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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (147809)4/15/2019 10:04:44 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217567
 
Mission nearly accomplished per deal almost / chabuduo done

bloomberg.com

U.S. Farmers Fear China Deal Will Leave Them Worse Off Than Before Trade War
Mike DorningApril 15, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+8



Farming in Malden, Illinois. Photographer: Daniel Acker/BloombergSome U.S. farm groups fear that President Donald Trump’s terms for easing his trade war with China risk leaving large swaths of American agriculture worse off than before the conflict began.

Many producers are alarmed by signs that the administration would accept Chinese purchase target pledges for commodities like soybeans and pork without a promise to lift retaliatory tariffs, said industry representatives, some of whom spoke only on condition of anonymity to avoid consequences for publicly criticizing the administration.

“This is of great concern to producers out here facing another year of tariffs,” said Mark Powers, president of the Northwest Horticultural Council, which represents cherry, pear and apple growers in the Pacific Northwest. “We’re disappointed. Clearly the priority lies elsewhere.”

Farmers are unnerved by Trump’s enthusiasm for tariffs and his tendency to pick industry winners and losers, even as he promises in general terms to put “America first” in negotiations with the U.S.’s largest trading partner.

As China and the U.S. aim to finalize a trade truce within the next month, Beijing is considering a U.S. request to shift some tariffs on key agricultural goods to other products, people familiar with the situation said.

But Trump is still vowing to maintain some U.S. tariffs as leverage for enforcement, which China could counter by continuing retaliatory duties on farmers despite possible purchase agreements for some commodities.

Read More: Trump’s Trade Wars Sap Spring Optimism and Profits on U.S. Farms

As recently as March 20, Trump said he envisions U.S. tariffs lasting “a substantial period of time” after a trade agreement takes effect. Hinting at what he considers a victory in this trade war, Trump also often promises “massive” new orders for farm exports.

“It’s only going to get better because we’re doing trade deals that are going to get you so much business, you’re not even going to believe it,” Trump said at the American Farm Bureau Federation annual meeting in January.

People familiar with the trade negotiations say there has been no agreement to remove retaliatory tariffs, and the issue is likely to be one of the last resolved. Several farm groups are quietly lobbying the administration to reject any agreement maintaining the agricultural levies but have not yet received any assurances from the White House.

“Our guys are being told, sorry, you guys are going to have to pay the price,” Powers said. “It’s a hard message to accept.”

Two other agricultural representatives who asked not to be identified said they were also told by Trump administration officials that -- despite their objections -- the White House may persist with U.S. tariffs even if it means China also maintains additional duties.

Earlier: U.S. Soy Exports Won’t Reach Pre-Trade War Levels for Years



Many American farmers say today’s economic pressure is the most severe since the farm crisis of the 1980s.

Photographer: Sergio Flores/Bloomberg

However, Jim Sutter, chief executive officer of the U.S. Soybean Export Council, said he doubted an accord with China would keep tariffs in place, despite Trump’s public declarations.

“If we make a deal, then we need to get the tariff off so the trade can begin again,” Sutter said by telephone, shortly after a visit to China. “I think it’s hard to imagine a situation where we come to an ‘agreement’ and then you leave the tariffs in place. I would be surprised if the Chinese found that an acceptable solution.”

Many American farmers say today’s economic pressure is the most severe since the farm crisis of the 1980s. Profits have been shrinking since they peaked six years ago and last year fell to half of what they were in 2013. Years of bumper crops sent prices for key commodities such as corn and soybeans plummeting -- down 40 percent since 2013.

Trump’s determination to disrupt global trade abruptly compounded the financial damage last year.

In addition to China’s tariffs, Mexico, Canada and India retaliated against U.S. producers after Trump targeted their steel and aluminum exports to the U.S. At the same time, competitors are making inroads in Japan, where the Trans-Pacific Partnership that Trump rejected has lowered duties for other Pacific Rim countries, and another trade deal eased access for European Union products.

Read More: America’s Farmers Call for Help With Debt at 1980s Levels

Beijing in December committed to a series of U.S. soybean purchases and has used government entities to buy American pork. The Trump administration touts those promises as successes and said a U.S.-China trade deal would include additional purchase commitments.

