Export Compliance Daily is a service of Warren Communications News.
China Down, Vietnam Up

January TV Imports Rose 26.1% From December but Fell 24% From 2019, Says DataWeb

The U.S. imported 3.03 million TVs from all countries in January, up 26.1% from December, but a 24% decline from January 2019, said Census Bureau data accessed Sunday through the International Trade Commission’s DataWeb tool.

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Export Compliance Daily combines U.S. export control news, foreign border import regulation and policy developments into a single daily information service that reliably informs its trade professional readers about important current issues affecting their operations.

January TV imports had $798.23 million in customs value, up 9.8% from December but down 24.8% from the previous January, said DataWeb. The average January TV import was worth $263.20, or 12.6% cheaper than in December and virtually unchanged from January a year earlier.

Mexico provided 60.9% of TV imports to the U.S. in January, the fifth full month that the 15% Section 301 tariffs were in effect on List 4A Chinese goods. The tariffs sent U.S. importers fleeing from China in a big way since Sept. 1, when the duties were activated, and Mexico was the biggest beneficiary of the retreat (see 2001100002). Mexico was responsible for only 32.1% of TV imports to the U.S. in January 2019, eight months before tariffs on Chinese TVs entered the picture.

TV imports from China were 782,000 sets in January, about 26% of shipments from all countries, said DataWeb. Though Chinese volume was up 45.2% from December, it was down a stunning 68% from January 2019 when China sent 61.2% of TV imports to the U.S. The 782,000 sets shipped here from China were the fewest for any January from that country since 2017 when 774,000 sets were imported.

Wuhan in China’s Hubei province, the original center of the COVID-19 outbreak, is home to several key links in the TV supply chain that had peak disruptions after the Chinese New Year holiday. Even with China’s diminished stature as a country of origin for U.S. TV imports, the February and March import data will bear watching as a measure of the likely impact on cargo.

Thailand in January 2019 was responsible for 6.2% of TV imports to the U.S., making it the world’s largest source of supply outside Mexico and China. That changed significantly this January when Thailand ceded share to Taiwan and especially Vietnam, said DataWeb. Thailand shipped 89,000 sets to the U.S. in January, only 2.9% of all TV imports, and 64.4% fewer sets than in the same month a year earlier.

Taiwan and Vietnam combined for 8% of January TV imports to the U.S., compared with virtually zero share in January 2019, said DataWeb. The U.S. imported nearly 145,000 sets from Vietnam, up 98.6% from December. Taiwanese imports were 97,000 sets, 65% more than in December.

Whether Taiwan and Vietnam will sustain those trends remains to be seen, especially if the List 4A tariff rollback to 7.5% forced any shifts in sourcing after the discount took effect Feb. 14. Vietnam shipped only 42,000 TVs to the U.S. in 2019's first eight months, then nearly 260,000 in September through December, plus the 145,000 in January, all when the 15% tariffs were in full effect, said DataWeb. Taiwan shipped only 63,000 TVs to the U.S. in 2019's first 11 months, then a combined 156,000 in December and January.

Mexico continues to be the haven for sourcing of larger, more premium TVs compared with other countries of origin, said DataWeb. The average Mexican TV import in January was worth $331.26, though 26% less than in January 2019, suggesting Mexico absorbed much of the commodity TV supply that tariffs chased from China. The average Chinese set was worth $163.50, $23 less than a year earlier, and roughly comparable with Taiwan's $178.93 average. Thailand and Vietnam rounded out the low end at $111.73 and $113.71, respectively.