U.S. importers sourced 4.22 million TVs from all countries in May, a 73.5% increase from April, and up 44.5% from May 2019, according to Census Bureau data accessed July 7 through the International Trade Commission’s DataWeb tool. It was the largest monthly volume for TV imports since October, when 4.71 million sets were shipped here in preparation for the 2019 holiday selling season.
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.
The labor provisions of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on free trade “don’t only apply to U.S. companies doing business in Mexico,” regulatory law expert Ignacio Sanchez, with DLA Piper, told a webinar held June 24 to prepare clients for the treaty that takes effect July 1. USMCA also applies to “any facility producing goods in Mexico” for import into the U.S., he said.
The U.S. in April imported more laptops and tablets than in any previous April in the category's history, according to Census Bureau data accessed June 15 through the International Trade Commission’s DataWeb tool. It was clear evidence of the surge in demand for work-from-home and remote-learning productivity tools after COVID-19 forced much of the U.S. into sudden lockdowns.
Sharply reduced April imports of the largest TVs were the result of COVID-19 factory shutdowns in Mexico, where the supply chain for big-screen sets predominantly resides, according to newly released Census Bureau data accessed June 6 through the International Trade Commission’s DataWeb tool. Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador ordered the closure of nonessential factories and businesses on March 31.
The U.S. imported 3.03 million TVs from all countries in January, a 26.1% increase from December, but a 24% decline from January 2019, according to Census Bureau data accessed March 15 through the International Trade Commission’s DataWeb tool. January TV imports were worth $798.23 million in customs value, up 9.8% from December, but down 24.8% from the previous January. The average January TV import was worth $263.20, which was 12.6% cheaper than in December and virtually unchanged from January a year earlier.
The proportion of smartphones imported from China dropped from almost 80% to just under 75% last year, according to government data, at the same time total imports fell 1.7%.
U.S. importers in December sourced 539,000 TVs from China, 46.2 percent fewer than in November and the lowest monthly volume since the 507,000 Chinese sets shipped here in February 2015, according to Census Bureau data posted Feb. 9 and accessed through the International Trade Commission’s DataWeb tool. Import statistics culled from DataWeb for the fourth full month that the 15 percent List 4A Section 301 tariffs were in force on Chinese goods showed the December exodus from Chinese TV sourcing accelerating at an even faster pace than in November. With it came signs of TV supply-chain diversification through third countries other than Mexico, especially for the cheapest entry-level sets.
IRobot’s 2019 operating-profit margin would have been 3.1 points higher at 10.4 percent if not for the $37.9 million in List 3 Section 301 tariff costs imposed on the robotic vacuum cleaners (RVCs) it sourced from China, CEO Colin Angle said on a Q4 earnings call Feb. 6. IRobot expects to incur $47 million to $50 million more in 2020 tariff costs, Chief Financial Officer Alison Dean said.
U.S. importers of Chinese goods inundated the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative with more than 2,800 List 4A tariff-exclusion requests in the 24 hours before the web portal went dark at 11:59 p.m. EST Jan. 31, the public docket shows. The surge came amid the huge backlog of List 3 requests still awaiting disposition. The requests filed Jan. 31 were nearly a third of the 8,800 requests posted in the three months after the portal went live on Halloween Day. Importers that are granted exclusions would qualify for refunds of the 15 percent duties paid on goods entering the country, retroactive to Sept. 1, 2019, when the tariffs took effect. The List 4A tariffs are scheduled for a Feb. 14 rollback to 7.5 percent when the U.S.-China phase one trade deal goes into force.
The many complicated “provisions” for implementing the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on free trade plausibly means July 1 is the “absolute earliest” date it can “enter into force,” Nicole Bivens Collinson, international trade expert with Sandler, Travis, told a Sports & Fitness Industry Association webinar Jan. 29. President Donald Trump signed USMCA’s enabling legislation into law on Jan. 29 (see 2001290035), saying the agreement “contains critical protections for intellectual property, including trade secrets, digital services and financial services.”