neiloxford
Member
I was going to buy the new Trek Rail but I am keen to avoid US brands.
Given China’s tit for tat tariff response, it’s going to be hard for the orange Manchurian candidate to get out of the corner he’s backed himself into.Being optimistic, my hope is that Trump will realise what a massive error these tariffs are before they do too much damage. If he can "pause" them based on concessions from other countries then he can still spin them as a massive success.
USA imports most of its Aluminum from Canada, followed by UAE, China, Mexico and Argentina. But as Alcoa has three major smelters in Canada (also one in Australia), as you mention, it seems probable that the price increase for the items that use the alu such as bike frames, if they are cast in the USA, stand to go up by at least 10%.Hello America and greetings from downunder '10%' Australia. Your beer cans and bike frames are about to be more expensive using Australian manufactured aluminium, made by..... American owned Alcoa.
Priceless !
P.S. Do we get our $5 billion deposit back when we cancel the $368 BILLION submarine order ?
You can expect to see grey-market work arounds on offer from mom and pop sellers in places like Canada and Mexico,
Nope, just the light hitting the edges.Is that a white line on the bonnet?
You could avoid Trek but any half decent MTB will be covered in US components. You could go with Tektro, Ohlins & Sun Race for example but not many bikes will come from factory specced that way. This is the thing with global supply chain stuff, it's so embedded across the industry that pretty much anything decent will have American componentry, it's just another point of folly in slapping tariffs around indiscriminately.I was going to buy the new Trek Rail but I am keen to avoid US brands.
Really !! Pokemon Go again@zim If only the world could go back to 2016![]()
You could avoid Trek but any half decent MTB will be covered in US components.
Seems very unlikely. Setting up a factory is going to take years and the tariffs are unlikely to last that long and are pretty much guaranteed to change before it would pay for itself.Thing is Shimano own companies in the USA . Who's to say they won't ship some manufacturing there![]()
they didn't even increase production when the covid boom happened, why would they move here instead?Thing is Shimano own companies in the USA . Who's to say they won't ship some manufacturing there![]()
they didn't even increase production when the covid boom happened, why would they move here instead?
Shimano licence manufacturing out to smaller companies. Its why there's GREY Market goods out there. No packaging, no warranty but cheap . When the licence runs out .Seems very unlikely. Setting up a factory is going to take years and the tariffs are unlikely to last that long and are pretty much guaranteed to change before it would pay for itself.
How could they have increase production ? They were effected buy everything like every other manufacturer was.they didn't even increase production when the covid boom happened, why would they move here instead?
USA imports most of its Aluminum from Canada, followed by UAE, China, Mexico and Argentina. But as Alcoa has three major smelters in Canada (also one in Australia), as you mention, it seems probable that the price increase for the items that use the alu such as bike frames, if they are cast in the USA, stand to go up by at least 10%.
It's not an attack on globalism, as much as it's an attack on globalism that is rigged in everybody's favor but our own.many have worked on the basis the tariffs set by Trump would remain but dozens of countries have already approached the US for trade deal talks...one report I saw mentioned over 50. Now in light of that Trump has given a 90 day pause presumably to give those discussions time to come to an agreement. So the situation is fluid. The only major "sticker" is China so it will be interesting to see what happens there. What we have witnessed so far is a fundamental attack on globalisation by the biggest consumer market in the world ( the US) and there are many other countries who may ultimately benefit from its demise by growing onshore manufacturing and rebuilding the job market in that sector of individual economies.
So any assessment the impact on the bike market is premature. The game has only just begun!!
And like the UK have been told the 25% on aluminium, steel, cars and the 10% for everything else is not going to change regardless if trading with the USA is in equity or even deficit!many have worked on the basis the tariffs set by Trump would remain but dozens of countries have already approached the US for trade deal talks...one report I saw mentioned over 50
Indeed, the tariff drives a ‘wedge’ between the supply cost and the demand price (the so called ‘willingness to pay’), so the price will rise by only a proportion of the tariff impost in most cases (goods with a 100% tariff say often end up costing 50% more).….part of that cost would be passed on to the buyers…
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