Strains showing from trade spat

Chinese stalling U.S. goods; tech giant ZTE to halt work

FILE- In this Feb. 26, 2014, file photo, a sign for the ZTE booth is seen at the Mobile World Congress, the world's largest mobile phone trade show in Barcelona, Spain. Chinese telecommunications company ZTE has halted its main operations after U.S. authorities cut off its access to American suppliers as President Donald Trump steps up pressure over trade and technology issues with Beijing. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)
FILE- In this Feb. 26, 2014, file photo, a sign for the ZTE booth is seen at the Mobile World Congress, the world's largest mobile phone trade show in Barcelona, Spain. Chinese telecommunications company ZTE has halted its main operations after U.S. authorities cut off its access to American suppliers as President Donald Trump steps up pressure over trade and technology issues with Beijing. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)

HONG KONG -- A Chinese tech giant has been brought to its knees. Tougher inspections at Chinese ports are holding up cars, apples and lumber imported from the U.S. These are among the early signs that the widening trade dispute between China and the U.S. is exacting a toll on both sides.

More talks aimed at resolving the conflict are planned for next week in Washington, while both sides dig in for a fight over their trade imbalance.

The tech giant, telecommunications equipment and smartphone maker ZTE, said Wednesday that it's ceasing "major operations" after the U.S. last month banned it from doing business with American suppliers for seven years as a punishment for illegal exports.

Also this week, businesses and officials reported that American products are running into delays in customs clearance because of stepped-up inspections at Chinese ports, suggesting Beijing may be making life tougher for U.S. companies as the dispute drags on.

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The ZTE business ban stems from a case dating to before President Donald Trump's administration, but analysts say the outcome was worse than expected, reflecting a deterioration in trade relations as the two countries vie for technological dominance.

"It has become really political now," said Nikhil Batra, a telecom analyst at IDC. "There would be wider consequences than for just the telecom industry" and for the companies directly involved, he added.

The U.S. Commerce Department's ban cut off ZTE's access to vital technology and components such as semiconductors from U.S. suppliers.

ZTE said in a statement that is has enough cash and will seek to fulfill its contracts. It was unclear whether the company is planning to shut down: Last week during trade talks in Beijing, Chinese officials appealed to their U.S. counterparts to end the ban.

But in another sign of fallout, Australian telecom company Telstra said Thursday that it will stop selling the company's mobile phones and broadband devices because of the U.S. ban.

"This was a difficult but necessary step," Telstra's head of innovation and strategy, Michele Garra, wrote in a blog post.

ZTE sells smartphones globally and supplies networks or equipment to some of the world's biggest telecommunication companies.

Losing access to U.S. suppliers is a heavy blow for it and the companies it buys from. The company is the No. 4 smartphone vendor in the U.S., where it also sources more than 40 percent of its components, according to IDC data, creating a multibillion-dollar revenue stream for suppliers like Qualcomm and Intel. Finding alternative suppliers won't be easy, "therefore, this U.S. ban would be a fatal crisis for any company," said Yan Sufei, analyst at Zero Power Intelligence Group. "We can't rule out that there will be layoffs later on."

At the same time, U.S. companies exporting to China are seeing their goods held up at China's ports.

Customs officials are doing stricter inspections of the emissions systems in Ford vehicles, ostensibly to comply with new regulations.

[DOCUMENT: Read full proposal from U.S. trade representative]

"That check is apparently quite onerous," said a person briefed on the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity. "It involves disassembling the vehicles and evaluating each of the components of the emissions system. Once a vehicle is taken apart it can't be sold so it forces long delays and high storage fees for those vehicles in China."

Last year, China imported 18,819 Ford autos, including Lincoln-brand vehicles, which arrived at ports in Shanghai and Tianjin. "We are closely monitoring our situation at the port," the company said in a statement.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture said it has received reports of "increased inspections" of many products, without being more specific. The department said in a statement that it is "troubled by reports that China continues to impose unjustified restrictions on U.S. products."

Chinese customs officials said Monday that they were tightening up quarantine inspections of apples and lumber imported from the U.S. for signs of rot, pests or diseases.

Inspectors in Shanghai, Shenzhen, Qingdao and Xiamen will send samples for lab testing and shipments will not be able to pass through customs while the tests are carried out. Any contaminated shipments will be returned or destroyed, according to the notice posted on China's General Administration of Customs website.

China's Foreign Ministry said it had no information on the inspections and spokesman Geng Shuang said at a regular briefing that the country "always follows law-based, scientific and fair principles when carrying out quarantine and inspection on imported products."

Labor groups and administration officials are hopeful that the U.S. trade moves will change incentives to encourage domestic and foreign-owned carmakers to manufacture more of their vehicles in the United States. But industry representatives warn they could have the opposite effect, raising the prices of U.S.-made cars and trucks, reducing vehicle sales and potentially choking off access to China, the world's fastest-growing market for automobiles.

General Motors sold nearly 1 million vehicles in China in the first quarter of the year -- more than it sold in North America in the same period.

Meanwhile, the U.S. has extended a public hearing on the Trump administration's proposed tariffs on $50 billion of Chinese goods to accommodate everyone who wants to testify.

The hearings, initially set for Tuesday, will continue on Wednesday and Thursday to give about 130 companies and industry groups a chance to share their views about the effect of the planned tariffs, according to the U.S. Trade Representative's Office.

Companies including U.S. Steel Corp., Best Buy Co., and HP Inc., as well as lobbying groups such as the National Retail Federation, Consumer Technology Association and National Association of Manufacturers have filed requests to testify at the hearings next week in Washington.

The meetings are part of the process for imposing tariffs on more than 1,300 products the administration identified to punish China for its alleged theft of intellectual property and unfair trade practices. Trump also has ordered consideration of tariffs on an additional $100 billion worth of goods from the Asian nation. China's vow to impose levies on an equal value of U.S. imports has sparked fears of an escalation that could spark a trade war.

Chinese Vice Premier Liu is scheduled to travel to Washington as early as next week for trade discussions, after a trip by a U.S. delegation to Beijing last week failed to reach a deal to resolve outstanding trade concerns.

Information for this article was contributed by Yu Bing of The Associated Press; by Jim Tankersley and Ana Swanson of The New York Times; and by Mark Niquette of Bloomberg News.

A Section on 05/11/2018

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