China Tariff News and Tracker
Welcome back to China Tariff News and Tracker, where we break down what’s really happening in the fast‑moving world of U.S.–China trade and tariffs. The big story right now is legal and political uncertainty around President Donald Trump’s tariff strategy, which directly affects how much Americans pay for Chinese goods and how Chinese exporters access the U.S. market. According to ABS‑CBN News, a U.S. appeals court has extended its pause on a lower court ruling that had declared Trump’s 10 percent global tariff illegal, allowing the administration to keep collecting that tariff while the case proceeds. That tariff applies broadly to a wide range of imports, and while it is not China‑specific, Chinese manufacturers are among the biggest targets because of their central role in global supply chains. The court’s move means importers bringing in Chinese products must continue paying that extra 10 percent at the border, at least for now, preserving a key pillar of Trump’s tariff leverage. Local station 13abc reports that these “new tariffs” are still scheduled to expire on July 24, but that same appeals court decision means the U.S. government can keep collecting the 10 percent duty in the interim. For Chinese exporters, this prolongs uncertainty: contracts, pricing, and shipping decisions into the U.S. all have to factor in the possibility that the 10 percent rate might suddenly disappear after July 24, or be replaced, raised, or extended depending on what the courts and the White House ultimately decide. Beyond the general 10 percent duty, attention is turning to sector‑specific measures that could reshape how China participates in key commodity markets. Tradingpedia reports that the U.S. Commerce Secretary is due to submit a recommendation to President Trump by June 30 on whether to impose tariffs on imported refined copper. When Trump introduced a 50 percent tariff on copper in July 2025, refined copper was explicitly excluded. Now that carve‑out is under review, with an initial Commerce Department proposal envisioning a 15 percent tariff on refined copper imports starting in January 2027 and rising to 30 percent in 2028. China is a major player in refined copper production and trade, so any new U.S. tariff in this space would likely hit Chinese smelters and traders particularly hard, potentially redirecting Chinese copper flows toward other Asian markets while raising costs for U.S. manufacturers in electronics, autos, and renewable energy. Markets are already reacting: Tradingpedia notes that the spread between COMEX and LME copper prices has widened to about 400 dollars per ton, a signal that traders are pricing in higher trade barriers on copper coming into the United States. Taken together, the ongoing court fight over Trump’s 10 percent tariff, the looming July 24 expiration date, and the pending copper tariff recommendation underscore how U.S.–China trade remains driven as much by legal deadlines and political decisions as by pure economics. For listeners, the key takeaway is that China‑linked tariffs are still very much alive, still highly uncertain, and still capable of moving prices, supply chains, and investment decisions on short notice. Thanks for tuning in to China Tariff News and Tracker, and be sure to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
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