Yet even those installments of soybeans won’t be sufficient to put a dent in record U.S. stockpiles after last year’s trade disruptions. And securing such purchasing commitments does little to help producers of other products still subject to retaliatory tariffs.

“If they’re going to buy soybeans, take the tariffs off cherries, take the tariffs off apples,” Powers said. “We haven’t been told they’re going to buy cherries. So how are we being helped?”

Powers estimates that Chinese tariffs cost cherry growers in Washington State, Oregon and Idaho $96 million last year. China had been the top export market for cherry growers in the region until last year, when sales to the country dropped 41 percent, he said.

Even producers of commodities that benefit from government purchase commitments won’t necessarily make as many sales to China as they would if the tariffs simply dropped to prior levels.

Unless tariffs are removed, it would be hard for American farmers to export much above the purchase agreement quotas in what had been their fastest-growing market. Since the quotas would be administered through Chinese government-controlled entities, Beijing also could use them as leverage, halting or delaying purchases whenever tensions rise with the U.S., and by doing so holding farmer livelihoods hostage.

Earlier: Canada Steals Market Share From U.S. as China Soy Tariffs Bite

“The real concern is these quotas could be ceilings for the U.S. and the quotas might not be filled if we run into trouble with the Chinese government,” said Joseph Glauber, former chief economist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture and now a senior fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington.

For the cherry growers in the Northwest, it’s crucial China end its retaliatory tariffs by June, when this year’s harvest begins shipping.

“The first year was damaging enough, this year could be much more impactful,” Powers said. “The Chinese have had a year to find alternative sources.”

— With assistance by Shawn Donnan, and Isis Almeida

(Updates with China weighing tariff shift in fifth paragraph.)

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (147809)4/15/2019 10:20:13 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217567
 
Another win for the trump team, saving right to continue subsidizing Boeing and Amazon and GM and and and

zerohedge.com

Washington Backtracks On Enforcement Progress, Caves On Demands Beijing Scrap Industrial Subsidies

Despite Trade Rep. Robert Lighthizer's insistence that Washington leverage its position of advantage - i.e. the unassailable fact that its tariffs had contributed to a precarious deceleration in Chinese economic growth - the Trump Administration's trade team has repeatedly caved to Beijing. First, the administration compromised on enforcement (the administration has reportedly punted it to 2025) to the currency manipulation. And now it has reportedly softened its demands for the 'structural economic reforms' that Trump had insisted on as part of the final deal.



According to Reuters, US negotiators have 'tempered' their demands that Beijing roll back some of its industrial state subsidies as part of the trade deal. Washington's demands were reportedly met with 'strong resistance' from Beijing.

The issue is a thorny one because China's brand of state-directed capitalism is deeply tied up with the tax breaks and other advantages that Beijing bestows on state-owned firms, and it's possible that many of these firms could fail without the government's support, potentially setting off a destabilizing chain reaction.

The issue of industrial subsidies is thorny because they are intertwined with the Chinese government’s industrial policy. Beijing grants subsidies and tax breaks to state-owned firms and to sectors seen as strategic for long-term development. Chinese President Xi Jinping has strengthened the state’s role in parts of the economy.

And as the Trump administration looks to secure a deal in the next month or so, expect them to cave on more of their demands and focus on priorities that they consider "achievable."

These include: Ending forced technology transfers, improving intellectual property protection, expanding access to Chinese markets for American firms (and in particular American tech firms).

In what sounded like an attempt to spin Washington's walk-backs on subsidies and enforcement, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin - one of the officials tasked with leading the trade delegation - said during a Monday morning interview that there was "more work to do" including on the issue of enforcement, after saying last week that the two sides had agreed to opening 'enforcement offices'.

When it comes to restrictions on state subsidies, expect any language in the deal to be vague, allowing Beijing substantial wiggle room to largely maintain the status quo.

So, if China's economy is in such dire straits, why is the US caving? Well, because President Xi can't accept a deal that would make him look weak, which gives him very little room to concede.

Washington has detailed more than 500 different subsidies it has said China applies in notifications to the WTO.

"It’s not that there won’t be some language on it, but it is not going to be very detailed or specific," one source familiar with the talks said in reference to the subsidies issue.

"If U.S. negotiators define success as changing the way China’s economy operates, that will never happen," said the other source with knowledge of the trade talks.

