The White House has put itself and the country in a bad situation but doesn’t realize it yet.
Around April 10th China to USA trade shut down.
It takes ~30 days for containers to go from China to LA.
45 to Houston by sea, 45 to Chicago by train.
55 to New York by sea.
That means that there are no economic effects of what was done on April 10th until about May 10th.
Around that time (it’s already started to happen) trucking work is going to dry up. Warehouses will start doing layoffs because no labor is needed to unload containers and some products will be out of stock, reducing the need for shipping labor.
All this will start in the Los Angeles area.
After about 2 weeks, it’ll start hitting Chicago and Houston.
Let’s say the White House, after 3 weeks, changes its mind, on May 31st.
“This isn’t working out like we thought it would. Tariffs back to 0.”
Let’s say China says “bygones be bygones, we’ll go back to how things were”.
Let’s say every factory in China that got screwed by their orders being cancelled says the same thing “no problem, we’ll make and ship”.
The problem is, even under the most favorable conditions of China and the factories restarting economic ties as though nothing happened, it will be at least another 30 days before economic activity is revived.
And that’s just in LA.
In Chicago/Houston, you’ll need to wait another 45 days.
New York, at that point, will still be getting containers from before April 10th, they will then have 50 days (May 31 minus April 10) of zero economic activity at the ports, in trucking of Chinese goods, in warehousing.
The whole situation is a bit like lockdowns. Once you shut down, it takes a long time to get economic activity back to where it was, if you ever can.
And again, this assumes, that China and its factories, which make things you can’t buy elsewhere, will start right back up again as though nothing happened, which is unlikely.
It’s almost like we’re speeding towards a brick wall but the driver of the car doesn’t see it yet.
By the time he does, it’ll be too late to hit the brakes.
The White House has put itself and the country in a bad situation but doesn’t realize it yet.
Around April 10th China to USA trade shut down.
It takes ~30 days for containers to go from China to LA.
45 to Houston by sea, 45 to Chicago by train.
55 to New York by sea.
That… pic.twitter.com/8vnGDMWCpt
— molson 🧠⚙️ (@Molson_Hart) April 24, 2025
Supply chain management executive warns the erratic implementation and potential subsequent rollback of tariff hikes on China could create “insane surge pricing and covid level logistics bottlenecks” in freight shipping https://t.co/xE90Tiykct
— Nick Timiraos (@NickTimiraos) April 24, 2025
There are increasing signs that the Embargo by the new admin is starting to have real economic consequences.
Container bookings have collapsed, ports are seeing reduced activity, trucking is decelerating, and retailers say in a few weeks store shelves will be empty.
Thread.
— Bob Elliott (@BobEUnlimited) April 24, 2025
If you think Americans are angry now, just wait another 14 days for shelves to begin being empty in Walmart.
Going to be an absolute fucking nightmare. pic.twitter.com/yua4iY7wF4
— Spencer Hakimian (@SpencerHakimian) April 24, 2025
Inflation is going to skyrocket. https://t.co/AQvRIawGTK
— The Great Martis (@great_martis) April 24, 2025
The U.S. imports $600B worth of goods from China every year, 95% of that via ocean freight. Those goods sell at retail for ~$2T.
— Ryan Petersen (@typesfast) April 23, 2025
We will also have mass shortages this summer as the goods don’t show up. The first ships carrying goods paying the duties arrived on Monday. And the decline in freight arrivals will hit in the coming weeks.
— Ryan Petersen (@typesfast) April 23, 2025
With bookings down 65%, ocean carriers canceled 25% of their sailings from China the last two weeks. Those ships are already being repositioned to other trade lanes.
— Ryan Petersen (@typesfast) April 23, 2025