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China bows, quietly rolls back retaliatory tariffs on some US-made semiconductors, import agencies say
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Sir Trump
2025-04-25 18:40:51 UTC
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China appears to have quietly rolled back retaliatory tariffs of 125% on
some semiconductors made in the US, according to details provided to CNN
on Friday by three import agencies in the southern technology hub of
Shenzhen, as Beijing tries to soften the blow of an ongoing trade war on
its all-important tech industry.

The exemptions apply to integrated circuits, also known as microchips or
semiconductors, according to the agencies. They found out about the
exemptions, which have not been officially announced, on Thursday.

On April 12, China raised its reciprocal tariffs to 125% for all goods
originating from the United States, in response to US President Donald
Trump’s move to hike levies on Chinese goods to a sky-high 145%.

For months, Beijing has been projecting an air of strength and
confidence in its ability to withstand an escalating trade war with the
US. But these exemptions suggest it needs to roll back some levies on
crucial items that it cannot make at home or source elsewhere. Besides
semiconductors, China has decided to grant exemptions on some aircraft
parts, including engines and landing gear, according to an aviation
executive.

Semiconductors are an indispensable part of just about every electronic
device. They are difficult to make because of the high cost of
development and the level of knowledge required, meaning much of the
production is concentrated among a handful of suppliers.

Although China has made strides in developing its own semiconductor
industry, it is still highly dependent on imports of chips and
chipmaking equipment from the United States, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan
and the Netherlands. Last year, China imported $11.7 billion worth of
semiconductors from the US, according to customs data.

Duncan Clark, chairman of technology investment advisory firm BDA, said
the exemptions suggest China does not have “autonomy in chips.”

“It has ambition for that. But basically, it’s going to be a while
before it can be fully autonomous,” he said.

Ray Wang, a Washington-based analyst focusing on US-China tech
competition, said the exemptions benefit American chipmakers such as
Intel, Texas Instruments and Global Foundries, which would be affected
by the Chinese tariffs.

Chinese authorities have not confirmed the exemptions on semiconductors
publicly. The General Administration of Customs and the customs offices
in Shenzhen and Zhongshan, both port cities in Guangdong province, said
they were not aware of the exemptions.

A spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry said he was not familiar
with the situation, when asked about the exemptions at a regular news
conference Friday. CNN has reached out to the Chinese Commerce Ministry
for comment.

Chen Shaoling, a manager at Zhengnenliang Supply Chain, an import
agency, told CNN that she found out on Thursday that tariffs on eight
kinds of integrated circuits, covering most semiconductors except for
memory chips, had been waived to zero. The discovery was made during a
routine custom clearance for her customers, she added.

“We only found out after we filed the declaration — without doing that,
we wouldn’t have known,” Chen said. “The news is now spreading like
wildfire.”

Caijing, a Chinese business magazine, reported on the exemptions on
Friday, citing multiple tech companies that import semiconductors,
including one based in Shanghai. The report was removed roughly three
hours after it was published.

Critical components
The exemptions aren’t the first time Beijing has come to the aid of its
tech sector, which is starting to enjoy a closer relationship with
officialdom after a years-long regulatory crackdown.

Earlier this month, China removed tariffs on chips designed by American
firms but manufactured outside the country. For example, US AI chip
giant Nvidia’s products are largely made in Taiwan by Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC).

On April 11, the state-backed China Semiconductor Industry Association
said in a post on its official social media channel that the “declared
country of origin” should be the location of the factory where the
product was made.

That means semiconductors from American chip designers like Qualcomm and
Nvidia, manufactured outside the US would not be subject to China’s 125%
tariff on US goods.

This week’s exemptions appear to apply only to logic chips, which
process and control data flow, an area dominated by the US. Memory
chips, which store and retrieve data, are not included in the
exemptions. South Korean firms Samsung and SK Hynix are the leaders in
this market.

The local customs authority in Shenzhen appears to have notified some
companies about the update.

“Fantastic news! We have received a new notice from China Customs,
stating that eight tariff codes related to semiconductors/integrated
circuits are now exempt from additional tariffs on US imports,” Shenzhen
HJET Supply Chain wrote in a post on its official social media account
Thursday.

“This means that imports originating from the United States under these
codes will have their tariffs reduced to zero upon entry into China,”
the post added.

A staff member at the company who picked up a call from CNN confirmed
the new policy, saying her company was notified by local customs on
Thursday.

Taihang Semiconductor, a company also based in Shenzhen that imports
chips, told CNN it has received a notice from customs, though it
declined to provide further details. “It’s definitely a good thing,” a
staff member said when contacted by CNN.

