logo
Trump announces Vietnam trade deal with 20% import tariff

Trump announces Vietnam trade deal with 20% import tariff

Straits Times9 hours ago
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Vietnam will also pay a 40 per cent tariff on transshipping, said US President Donald Trump.
WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump said he had reached a trade deal with Vietnam, following weeks of intense diplomacy between the two nations and ahead of a deadline next week that would have seen higher tariffs imposed on the country's imports.
'I just made a Trade Deal with Vietnam. Details to follow,' Mr Trump said in a Truth Social post on July 2 .
The deal with Vietnam would be just the third announced following agreements with the UK and China as trading partners race to cut agreements with the US ahead of a July 9 deadline.
Mr Trump had imposed a 46 per cent duty on Vietnam as part of his initial rollout of so-called reciprocal tariffs in early April, then pared it back to 10 per cent to allow time for negotiations.
The South-east Asian nation has seen its sales to US markets surge in recent years, partly because manufacturers shifted production there from China.
It is a major supplier of textiles and sportswear, hosting factories for companies such as Nike Inc, Gap Inc and Lululemon Athletica Inc.
Vietnam was the sixth-biggest supplier of US imports in 2024 , sending goods worth almost US$137 billion (S$174 billion), according to Census Bureau data.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore Singapore and Cambodia to expand collaboration in renewable energy, carbon markets and agri-trade
Singapore From camping to mentorship, Singapore scouts mark 115th anniversary of the youth movement
Singapore Ong Beng Seng's court hearing rescheduled one day before he was expected to plead guilty
World Sean 'Diddy' Combs convicted on prostitution counts but cleared of more serious charges
Singapore ByteDance food poisoning: Catering firm convicted after cockroach infestation found on premises
Singapore Teen, 17, to be charged with allegedly trespassing on MRT tracks
Singapore Granddaughter of Hin Leong founder O.K. Lim fails to keep 3 insurance policies from creditors' reach
Singapore Man on trial for raping drunken woman after offering to drive her and her friend home
The deal with Vietnam was struck after weeks of discussions during which the US pressured the country to get tougher on trade fraud, ensure stricter enforcement against the transshipment of Chinese products, and also pushed for the removal of non-tariff barriers.
Vietnam offered to remove all tariffs and repeatedly promised to purchase more American goods.
Senior Vietnamese officials flew to the US to rally support and sign deals, including for US$3 billion of agricultural goods. The trade minister also wooed executives from Nike, Gap and others to encourage them to get behind negotiation efforts.
Brands raced to move manufacturing to Vietnam over the past decade as US-China tensions escalated.
The industrial shift from China to Vietnam also helped build the kind of massive trade gap that made it a prime tariff target for Mr Trump.
In 2024, Vietnam's trade surplus with the US was the third-largest globally on a country basis behind only China and Mexico. Shipments in May jumped 35 per cent as firms sought to get goods onto vessels as quickly as possible ahead of the deadline. BLOOMBERG
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

North Korean tech workers infiltrating companies around world, US says
North Korean tech workers infiltrating companies around world, US says

