IRobot’s U.S. sales declined 7 percent in Q3 because growth “remained subdued as the direct and indirect impacts” of the 25 percent List 3 Section 301 tariffs “weighed heavily on consumers, retailers and suppliers,” CEO Colin Angle said on an Oct. 23 call. IRobot price hikes in late July resulted in “suboptimal sellthrough” in August and September, prompting the vendor to roll back pricing to “pre-tariff levels” earlier in October, he said.
Paul Gluckman
Paul Gluckman, Executive Senior Editor, is a 30-year Warren Communications News veteran having joined the company in May 1989 to launch its Audio Week publication. In his long career, Paul has chronicled the rise and fall of physical entertainment media like the CD, DVD and Blu-ray and the advent of ATSC 3.0 broadcast technology from its rudimentary standardization roots to its anticipated 2020 commercial launch.
Details remain vague about the “very substantial phase one” trade deal President Donald Trump announced at the White House Oct. 11 with China's Vice Premier Liu He that persuaded the president to delay hiking three rounds of Section 301 tariffs to 30 percent (see 1910110038). Trump “approved” the delay at Liu's request, “while we go through a process of documenting” phase one and putting the agreement on paper, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said.
Costco is experiencing “a lot of moving parts” with the Section 301 tariffs on Chinese goods, including a few price increases “along the way,” said Chief Financial Officer Richard Galanti on a fiscal Q4 call on Oct. 3. Costco has tariff exposure to many of the products on “the first three lists,” and “we'll just have to wait and see” the impact if those tariffs rise to 30 percent as scheduled Oct. 15, he said.
Samsung’s Galaxy Tab S6, released for sale on Sept. 6 and marked on the packaging as a product of Vietnam, typifies the growing volume of Vietnamese-sourced tablets and laptops imported to the U.S. under Harmonized Tariff Schedule subheading 8471.30.01. Though the overwhelming majority of those goods continue to originate from China, Vietnam is emerging as a more important country of origin, according to Census Bureau trade data accessed through the International Trade Commission’s DataWeb tool.
TV imports to the U.S. turned sharply more China-centric in the weeks after the Trump administration announced its proposed List 4 Section 301 tariffs on finished sets from China among the roughly $300 billion worth of goods not previously dutied, an analysis of Census Bureau trade statistics found. Observers will debate whether importers’ rush to beat the threatened tariffs played a role in the steep influx of China-sourced TVs arriving in the U.S. during June.
Of the 140 Harmonized Tariff Schedule subheadings that the Consumer Technology Association urged the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative in its June 17 comments to remove from List 4 Section 301 tariff exposure, the association won 37 deferrals to Dec. 15 in key product areas like smartphones, laptops and tablets and PC monitors when the final lists were released Aug. 13 (see 1908130033). The remaining subheadings face 10 percent tariff exposure when the duties on the newly configured List 4A take effect Sept. 1.
The “same concerns” that led the Trump administration to remove smartwatches and fitness trackers from the List 3 Section 301 tariffs on Chinese imports in September “continue to apply” with the proposed fourth tranche, commented Fitbit in docket USTR-2019-0004. Imposing 25 percent tariffs would cause Fitbit “significant and unavoidable economic harm," it commented.
The Consumer Technology Association “urges the administration to quickly implement a broader and more effective exclusion process for List 4” than it did for lists 1 and 2, it said in comments posted in docket USTR-2019-0004. “Unlike the product exclusion process for the first two tranches of tariffs,” which required applicants to submit requests by a hard deadline, “circumstances warrant” installing a process for List 4 that works “on a rolling basis,” it said.
The List 4 goods targeted for Section 301 tariffs of up to 25 percent include “many products Bose imports” to the U.S. from China, the manufacturer said in comments posted June 17 in docket USTR-2019-0004. The “proposed remedy” for curbing China’s allegedly unfair trade practices “should avoid causing disproportionate and direct economic harm to U.S. consumers,” Bose said.
Consumer Technology Association members have identified 139 “line items for technology sector products” they want removed from List 4 of the proposed Section 301 tariffs on Chinese imports, the association said in comments dated June 10 in docket USTR-2019-0004. “The annual import value from China of those items alone totals over $167 billion, over half of the entire value of the products on List 4,” CTA said.