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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 398.52-4.4%Dec 29 4:00 PM EST

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To: TobagoJack who wrote (218318)12/10/2025 9:20:14 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) of 218817
 
Additional discourse following <<Daily workflow 2025 12 11 Good morning Manus co-pilot, please>>

... busy day

Q: Re bloomberg.com <<Mexico Approves Up to 50% Tariffs on China, Other Asian Nations>> - dunno, perhaps watch for signs of enveloping TwoAPuc (The Worst of All Possible Unintended Consequences) where Mexico becomes a failed state by way of supply chain disruptions and such same, cut off by China, rejected by US, and left on sidewalk like a tin of bad cat food under the hot sun. What happens going forward, your best guess.

Mexico Approves Up to 50% Tariffs on China, Other Asian Nations


Containers at the Yangshan Deepwater Port in Shanghai, one of China’s major shipping hubs for exports to Mexico.Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

By Gonzalo Soto

December 11, 2025 at 9:08 AM GMT+8

Takeaways by Bloomberg AI

  • Mexican lawmakers gave final approval for new tariffs on Asian imports, broadly aligning with US efforts to tighten trade barriers against China.
  • The new levies will take effect starting next year and hit a wide range of products from clothing to metals and auto parts, with the massive output of Chinese factories emerging as the legislation’s focus.
  • Mexico’s finance ministry estimates the new tariffs will raise nearly 52 billion pesos in extra revenue next year.

Mexican lawmakers gave final approval for new tariffs on Asian imports, broadly aligning with US efforts to tighten trade barriers against China, as President Claudia Sheinbaum seeks to protect local industry.

Mexico’s Senate on Wednesday voted in favor of the bill that imposes tariffs of between 5% and 50% on more than 1,400 products from Asian nations that don’t have a trade deal with Mexico. The bill passed with 76 votes in favor, five against and 35 abstentions.

The new levies will take effect starting next year and hit a wide range of products from clothing to metals and auto parts, with the massive output of Chinese factories emerging as the legislation’s focus.


Claudia SheinbaumPhotographer: Stephania Corpi/Bloomberg

Passage of the bill took place against the backdrop of Sheinbaum’s high-stakes trade talks with President Donald Trump and pressure to match his priorities, fueling hopes Mexico’s levies on Chinese goods could ease punishing US tariffs on goods like Mexican steel and aluminum.

While Sheinbaum has publicly denied any connection to Trump’s own tariff onslaught against the Asian giant, the new import levies resemble the US leader’s approach.

For decades, Mexico has embraced free trade more than nearly any other country in the Americas, inking dozens of trade deals with nations all across the globe. But Sheinbaum’s leftist Morena party is now moving in a different direction.

Mexico’s finance ministry estimates the new tariffs will raise nearly 52 billion pesos ($2.8 billion) in extra revenue next year.

Sheinbaum sent the proposal to Congress in early September, but lobbying from Asian governments and domestic opponents — from business lobbies and critical legislators — delayed its passage.

Manufacturers reliant on inputs made in China, India and South Korea, among others, warned of rising costs that could fan inflation. Some lawmakers, including from the ruling party, sought to avoid a dispute with a rising region many consider crucial to the diversification of Mexican export markets.

Sheinbaum’s embrace of the tariffs track with US concerns regarding so-called transshipment of Chinese exports through other countries, and follow action by Canada last year to also emulate US levies on electric cars, steel and aluminum from China.

Chinese officials have sharply criticized the latest Mexican tariffs as unwarranted and harmful.


A BYD showroom in Mexico City.Photographer: Mariceu Erthal/Bloomberg

According to the tariff legislation, Chinese cars will face among the steepest tariffs at 50%. The country’s massive auto sector currently holds 20% of the Mexican market, up dramatically from minimal vehicle imports just six years ago.

Mexican officials and local auto associations backed the import levies in a bid to protect national vehicle production, a major driver of Mexico’s manufacturing sector.

Along with the new tariffs, lawmakers approved a measure that will empower Mexico’s Economy Ministry, responsible for trade policy, to adjust the import levies as it sees fit.

The measure states that the ministry “may implement specific legal mechanisms and instruments for the importation of goods from countries with which the Mexican state does not have a free trade agreement in force.” The provision cites the flexible mechanism’s goal of ensuring supplies of key imports under competitive conditions.

The policy could provide Mexican officials with useful tools ahead of next year’s review of the North American USMCA trade pact with US and Canadian negotiators.
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