Straits Times

time7 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

North Korean tech workers infiltrating companies around world, US says

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox WASHINGTON - The North Korean government, struggling under the weight of international sanctions , has for years seeded companies in the United States and elsewhere with remote tech workers camouflaged by false and stolen identifies to generate desperately needed revenue, federal prosecutors say. Taking advantage of the global demand for skilled tech employees and the rise in remote employment, the North Korean regime has found a way to work around UN and US sanctions imposed on it for its nuclear weapons program, the prosecutors said in two indictments unsealed in federal district courts in Massachusetts and Georgia. It has also used the access to steal both money and information, they said. 'Thousands of North Korean cyber-operatives have been trained and deployed by the regime to blend into the global digital workforce,' Ms Leah Foley, the chief federal prosecutor in Massachusetts, said in announcing the charges on June 30. She called the threat 'both real and immediate'. On June 30, federal law enforcement authorities took a series of actions across 16 states aimed at shutting down the scheme. Investigators seized dozens of financial accounts and fraudulent websites and searched 'laptop farms' that allowed North Korean operatives to gain access to the computers that companies provide their off-site employees, prosecutors said. In recent years, North Korean attempts to evade sanctions using false identities have increasingly been raising alarm. There is evidence that the operation has expanded geographically, targeting Europe in particular, according to a report from the Google Threat Intelligence Group in April. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Singapore and Cambodia to expand collaboration in renewable energy, carbon markets and agri-trade Asia US, India push for trade pact after Trump strikes deal with Vietnam: Sources Business Microsoft cutting 9,000 jobs companywide in second major wave of layoffs this year Opinion How Apple gave 'the gift of fire' to Chinese electronics firms Life Sean 'Diddy' Combs to remain jailed ahead of sentencing, judge rules Singapore Granddaughter of Hin Leong founder O.K. Lim fails to keep 3 insurance policies from creditors' reach Asia Dalai Lama says only his organisation can name his successor; Beijing pushes back World Iran's nuclear programme degraded by up to two years, Pentagon says In 2024, the Justice Department and the FBI launched an initiative to identify people in the US believed to be helping North Koreans advance the plots, some of them without their knowledge. In one of the cases brought by federal prosecutors this week, American, Chinese and Taiwanese citizens were accused of involvement in a plot that compromised about 80 American identities. The falsified identities were used to help North Koreans get remote tech jobs with over 100 companies across dozens of states in a range of industries between 2021 and 2024. Prosecutors say the scheme generated about US$5 million (S$6.36 million) for North Korea, and cost American business some US$3 million in damage and expenses. It also exposed sensitive information, including some related to military technology, they said. The defendants are said to have used online background check services to cull personal information and create personas for the North Koreans so that they appeared authorized to work in the United States. They conducted records checks of hundreds of individuals, including dozens whose identities were stolen, prosecutors said. To bolster the falsified identities, participants in the scheme created fake companies, websites and bank accounts and arranged to receive the company laptops delivered to the remote workers in the United States, prosecutors said. Then, the authorities said, they granted remote access to the laptops to North Korean operatives working abroad. The second case unsealed this week, in the Northern District of Georgia, charges four North Koreans with theft and money laundering involving about US$900,000 in cryptocurrency. The remote workers used false identities from Malaysia to perpetrate the scheme and worked out of the United Arab Emirates, prosecutors say. The defendants sought jobs in the crypto industry, according to the indictment. One was hired as a developer at an Atlanta-based company, and another worked for a Serbian firm. Together they diverted nearly US$1 million in crypto from their employers, and their accused co-conspirators laundered the funds, according to the indictment. The American authorities have been raising alarms about the problem since at least 2022, when the FBI, along with the State and Treasury departments, issued an advisory warning to the international community about infiltration. Operatives working mostly in North Korea, China and Russia were relying on an expansive network abroad to get jobs, targeting Europe and East Asia, the advisory said. After the American warning, North Korean workers increasingly began seeking contracts elsewhere, according to an April report from a lead adviser to the Google Threat Intelligence Group in Europe, Mr James Collier. One North Korean worker ran at least 12 personas across Europe and the United States in late 2024, seeking jobs at defense companies and in governments, using fabricated references , the report says. There is also evidence of operatives and assistants working in Portugal, Germany and Britain. 'In response to heightened awareness of the threat within the United States, they've established a global ecosystem of fraudulent personas to enhance operational agility,' Mr Collier said. That evolution, he said, suggests they will continue being able to run the financing schemes. NYTIMES

BYD sales hit new high in June after China's top EV maker slashed prices
BYD sales hit new high in June after China's top EV maker slashed prices

