
Reduced 19pc US tariff fuels hope
The new rate — a reduction from the original 25 per cent — is on a par with regional neighbours such as Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Cambodia.
The White House issued a presidential order dated July 31, outlining broader changes to the US Reciprocal Tariff framework under Executive Order 14257.
It saw sweeping revision to the "liberation day" tariffs announced by President Donald Trump in April, reducing or slightly increasing rates on US trading partners.
The April announcement saw Malaysia facing a 24 per cent tariff, adjusted to 25 per cent in July, before being reduced to 19 per cent effective Aug 8. This sits above the global baseline of 10 per cent.
Industry players welcomed the lower rate, saying it reflects the result of constructive dialogue and engagement between the Malaysian and US governments.
The cut may seem modest but it marks a significant boost for Malaysian exporters navigating increasingly competitive and cost-sensitive global supply chains, they added.
At Bursa Malaysia, the news prompted a positive market reaction.
The stock exchange's benchmark index FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) saw an immediate rise as investors quickly priced in the positive impact on Malaysian exporters, particularly in sectors such as semiconductor, palm oil and rubber products.
The key index rose 1.33 per cent, gaining 20.10 points to close at 1,533.35, up from Thursday's close of 1,513.25.
Following the tariff clarity, the FBM KLCI is expected to trade higher next week, driven by clearer investor outlook.
Enhancing Competitiveness
While it is still too early to assess the full extent of the impact, several export-oriented industries may benefit from improved competitiveness and increased demand.
Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM) president Tan Sri Soh Thian Lai said the tariff cut enhances the cost competitiveness of Malaysian-manufactured goods in the US market and reflects improved bilateral trade relations.
He commended Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim's direct engagement with US President Donald Trump as well as the Investment, Trade and Industry Ministry and other relevant agencies for their continued efforts in advocating for the interests of Malaysian industry on the international stage.
Malaysian Furniture Council president Desmond Tan said the tariff reduction brings Malaysia's treatment more in line with that of neighbouring Asean nations, helping to preserve its relevance within the regional supply chain.
"Hopefully these latest tariffs can reduce uncertainty. However, exporters will still need to adapt to a higher-cost trade environment and continued support from the government remains valuable," Tan told the New Straits Times.
Trade talks between the Malaysian and US governments began on May 6 and concluded on July 31, involving multiple platforms of engagement, according to the Investment, Trade and Industry Ministry.
The US is Malaysia's largest export market, with trade valued at RM198.65 billion and its largest source of foreign direct investment, with RM32.82 billion in approved investments recorded in 2024.
Underlying Risks
While the 19 per cent tariff is "less damaging" than the initially proposed 25 per cent, some industry specialists said it still represents a hurdle that will weigh on Malaysia's exports in the global market.
Moomoo Malaysia head of dealing Ken Low said the tariff easing is a short-term relief as there remains underlying risks that investors and exporters must navigate in the coming months.
"While the tariff reduction is a positive development for Malay-sia's export sectors, it is far from a comprehensive solution," he said.
For exporters, particularly in industries like semiconductor, palm oil and medical devices, the 19 per cent tariff could still pressure margins and profitability, Low said.
Companies will likely face higher costs for their goods entering the US market, with potential price hikes or margin erosion.
Additionally, supply chain disruptions caused by tariffs could delay shipments and reduce overall demand.
In the glove sector, Malaysia — which is a major glove producer and exporter — no longer holds a rate advantage over Thailand, Indonesia or Cambodia.
But the country's 19 per cent tariff is still lower than Vietnam's 20 per cent and China's 30 per cent, offering marginal competitiveness in the US market, according to CIMB Securities.
In 2024, Malaysia held the largest share (about 45 per cent) of the global rubber glove market, followed by China (28 per cent) and Vietnam (10 per cent).