Wider exemptions
China is granting exemptions in other sectors outside of semiconductors,
including aviation, according to Olivier Andries, the chief executive of
French engine maker Safran.

“Yesterday night, China has decided to exempt from tax any deliveries of
engines, nacelles, landing gears or parts,” he said on an earnings call
Friday.

The company is a major supplier to China’s aviation industry. It makes
the oxygen systems and nacelles (the structure that houses the engines
and connects them to the wings) for the C919, China’s first homegrown
mainline passenger plane. The C919’s LEAP-1C engines are produced by
CFM, a joint venture between US engine-maker GE Aviation and Safran.

According to Reuters, which cited an unnamed source, the Chinese
government is also asking businesses to identify goods that could be
eligible for exemption from its reciprocal US tariffs.

The world’s two largest economies are at each other’s throats in a
bitter tariff fight that has roiled global markets, disrupted supply
chains and stoked recession fears.

On April 11, Trump exempted imports of electronics such as smartphones
and computers from his “reciprocal” tariffs. That exemption has had a
major impact on tech giants like Apple, which make iPhones and other
products in China.

In recent days, Trump has softened his tone, saying the astronomical
tariffs on Chinese goods will “come down substantially” and promised to
be “very nice” at the negotiating table as he attempts to get Chinese
leader Xi Jinping to make the first move to initiate trade talks.

But Beijing has brushed off Trump’s apparent olive branch, demanding the
US should remove all tariffs on China if it wants to talk. Chinese
officials have also repeatedly refuted Trump’s claims that the two sides
are in talks about trade.

“There have been no negotiations between China and the United States on
the issue of tariffs. The US should not mislead the public,” Guo Jiakun,
a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said at the regular
news conference Friday.