Straits Times

time8 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

BYD sales hit new high in June after China's top EV maker slashed prices

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Despite the discounts, BYD sales barely grew month on month, putting it under pressure to hit its annual target for 5.5 million deliveries. BEIJING – BYD's sales climbed to a fresh monthly high for 2025 after a round of price cuts, though the move sparked scrutiny from government authorities and drew criticism from industry groups. The Chinese car-making juggernaut sold 377,628 passenger vehicles in June, including 206,884 battery electric cars. That was up 11 per cent from a year earlier, helping to push first-half volumes to 2.1 million units, according to a statement on July 2. But sales barely grew month on month, placing greater pressure on BYD's second-half strategy to hit its annual target for 5.5 million deliveries. The incremental rise in sales takes BYD's performance through June to 2.1 million units, but that means it needs to sell 559,000 units for each of the remaining six months on average At the same time, rival Geely Automobile Holdings sold more than 193,000 cars in June, a 59 per cent year-on-year increase. The showing prompted Geely to raise its delivery target for 2025 by 11 per cent to 3 million. The sales figures signal BYD's discounting of as much as 34 per cent across some models in late May didn't give it the sales bump it had hoped for. In its top-selling home market of China, the EV giant's passenger car sales have declined for three straight months and the scrutiny that's come alongside its price cuts cloud the outlook for the second half. Investor qualm about the hit to profit margins has wiped more than US$20 billion (S$25.5 billion) from the company's market value and the aggressive discounts have attracted the ire of policymakers, who chided the industry for 'rate race competition' and warned car companies they should self-regulate on prices. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Singapore and Cambodia to expand collaboration in renewable energy, carbon markets and agri-trade Asia US, India push for trade pact after Trump strikes deal with Vietnam: Sources Business Microsoft cutting 9,000 jobs companywide in second major wave of layoffs this year Opinion How Apple gave 'the gift of fire' to Chinese electronics firms Life Sean 'Diddy' Combs to remain jailed ahead of sentencing, judge rules Singapore Granddaughter of Hin Leong founder O.K. Lim fails to keep 3 insurance policies from creditors' reach Asia Dalai Lama says only his organisation can name his successor; Beijing pushes back World Iran's nuclear programme degraded by up to two years, Pentagon says Still, even with domestic momentum in China slowing, BYD has managed to sustain strong growth in Europe. Data released by Jato Dynamics indicated the Chinese automaker almost matched Tesla's European registrations in May, building on its initial out-performance of its US rival in April. It nearly quadrupled European sales in the first four months of 2025, figures from researcher Dataforce show. Pressured by regulators, BYD has ended some discounts in China and joined a collective industry pledge to standardise bill payments for suppliers to 60 days as authorities scrutinize the use of supply chain financing as a form of debt. BYD meanwhile has shelved plans to build a major plant in Mexico over geopolitical tensions and uncertainty stemming from US President Donald Trump's trade policies. The company remains interested in expanding in the Americas but has no timeline to make a new investment, BYD executive vice president Stella Li said in an interview on July 2 in the Brazilian state of Bahia, where the company is opening its first factory outside Asia. 'Geopolitical issues have a big impact on the automotive industry,' Ms Li said. 'Now everybody is rethinking their strategy in other countries. We want to wait for more clarity before making our decision.' US President Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs on dozens of US trading partners and separate taxes on certain imports including autos, upending industry supply lines. General Motors in June said it would spend US$4 billion in a plan to shift production of several pickup and SUV models from factories in Mexico to the United States. BLOOMBERG

Why the Dalai Lama decided not to break from tradition on his successor
Why the Dalai Lama decided not to break from tradition on his successor

Straits Times

time24 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Why the Dalai Lama decided not to break from tradition on his successor