“A deal that makes Xi look weak is not a worthwhile deal for Xi. Whatever deal we get, it’s going to be better than what we’ve had, and it’s not going to be sufficient for some people. But that’s politics,” that source said.

China promised to end its subsidies earlier this year, but never said how it would accomplish this. To be sure, as Reuters points out, there are ways that maintaining subsidies could work to America's advantage, since most of the firms that would be making the tens of billions of dollars of annual agricultural purchases are mostly recipients of these subsidies.

One of the key sticking points in the negotiations is the removal of the $250 billion in U.S. tariffs. It is broadly expected in the trade community that U.S. negotiators want to keep some tariffs on Chinese goods, which Washington sees as retaliation for the years of damage done to its economy by Beijing’s unfair trade practices.

The role of the state firms may benefit the United States in another part of the trade deal. The Trump administration wants China to make big-ticket purchases of over a trillion dollars of U.S. goods in the next six years to reduce its trade surplus. The companies likely to make the purchases are the state-run firms, both sources said.

"The purchasing, for example, reinforces the role of the state sector because the purchasing is all being done through state enterprises," one of the sources said.

Another point of contention between the two countries, telecommunications, may drive China to increase the state’s role rather than reduce it, the source said.

In a separate report, Bloomberg said that China is weighing a request from Washington to shift some tariffs on key agricultural goods to other products to help the administration sell the trade deal to farmers, a key voting bloc for Trump, ahead of the 2020 election. While the exact nature of the arrangement proposed by the US wasn't reported, it shows that political considerations are increasingly becoming a factor as the talks enter their final stretch.

While some have argued that Trump could tout any deal as a win, even if China refuses to meet Washington's core demands and instead focuses on agricultural purchases, the political problem could become a serious Catch-22 for Trump.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (147809)4/15/2019 10:33:04 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217567
 
Whilst you may not support your potus trump, he supports your contention, that the 737 is misunderstood, mislabeled, and just need a software patch to be good-to-go, and maybe rebranded, perhaps, dare I guess what he has in mind, 737 max trump

zerohedge.com

Trump Says Boeing Should "Rebrand" 737 MAX As Airlines Cancel More FlightsIn the latest indication of how the financial burden of the 737 MAX's troubles will ultimately be borne by Boeing's airline customers, American Airlines announced on Sunday that it would cancel all flights with Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes through Aug. 19, the longest stretch of cancellations announced by a US airline since regulators around the world grounded the planes following the March 10 crash of ET302. The cancellations will amount to 115 flights per day - about 1.5% of American's total during each day of the summer travel season.



The airline had previously cancelled flights through early June. AA's decision to extend cancellations follows United's decision to cancel all MAX flights through June 5, and Southwest canceled them through Aug. 5. The cancellations are expected to severely hamper travel during the busy summer season, when families typically take vacations.

Read the full statement from American’s Chairman and CEO Doug Parker and President Robert Isom:

Dear fellow team members,

As we prepare for summer, our focus is around planning for the busiest travel period of the year. Families everywhere are counting on American Airlines for their summer vacations, family reunions, trips to visit friends and adventures overseas. Our commitment to each other and to our customers is to operate the safest and most reliable operation in our history.

To further that mission, we have made the decision to extend our cancellations for the Boeing 737 MAX aircraft through Aug. 19. Based upon our ongoing work with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and Boeing, we are highly confident that the MAX will be recertified prior to this time. But by extending our cancellations through the summer, we can plan more reliably for the peak travel season and provide confidence to our customers and team members when it comes to their travel plans. Once the MAX is recertified, we anticipate bringing our MAX aircraft back on line as spares to supplement our operation as needed during the summer.

The planning team is working on this action now and in total, approximately 115 flights per day will be canceled through Aug. 19. These 115 flights represent approximately 1.5 percent of American’s total flying each day this summer.

We remain confident that the impending software updates, along with the new training elements Boeing is developing for the MAX, will lead to recertification of the aircraft soon. We have been in continuous contact with the FAA, Department of Transportation (DOT), National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), other regulatory authorities and are pleased with the progress so far.

