Beautiful Bill' roll back clean energy tax breaks and shift US climate strategy?

Malay Mail

time32 minutes ago

  • Malay Mail

How will Trump's ‘Big Beautiful Bill' roll back clean energy tax breaks and shift US climate strategy?

WASHINGTON, July 4 — With the passage of his party's 'One Big Beautiful Bill,' Republican President Donald Trump has largely delivered on his promise of curtailing Joe Biden's landmark climate law. Here's a breakdown of how the new legislation will reshape US climate and energy policy. Clean energy tax incentives slashed The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), signed by Biden in 2022, was the largest climate investment in US history, allocating around $370 billion in tax credits for renewable energy projects, efficient appliances, and more. Much of that now faces imminent repeal. 'These credits were all huge motivating incentives for clean energy to be built out across the country,' said Jean Su, senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. 'With those removed, those renewable energy projects are all at risk of entirely failing.' Su noted the cuts come amid surging electricity demand from AI data centers. 'Removing tax incentives for clean energy means that all of this new energy demand will be given over to the fossil fuel industry'—resulting in more greenhouse emissions and air pollution. Critics say keeping the US energy mix heavily tied to fossil fuels locks in market volatility, as seen during the Ukraine war. Su added that utilities are incentivized to build costlier fossil plants to boost profits-raising electricity rates in the process. Trump, who received an estimated $445 million from Big Oil during his campaign, has framed the clean energy rollbacks as a victory over what he calls the 'Green New Scam.' Doug Jones, a tax attorney and partner at Husch Blackwell, told AFP that 'wind and solar took the biggest hit.' Under the new rules, clean energy projects must be in service by 2027 or begin construction within 12 months of the bill's enactment to qualify for remaining credits. 'The pipeline of projects that had begun construction by the prescribed time is eventually going to dry up—I don't know how they're going to start financing these projects without the tax credits,' said Jones. He added his clients include Fortune 500 companies now alarmed by the ripple effects of ending the credits, which they have been purchasing from renewable developers—a practice that has infused the market with much-needed liquidity. Tax credits for energy-efficient home and commercial upgrades also now face a shorter runway, expiring June 30, 2026. However, the bill preserves credits for nuclear, geothermal power, hydrogen and carbon capture technologies. Electric vehicles and fuel economy Electric vehicles come in for some of the harshest treatment. Tax credits for new and used EV purchases are set to sunset this year, while charging station installation credits expire June 30, 2026. Albert Gore of the Zero Emission Transportation Project said the bill effectively abandoned 'the goal we all share of making the United States globally competitive in the mineral, battery, and vehicle production markets of the future,' ceding the market to China. One eye-catching provision allows automakers to effectively ignore fuel economy rules by reducing fines to zero. 'If you tell a kid before a test, it's okay, there's no penalty if you cheat, what do you think they're going to do?' said Dan Becker of the Center for Biological Diversity. Skewing the market Meanwhile, provisions of the IRA that benefited fossil fuel companies remain intact, including billions in subsidies and drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico. There's a new tax credit for coal used in steel making, while a program to help gas and petroleum companies reduce waste and methane emissions is nixed. The legislation also clears the way for drilling, mining and logging on vast swaths of public lands, including in the sensitive Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Analysts had hoped that the surge of investment and job creation driven by Biden's landmark climate law—much of it in conservative-led states—would serve as a check on efforts to fully dismantle it. That has largely not materialized, though renewable advocates did win a small concession: the late withdrawal of a provision that would have imposed a devastating new tax on wind and solar. — AFP

Gold heads for weekly gain on US fiscal concerns after tax-cut bill
Gold heads for weekly gain on US fiscal concerns after tax-cut bill

New Straits Times

time33 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

Gold heads for weekly gain on US fiscal concerns after tax-cut bill

NEW YORK: Gold held steady on Friday, poised for a weekly gain as US President Donald Trump's tax-cut and spending bill passed in Congress, raising fiscal concerns, though stronger-than-expected US jobs data capped bullion's gains. FUNDAMENTALS Spot gold was flat at US$3,328.36 per ounce, as of 0029 GMT. Bullion is up 1.7 per cent this week. US gold futures edged down 0.1 per cent to US$3,337.90. Trump's tax-cut legislation cleared its final hurdle in the US Congress on Thursday, as the Republican-controlled House of Representatives narrowly approved a massive package that would fund his domestic agenda and push millions of Americans off health insurance. The labor market data on Thursday showed US firms added a more-than-expected 147,000 jobs in June and the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.1 per cent. Solid job gains bolstered the case for the Federal Reserve to hold interest rates steady. Fed funds futures traders are now pricing in a 50-basis-point rate cut this year, starting October. Meanwhile, Trump announced that letters specifying tariff rates on imports would begin being sent out Friday, signaling a shift from earlier pledges to negotiate individual trade deals. Non-yielding bullion, considered a safe-haven asset during geopolitical and economic uncertainties, tends to perform well in a low-interest-rate environment. On Ukraine, Trump said a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin yielded no progress in resolving the conflict, while the Kremlin stated that Moscow would continue addressing the "root causes" of the crisis. Platinum prices have limited room to rise further after a record quarterly rally, analysts and traders said, with Chinese imports expected to soften and South African output likely to recover against a backdrop of still-muted auto sector demand. Spot silver fell 0.3 per cent to US$36.73 per ounce, platinum rose 0.8 per cent to US$1,378.30 and palladium was up 0.1 per cent at US$1,137.94. All three metals were headed for weekly gains.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store