The rebuttal came after Trump said on Thursday that his administration
had meetings with Chinese officials regarding trade earlier in the
morning.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/25/business/china-us-tariffs-semiconductors-e
xemptions-hnk-intl/index.html
Garry S Robb
2025-04-25 18:54:10 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Express your gratitude to Trump for we no longer must pay massive price
increases on virtually all the technology and dry goods imported exclusively
from Communist China. Fox and Friends says most Americans were looking
forward with glee on paying 200% extra government tax on essential items that
are made exclusively by the Chinese.
Governor Swill
2025-04-27 11:42:41 UTC
Reply
Permalink
On Fri, 25 Apr 2025 18:40:51 -0000 (UTC), Sir Trump
Post by Sir Trump
China appears to have quietly rolled back retaliatory tariffs of 125% on
some semiconductors made in the US, according to details provided to CNN
on Friday by three import agencies in the southern technology hub of
Shenzhen, as Beijing tries to soften the blow of an ongoing trade war on
its all-important tech industry.
The exemptions apply to integrated circuits, also known as microchips or
semiconductors, according to the agencies. They found out about the
exemptions, which have not been officially announced, on Thursday.
On April 12, China raised its reciprocal tariffs to 125% for all goods
originating from the United States, in response to US President Donald
Trump’s move to hike levies on Chinese goods to a sky-high 145%.
For months, Beijing has been projecting an air of strength and
confidence in its ability to withstand an escalating trade war with the
US. But these exemptions suggest it needs to roll back some levies on
crucial items that it cannot make at home or source elsewhere. Besides
semiconductors, China has decided to grant exemptions on some aircraft
parts, including engines and landing gear, according to an aviation
executive.
Semiconductors are an indispensable part of just about every electronic
device. They are difficult to make because of the high cost of
development and the level of knowledge required, meaning much of the
production is concentrated among a handful of suppliers.
Although China has made strides in developing its own semiconductor
industry, it is still highly dependent on imports of chips and
chipmaking equipment from the United States, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan
and the Netherlands. Last year, China imported $11.7 billion worth of
semiconductors from the US, according to customs data.
Duncan Clark, chairman of technology investment advisory firm BDA, said
the exemptions suggest China does not have “autonomy in chips.”
“It has ambition for that. But basically, it’s going to be a while
before it can be fully autonomous,” he said.
Ray Wang, a Washington-based analyst focusing on US-China tech
competition, said the exemptions benefit American chipmakers such as
Intel, Texas Instruments and Global Foundries, which would be affected
by the Chinese tariffs.
Chinese authorities have not confirmed the exemptions on semiconductors
publicly. The General Administration of Customs and the customs offices
in Shenzhen and Zhongshan, both port cities in Guangdong province, said
they were not aware of the exemptions.
A spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry said he was not familiar
with the situation, when asked about the exemptions at a regular news
conference Friday. CNN has reached out to the Chinese Commerce Ministry
for comment.
Chen Shaoling, a manager at Zhengnenliang Supply Chain, an import
agency, told CNN that she found out on Thursday that tariffs on eight
kinds of integrated circuits, covering most semiconductors except for
memory chips, had been waived to zero. The discovery was made during a
routine custom clearance for her customers, she added.
“We only found out after we filed the declaration — without doing that,
we wouldn’t have known,” Chen said. “The news is now spreading like
wildfire.”
Caijing, a Chinese business magazine, reported on the exemptions on
Friday, citing multiple tech companies that import semiconductors,
including one based in Shanghai. The report was removed roughly three
hours after it was published.
Critical components
The exemptions aren’t the first time Beijing has come to the aid of its
tech sector, which is starting to enjoy a closer relationship with
officialdom after a years-long regulatory crackdown.
Earlier this month, China removed tariffs on chips designed by American
firms but manufactured outside the country. For example, US AI chip
giant Nvidia’s products are largely made in Taiwan by Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC).
On April 11, the state-backed China Semiconductor Industry Association
said in a post on its official social media channel that the “declared
country of origin” should be the location of the factory where the
product was made.
That means semiconductors from American chip designers like Qualcomm and
Nvidia, manufactured outside the US would not be subject to China’s 125%
tariff on US goods.
This week’s exemptions appear to apply only to logic chips, which
process and control data flow, an area dominated by the US. Memory
chips, which store and retrieve data, are not included in the
exemptions. South Korean firms Samsung and SK Hynix are the leaders in
this market.
The local customs authority in Shenzhen appears to have notified some
companies about the update.
“Fantastic news! We have received a new notice from China Customs,
stating that eight tariff codes related to semiconductors/integrated
circuits are now exempt from additional tariffs on US imports,” Shenzhen
HJET Supply Chain wrote in a post on its official social media account
Thursday.
“This means that imports originating from the United States under these
codes will have their tariffs reduced to zero upon entry into China,”
the post added.
A staff member at the company who picked up a call from CNN confirmed
the new policy, saying her company was notified by local customs on
Thursday.
Taihang Semiconductor, a company also based in Shenzhen that imports
chips, told CNN it has received a notice from customs, though it
declined to provide further details. “It’s definitely a good thing,” a
staff member said when contacted by CNN.
Wider exemptions
China is granting exemptions in other sectors outside of semiconductors,
including aviation, according to Olivier Andries, the chief executive of
French engine maker Safran.
“Yesterday night, China has decided to exempt from tax any deliveries of
engines, nacelles, landing gears or parts,” he said on an earnings call
Friday.
The company is a major supplier to China’s aviation industry. It makes
the oxygen systems and nacelles (the structure that houses the engines
and connects them to the wings) for the C919, China’s first homegrown
mainline passenger plane. The C919’s LEAP-1C engines are produced by
CFM, a joint venture between US engine-maker GE Aviation and Safran.
According to Reuters, which cited an unnamed source, the Chinese
government is also asking businesses to identify goods that could be
eligible for exemption from its reciprocal US tariffs.
The world’s two largest economies are at each other’s throats in a
bitter tariff fight that has roiled global markets, disrupted supply
chains and stoked recession fears.
On April 11, Trump exempted imports of electronics such as smartphones
and computers from his “reciprocal” tariffs. That exemption has had a
major impact on tech giants like Apple, which make iPhones and other
products in China.
In recent days, Trump has softened his tone, saying the astronomical
tariffs on Chinese goods will “come down substantially” and promised to
be “very nice” at the negotiating table as he attempts to get Chinese
leader Xi Jinping to make the first move to initiate trade talks.
But Beijing has brushed off Trump’s apparent olive branch, demanding the
US should remove all tariffs on China if it wants to talk. Chinese
officials have also repeatedly refuted Trump’s claims that the two sides
are in talks about trade.
“There have been no negotiations between China and the United States on
the issue of tariffs. The US should not mislead the public,” Guo Jiakun,
a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said at the regular
news conference Friday.
The rebuttal came after Trump said on Thursday that his administration
had meetings with Chinese officials regarding trade earlier in the
morning.
https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/25/business/china-us-tariffs-semiconductors-exemptions-hnk-intl/index.html
"“Fantastic news! We have received a new notice from China Customs,
stating that eight tariff codes related to semiconductors/integrated
circuits are now exempt from additional tariffs on US imports,”
Shenzhen HJET Supply Chain wrote in a post on its official social
media account Thursday. "

The whole world will be wanting to deal, but do we have enough
negotiations staff to handle the flow? Stuff's gonna get missed and
lost and we're not going to come out of this as strong as we're going
in.
--
In just seven years, the Clinton Administration shrank
the federal workforce by 426,000,
consolidated 800 agencies
and eliminated 640,000 pages of rules.
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