Our Reservations and Sales teams will continue to work closely with customers to manage their travel plans, and we appreciate their outstanding efforts to care for our customers. Your professionalism and care for customers is second to none, and we thank you for all you do every day for our customers and for each other.

AA said customers would have the option of rebooking their flights or receiving a refund. The airline said it might try to find other planes to fill in for 737 MAXs on certain scheduled flghts.

The FAA is still investigating the two deadly crashes, and it recently met with representatives from American, Southwest, United and their pilot unions to discuss the plane's safety questions. Boeing said last week that it had completed 96 test flights of the 737 MAX with its software update.

Stiil, even after Boeing has managed to convince regulators that its planes are safe, there's still the open question of whether the public will feel comfortable flying on the planes. It's unclear how the company plans to deal with this problem, but President Trump on Monday morning tweeted one idea.

Conceding "what the hell do I know" about branding (despite previously running an airline and, of course, going from presidential long shot to clinch a historic, come-from-behind victory in the 2016 election), Trump said if it were up to him he would "rebrand" the Boeing 737 MAX 8 and "add some great features" to win back the public trust.

"No product has suffered like this one."

What do I know about branding, maybe nothing (but I did become President!), but if I were Boeing, I would FIX the Boeing 737 MAX, add some additional great features, & REBRAND the plane with a new name.
No product has suffered like this one. But again, what the hell do I know?

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 15, 2019
We'll see if Boeing takes that suggestion to heart.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (147809)4/15/2019 10:39:18 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217567
 
Rebranding ... :0)

edition.cnn.com

Exhibition showcases 1,000 Trump objects, from colognes to steaks
For about a year now, artist and photographer Andres Serrano has been preparing for a museum-styled multi-media installation, " The Game: All Things Trump," as an apt reflection of an unusual business icon who became President.
Serrano says the exhibition is a portrait of US President Donald Trump that features more than 1,000 objects he purchased mostly from eBay, at a cost of nearly $200,000. A 10-foot high, rotating "Ego" sign in bold letters from Taj Mahal's Ego Lounge sits in the center of the first floor of a former nightclub in Manhattan's Meatpacking District where the exhibit is on display.

Promoted by SK-II

The place where traditions and modern aspirations meet

Meet the brave women challenging conventions in China and bridging the gap between traditional and modern expectations.


One Serrano work is featured along with more than 1,000 objects he purchased. Credit: Andres Serrano

Serrano only met Trump once when he photographed him in 2004 for his "America" series, which was comprised of more than 100 portraits of people from various professions and backgrounds. A large print of the portrait is the only one of Serrano's own works in the show.
"I've always said that my work is very basic. It's about life, death, religion, sex, race, and everything that people think about. So what is it now that occupies everyone's thoughts? It's Donald Trump," Serrano said.


The same ideals that many people once admired about Trump are now the same ones that many hate. Credit: Andres Serrano

Thirty years ago, Serrano's infamous "P**s Christ" (1987) infuriated conservatives, drawing national attention surrounding the culture wars over government funding of art.
State of the art: How will Trump's taste change the White House?


Now, Serrano is partnering with " a/political," an arts initiative based in London whose mission is to support artists producing socially engaged work, and he is not shying away from making art out of controversial subject matter.
"There are a lot of things that concern me about this administration," Serrano said. "In a way, I can understand what happened. It seems like Donald Trump had a lot of cards in his favor, just being the antithesis to Barack Obama. I see his election as a backlash to Barack Obama's presidency."


Magazines are featured including high-profile autographed covers that were critical of Trump. Credit: Andres Serrano

Why the Obamas' newly unveiled official portraits matter


Some of the most fascinating items Serrano collected are magazine and tabloid covers featuring Trump over the past three decades, including high-profile autographed covers that were critical of him. An autographed copy of Esquire, with a headline that reads: "Hater-in-Chief" might inspire a laugh but by signing these covers, Trump suggests he's bigger than the opinions of his critics and American voters. Ironically, the same ideals that many people once admired about Trump are the same ones that many now hate.


Most people by now have formed their own opinions either for or against Trump, but Serrano seems uninterested in inserting himself into the debate. Credit: Andres Serrano

Workbooks and a diploma from Trump University that once fueled aspiring entrepreneurs' capitalist dreams are also on display. Merchandise from his numerous other business ventures including Trump Shuttle, Trump Steaks, Trump Casinos, colognes, and a talking Trump doll from "The Apprentice" account for an astonishing number of products in the exhibit that feature the Trump name. It almost seems like overkill, but that may be part of Serrano's point.