CIMB Securities expects some incremental shift in the US glove orders to Malaysia, but higher tariffs will still increase US buyers' cost base, which may limit restocking or lead to leaner inventories.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
2 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Malaysia to roll out regulatory reforms, other measures following US tariff deal
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia will roll out three key follow-up actions — an exporter outreach programme, regulatory reform and a nationwide supply chain mapping initiative — following the recent tariff renegotiation agreement with the United States which reduced tariffs on Malaysian goods from 25 per cent to 19 per cent. Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz said the agreement, effective Aug 1, was achieved after "months of intense but thorough as well as methodical negotiations". "Most importantly, we achieved this without conceding on our red lines in key areas," he said in his keynote address at The Edge Malaysia Centurion Club Awards 2025 here today. Tengku Zafrul said those red lines included foreign equity limits in strategic sectors, legal safeguards in digital companies, halal standards and many other areas. But the key point, he added, is that the negotiation package was a all-of-nation offer, not just the government, but all (Malaysians and Malaysian companies). With the tariff deal in effect, Tengku Zafrul said the government is focusing on three key areas, starting with an outreach programme to support industry players and exporters. "Some of you in this room may be impacted, but again we will engage the whole exporters' ecosystem — not just the multinationals, but all the small and medium enterprises that are supporting the major exporters," he said. Secondly, he said the government aims to accelerate industrial reforms by cutting bureaucracy and reviewing regulations to eliminate overlaps, outdated provisions and irrelevant processes. "Thirdly, we need to strengthen the resilience of our supply chain by fortifying specific industries' role in the global supply chain," he said. Tengku Zafrul said Malaysia is making good progress on a supply chain mapping project, which aims to identify every player involved in the economic activities of key industrial sectors. Meanwhile, he said Malaysia's mid-cap companies — defined as listed companies with a market capitalisation of between RM100 million and RM1 billion — remain critical to the country's growth ambition under the New Industrial Master Plan (NIMP) 2030. "For me and for our ministry, we view this award such as Centurion as one of the private sector's contributions to Malaysia's journey towards becoming a high-income, sustainable and globally competitive nation. "As of March 31, there are 519 such Centurions. And this speaks volumes about the vibrancy of Malaysia's mid-cap sector — a sector that is equally critical to our national economic aspirations," he said.


New Straits Times
2 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Brexit's parallels with Trump tariffs tell a tale
In figuring out why the United States tariff shock hasn't sent the economy or financial world into a tailspin, Britain's exit from the European Union trade bloc provides something of a playbook — and without a particularly happy ending. Aside from vast differences in economic scale and global reach, the two episodes bear some comparison in how they upended years of deeply integrated free trade and possibly in how business, the economy at large and financial markets reacted. The 2016 Brexit referendum and Trump's tariffs this year were each widely billed as economic shocks that would send the financial world into paroxysms. They didn't, at least not at the outset. To be sure, both were followed by dramatic downward lurches in the two countries' currencies. But, to some extent, the steep drop in sterling after the referendum vote and the dollar's plunge on President Donald Trump's tariff plan this year helped offset some of the wider impact, at least on stock markets that are loaded with global firms with outsized foreign revenue. More broadly, however, the difficulty in isolating their immediate net impact means no "big bang" economic crisis unfolds to prove critics right, even if their enduring legacy turns out to be a slow burn of economic potential and lost output, often obscured by multiple other crosswinds. In Britain's case, the seismic effects of the Covid-19 pandemic distorted any attempt to easily assess Brexit when it actually happened. Tortuous negotiations with the EU meant the UK's departure eventually occurred on the eve of the health crisis in 2020 and the new trade rules did not come into force until a year later. But in the four years between the referendum surprise and the pandemic, the UK economy never entered a recession nor recorded a negative quarterly GDP print — confounding pro-EU supporters at the time and bolstering the Brexit lobby. Emerging from the twin hits, however, the economy has almost flatlined since. What's more, it's taken more than eight years for the pound's effective exchange rate to recover its pre-referendum levels. Few mainstream economists now doubt that Brexit has taken a serious toll on the UK economy. One academic study by a number of Bank of England economists earlier this year concluded that uncertainty following the referendum resulted in little change in goods exports and imports before the exit was finalised. But after the new rules hit, UK imports fell three per cent and overall exports fell 6.4 per cent, largely because of the 13 per cent hit in exports to the EU. While this slump seems relatively modest compared with the official forecasts of the longer-term hit, the pain has been borne disproportionately by small businesses. And the cumulative damage to London and the service sector over the next 10 years continues to worry the City. The US tariff story is of a completely different order, of course, as it will reverberate across the world economy. But there are some parallels, not least in certain aspects of the market reactions and the initial resilience. Economists estimate that the tariffs could lop anywhere from 0.5 per cent to one per cent off US gross domestic product over time. That's a US$150 billion to US$300 billion hit, which, though painful, would not be an instant crisis for an economy that's growing at a roughly two per cent annualised rate, where imported goods represent just 11 per cent of GDP and where tech and AI trends are generating considerable tailwinds. But as former White House economic adviser Jason Furman said in a New York Times essay last week, the tariff damage is likely not a one-off hit. The loss of 0.5 per cent of GDP, he argued, is "the equivalent of every household in America taking around US$1,000 and lighting it on fire, then doing it again every year. Forever." In the end, the main point of the British comparison is to show how extreme partisan arguments on the pros or cons of such giant economic policy changes don't necessarily get resolved cleanly in adaptive, hardy and hyper-complex economies. The latest YouGov opinion poll shows 56 per cent of Britons now think it was wrong to leave the EU, some nine years after their narrow vote to leave. The jury on Trump's tariffs is still out.

