Blog

Blog

Anti-Dumping Products: The Real Risk Is Not Shipping — It’s Who Bears the Cost

Many importers only realize the seriousness of anti-dumping risks after their cargo is already at the port. By then, the problem is no longer whether the goods can be shipped, but who will carry the financial and compliance risk. Products Under Constant Scrutiny Based on recent clearance patterns, the following

Blog

New U.S. Tariff Signal: What Importers and Supply Chains Should Watch Closely

The recent statement from former President Donald Trump — proposing an immediate 25% tariff on any country conducting business with Iran while trading with the United States — may not yet be a formal regulation. However, as a policy signal, it carries meaningful implications for global supply chains, compliance planning,

Blog

What China’s Repeated Use of Rare Earth Controls Teaches Global Businesses

In recent years, China has repeatedly tightened controls on rare earth exports and related processing technologies. These moves—ranging from export licensing requirements to restrictions on overseas cooperation and end-use limitations—send a clear and consistent message to global markets: critical resources are no longer treated as ordinary commodities; they are strategic

Blog

When Are You Most Likely to Get Burned by Ocean Freight Bookings This Year?

A Practical Timeline for U.S. Importers One of the biggest misconceptions U.S. importers have this year is this: Most shipping problems are not caused by price — they are caused by timing. For the same shipment, choosing the wrong booking window can mean: Higher costs Unstable schedules Delays that disrupt

Blog

A Look Back at U.S.–China Trade Tensions and What Lies Ahead

As 2025 draws to an end, U.S.–China trade relations remain one of the most consequential—and complex—forces shaping global commerce. This year did not bring a full reset, but it did offer clearer signals about how the two economies intend to coexist: less illusion of decoupling, more reality of managed competition.

Blog

RMB Strengthens, Breaks Below 7.0 Against the USD — What Does It Mean?

The Chinese yuan (RMB) has continued its upward trend against the U.S. dollar, breaking below the 7.0 level, a key psychological threshold closely watched by global markets. While exchange rate movements may seem abstract, for companies trading with China, currency shifts directly affect pricing, margins, sourcing decisions, and logistics strategies.

Blog

How to Find Reliable Suppliers in China: A Practical Guide for International Buyers

Finding a trustworthy supplier in China is one of the most important steps for any importer. Whether you’re sourcing kitchenware, furniture, electronics, toys, or raw materials, choosing the wrong supplier can lead to delayed shipments, product defects, refund disputes, or even fraud. The good news: with the right process, you

Blog

China’s Industrial Profits Drop in October — First Decline in 3 Months

China’s latest economic data shows a clear sign of slowing momentum. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, profits of industrial firms above designated size fell 5.5% year-on-year in October, marking the first decline in three months. This sharply contrasts with the +21.6% in September and +20.4% in August and