The Dalai Lama's statement emphasised the consultative process through which he had reached his decision on the matter of succession. DHARAMSALA, India – The Dalai Lama has spent decades in exile thinking about ways to prevent the Chinese government from taking control of Tibetan Buddhism after his death and ending the struggle for Tibetan autonomy. Early on, he suggested that the institution of the Dalai Lama could be ended altogether to deprive Beijing of a target to exploit. Later, he focused on how to keep the Communist Party of China from installing its own choice to succeed him. He floated a sharp break from precedent, saying he might transfer his spiritual powers to an adult during his lifetime to avoid the vacuum that would come with selecting a child as his reincarnation and successor. But on July 2, as senior monks filed into a much-anticipated conference in Dharamsala, India, as part of 90th birthday celebrations for the Dalai Lama, he made clear that tradition would prevail. The institution of the Dalai Lama, he said, will continue. And his successor will be selected through the usual process of reincarnation. His decision reflected the fine line that even a modernising Dalai Lama must tread between preserving a core element of Tibetan Buddhism and shielding it from political manipulation by Beijing. It showed the limits of his powers to reshape the institution he has towered over for more than seven decades, as well as his pragmatic understanding of Tibetans' David-vs.-Goliath struggle against the Chinese government. 'The issue in probably any religion, but especially a religion where you have a leader who's modernizing, is how far can you push your community to take up a new approach,' said Mr Richard Barnett, a scholar of Tibet at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Singapore and Cambodia to expand collaboration in renewable energy, carbon markets and agri-trade Asia US, India push for trade pact after Trump strikes deal with Vietnam: Sources Business Microsoft cutting 9,000 jobs companywide in second major wave of layoffs this year Opinion How Apple gave 'the gift of fire' to Chinese electronics firms Life Sean 'Diddy' Combs to remain jailed ahead of sentencing, judge rules Singapore Granddaughter of Hin Leong founder O.K. Lim fails to keep 3 insurance policies from creditors' reach Asia Dalai Lama says only his organisation can name his successor; Beijing pushes back World Iran's nuclear programme degraded by up to two years, Pentagon says 'He may have sensed that the community wasn't quite ready to take this new step of succession,' he added. Still, even as the Dalai Lama seemed to close a door on some out-of-the-box ideas, he sought to lay down boundaries that would shut out an authoritarian Beijing. He made clear that his office had 'sole authority' in identifying the next Dalai Lama. 'No one else has any such authority to interfere in this matter,' he said in a video message to the monks. His statement, which he read through large reading glasses from a sheet of paper he held in front of him, emphasised the consultative process through which he had reached his decision on the matter of succession. The Communist Party of China, which has sought to erode the influence of the Dalai Lama in Tibet, asserts that only it has the authority to choose his reincarnation, despite being committed to atheism in its ranks. The Dalai Lama, the 14th to hold the role, fled China in 1959 after the Chinese army invaded Tibet to bring the region under the control of the Communist Party. He has lived in India ever since, helping to establish a democracy in exile while traveling the world to advocate autonomy and cultural and religious freedom for the Tibetan people. The Chinese government sees the octogenarian leader as a separatist who seeks independence for Tibet, where more than 6 million Tibetans live. In his absence, Beijing has tried to bring elements of the Tibetan religious institution under state control. It has also worked to erase Tibetan culture in order to absorb the people into one nation united around the Communist Party. There are clear signs that Beijing could dispute the selection of the next Dalai Lama. When the 10th Panchen Lama, Tibet's second-highest spiritual figure, died in 1989, the Dalai Lama named the 5-year-old son of a herder as the successor. The boy and his family were kidnapped by China, and the boy – who has not been seen since – was replaced with a monk chosen by Beijing. Traditionally, the search for a new Dalai Lama begins only after the current one dies. Tibetan Buddhist leaders say they follow ancient customs of parsing mystical visions, clues left by the previous Dalai Lama and astrology to help narrow their search. In the past, search committees would travel around Tibet testing candidates to see if they showed any traits that could be deemed especially holy. This process can take years. Eventually, a child is deemed to be the previous Dalai Lama's reincarnation. Another decade or more can pass while the child is educated and prepared for the role when he reaches maturity. The fear that China will exploit that gap has shaped the Dalai Lama's strategy ever since he and tens of thousands of his followers went into exile. In 2011, the Dalai Lama completed a process of gradually relinquishing his political leadership role in the Tibetan exile government, a decision intended to strengthen the democratic structure of the Tibetan movement. Since then, Tibetan refugees scattered around the world have elected their political leader through a direct vote. Lobsang Tenzin, the second-most-senior leader of the trust that will oversee reincarnation matters, who is known by his religious title of Samdhong Rinpoche, said the Dalai Lama had weighed the future of the institution for decades but over time found that Tibetan people favoured preserving it. Analysts said that was consistent with the image the Dalai Lama has cultivated as a democrat who seeks consultation. While the approach may be his nature, it also makes a clear contrast with authoritarian China, they said. 'Today's message,' Samdhong Rinpoche said at a news conference in Dharamsala, 'is that the Dalai Lama institution will continue – that after the 14th Dalai Lama, there will be a 15th Dalai Lama, there will be a 16th Dalai Lama.' He did not say how the Dalai Lama planned to shield the reincarnation process from Chinese interference. He also declined to say whether the Dalai Lama's statement emphasizing the traditional process of reincarnation now ruled out his earlier suggestions about breaking with precedents. 'When the time comes, he will give instructions,' Samdhong Rinpoche said, referring to reincarnation. NYTIMES

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store