The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Tuesday (Aug 5, 2025)
Malaysia * Rising govt debt under control, directed at development, says Anwar * MCMC probes viral video of 'influencers' giving scraps to homeless man * Boeing aircraft deal driven by demand, strategic interest, says Anwar * Use 'Sulawesi Sea' and not 'Ambalat' to refer to contested maritime area, says Tok Mat * Opposition lawmakers' claims show they haven't read 13MP document, says PM * Govt to kick off Budget 2026 consultation session on Aug 7, says Fahmi * CAAM, Boeing team up to improve KLIA air traffic ahead of expected passenger surge * Sex worker caught in the act during Sandakan police raid * Respect process of law in probe of Zara Qairina's death, says Home Minister * Structural reforms continue to underpin Malaysia's resilience, says Bank Negara Governor * Health Ministry to engage food content creators to promote healthy eating, says Dzulkefly * Family wants AG to hold inquest into Zara Qairina's death * Court of appeal dismissed former special needs student's appeal in bullying suit * Defence closes case in Zayn Rayyan neglect trial, verdict on Oct 31 * Govt developing AI guidelines to combat online scam, to be ready early 2026 * Proposals on unexplained wealth, monthly pensions to be studied, says Amir Hamzah * Teacher claims trial to sexual assault of 11-year-old student * Dewan Rakyat lacks clear mechanism for no-confidence vote, says Beluran MP * MCMC questions influencer trio over 'leftovers' video * Decomposing body of elderly woman found in locked Kuala Krai flat Singapore * Tycoon pleads guilty in graft case * Singapore-made bot amble matchmakes strangers virtually - without profile photos * Singapore jails Malaysian over scheme to buy phones worth more than S$45,000 with stolen credit card details * 'She had a whole life ahead of her': Boyfriend mourns Singapore's Yishun fatal crash victim * Elderly man in Singapore charged after he allegedly molested, performed sex act on 'vulnerable' man * CEO of sports car distributor accused of offences including multiple counts of false trading in Singapore Indonesia * Indonesia police detain former eFishery CEO who faked data * Two foreign tourists held over robbery targeting money changers in Bali * 18-month jail sentence for sandals thief sparks corruption debate in Indonesia * Bali trial opens for American man accused of drug distribution * Two Chinese nationals dead in Bali boat accident: authorities Thailand * PM Anwar's four wins as Asean Chair, according to veteran Thai journalist * Thailand's foreign tourist numbers fall 6% as regional competition intensifies * Thaksin's niece files complaint over false claims of being a "Cambodian spy" * Thailand approves US$600mil deal for Swedish fighter jets * Thailand plans $572 million stimulus spending and will compensate border conflict casualties * Thai Cabinet approves 10mil baht compensations for fallen troops, police, 8mil baht for killed civilians * Thailand's monitor lizards tipped as next big 'economic animal' in luxury leather * Bangkok seeks sustainable ceasefire ahead of high-level GBC talks * Ceasefire, terms of reference main topic of Thai-Cambodia talks, says Defence Force chief Philippines * Inaugural patrol bolsters defence * Philippine inflation at near six-year low, paves way for rate cuts * Philippines' Marcos strikes defence deals in India Vietnam * Vietnam issues food safety control procedures for exported fresh durian * Vinh Long province seeks to develop diverse tourism experiences in Vietnam * Vietnam facing worsening African swine fever outbreaks * Unexploded bomb found during flood clean-up in Dien Bien, Vietnam Myanmar * Schools and hospital reopen in Nawnghkio town, over 3,400 students return to classrooms * 2 million stimulant tablets seized in southern Myanmar Cambodia * French woman found dead after disappearing during solo run near Angkor Wat * Opinion - Why the SEA Games must remain untouched by politics Laos * Nine dead, over 58,000 affected by floods in Laos * Lao Provincial party secretary, governor replaced as govt extends reshuffle Brunei * Brunei represented at Asean Ride 2025 in Indonesia * Brunei to enhance inclusivity of public sports facilities * Stronger stakeholder commitment needed towards Brunei's Vision 2035 Aseanplus * Anwar calls for deeper appreciation of Asian history, free from colonial narratives * Thailand and Cambodia should reach common ground in peace talks by Aug 7, says Anwar * Thailand-Cambodia talks an early success towards a full resolution, says PM * Sultan Ibrahim arrives in Russia for maiden state visit * Cricket-India's Gill celebrates first series as captain with dramatic win * QuickCheck: Is there a fake letter bearing the Works Minister's name about gratuity payment ceremony? * Athletics-Bednarek labels Lyles 'unsportsmanlike' after post-200m scuffle * Readying Beijing for more rain * Students rally in Dhaka for a new polity amid turmoil * Travel and funding ban for overseas activists * Torrential rain in Taiwan kills four over past week * Unearthing Hiroshima's forgotten dead * Removal of loudspeakers on border with North * Oil falls as Opec+ proceeds with September output increase * Cambodia-Thailand conflict negotiation, govt debt in focus at Dewan Rakyat today * Australia awards navy frigate contract to Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy * Chinese actress Zhao Lusi accuses agency of wage theft, threats * Ringgit extends gains vs US$ amid rate cut talks * Palestine, Taiwan join Hiroshima ceremony for first time on 80th anniversary * Hong Kong issues highest weather warning, as rains shut schools, courts and hospital wards * Nine Malaysian firms make the cut in Forbes Asia's Best Under A Billion 2025 * Asian markets track Wall St rally on Fed rate cut bets * Beijing lifts rain alert after evacuating over 80,000 * Australia lifts foreign student cap to 295,000 and prioritises South-East Asia * Barges carrying fireworks ablaze in Japan, five flee into sea * China's Baidu to deploy robotaxis on rideshare app Lyft * Thousands join Bangladesh rallies, concerts one year after Hasina's ouster * Jeju to host K-Culture Festival, offers fully-paid trip to three wheelchair-using M'sian BTS fans * Platforms to rein in aggressive discounting * 'KPop Demon Hunters' songwriter Vince to release new single with G-Dragon * Japan sets record high temperatures, worries mount over rice crops * Jailed rapist refuses to quit Australian state parliament * Court orders Caprice to remove defamatory Instagram posts about businessman * Oil edges down as traders weigh Trump's latest India threat * Hong Kong police investigate mangled body found on street * Japan sets record temperature of 41.8 deg C * Thousands join Bangladesh rallies, concerts one year after Hasina's ouster * India deploys rescue teams as flood swamps Himalayan town * Pakistan police arrest 120 workers of ex-PM Imran Khan's party ahead of protest * US reaffirms commitment to strengthen defence, security diplomacy across Asean, says PM Anwar * Ringgit ends higher against US dollar on Fed rate cut hopes * Hong Kong's booming wealth sector to lead hiring and office expansion, HKMA says * South-East Asia's rising golf star Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand is now the No. 1 in the Rolex Women's World Golf Ranking * Google offers to blur sensitive sites on its map amid Seoul's security concerns * China announces phased implementation of free preschool education * Malaysia's 'it' couple, Bella Astillah and Syed Saddiq, are also the star-twosome after being awarded the 'hottest duo' title at Melodi Awards * Actress Bella Astillah had to present award to ex-husband's rumoured fling * China twins score 666 points in crucial exam, astonish many with coincidence * Trump says 'getting very close' on extending China trade truce * Trump says he will 'substantially' raise tariffs on India over Russian oil purchases * Motor racing-Cadillac will add value as 11th F1 team, says McLaren's Brown * Malaysia in final running for Unesco Executive Board seat * India hits back at Trump's threat over Russian oil purchases * Australia regulator says YouTube, others 'turning a blind eye' to child abuse material