How White House photographers have shaped the image of the President


A Monopoly-like game, "Trump: The Game," carries a tagline that reads: "It's not whether you win or lose...It's whether you win." The display cases are loaded with material, including a letter from former Mexican President Vicente Fox. There's also a tie collection and his "Make America Great Again" hats.

Why is art so expensive?

Most people by now have formed their own opinions either for or against Trump, but Serrano seems uninterested in inserting himself into the debate. He is, however, concerned about support for arts funding and where the administration is headed.

Jim Carrey's cartoons reflect the political circus that inspires them


Is the exhibition a celebration of Trump or a criticism of him? That interpretation, Serrano leaves to the viewers.

"I've treated all these objects like precious objects and treated them like art," Serrano said.


There an astonishing number of products featuring the Trump name. Credit: Andres Serrano



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (147809)4/25/2019 7:57:46 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217567
 
while team USA is talking doing more for the aged and sick and ... its deep-state is on another program

to extract more from its aged and sick and ...

trump is setting up to save the aged and sick and ...

bloomberg.com

U.S. Considers Concessions on Drug Protections in China Talks, Sources Say
Jenny Leonard26 April 2019, 05:04 GMT+8

LISTEN TO ARTICLE
The Trump administration may concede to a Chinese proposal that would give less protection for U.S. pharmaceutical products than they receive at home, according to people familiar with the matter, a move that could draw opposition from the American drug industry.

Under the Chinese offer being discussed as part of wider trade talks, U.S. pharmaceutical companies would get eight years of regulatory data protection in China for the biologics they develop, said two people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions are private.

That compares with the 10 years of protection they get in the new Nafta, which Congress hasn’t yet approved, and the 12 years they receive in the U.S. The move raises the possibility that, in the middle of a fierce U.S. debate over drug prices, the Trump administration would give China a stronger mechanism to force down prices for some of the world’s most expensive drugs than the U.S. has.

Biologics refer to products made from living systems such as cells or tissues, as opposed to conventional drugs that have been chemically synthesized. Biologics are consistently among the highest-price drugs that pharmaceutical companies make.

Trade DealU.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and his deputy Jeffrey Gerrish in recent weeks have informed pharma companies that China is dug in on its offer for eight years and the USTR officials have pushed U.S. industry to accept that outcome in a final deal, three people said. One person said USTR has threatened to remove the issue from the trade negotiations altogether if the industry pushes back.

But the take-it-or-leave-it approach employed by USTR is frustrating some in the industry who would like the Trump administration to fight for a longer data protection period, they said. Industry is also complaining that the administration kept them in the dark throughout the negotiations and is now asking companies to stand behind a final product that they don’t consider strong enough.

A spokesman for USTR didn’t respond to a request for comment on China’s offer and Lighthizer’s engagement with the industry. The Chinese embassy in Washington didn’t respond to a request for comment. A spokeswoman for the The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America declined to comment.

The development of biologics requires companies to generate and submit new clinical trial data to government regulators, which they review for approval. During the data protection period, a “biosimilar” competitor can’t rely on the innovator’s regulatory data to seek marketing approval for its product, PhRMA wrote in a blog post.

USMCA ProtectionsWhat’s agreed to in the China deal could have implications for other trade agreements. If the U.S. makes a concession to Beijing, it could weaken the Trump administration’s position as it tries to push for the approval of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement by Congress.

The USMCA provides at least 10 years of data protection for such drugs but congressional Democrats are pushing the Trump administration to shorten that period, arguing that the trade deal would lock in higher drug prices in all three countries. USTR has pushed back against that notion, saying the administration is committed to lowering drug prices for Americans while also realizing the need to protect intellectual property for pharmaceuticals.

The U.S.’s 12-year protection period was established in the Affordable Care Act, which became law in 2010.

The next round of U.S.-China trade talks is set to take place in Beijing next week. Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin will travel to China for talks starting April 30 and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He will come to Washington the following week.

— With assistance by Cynthia Koons, Drew Armstrong, and Anna Edney