Trump's Tariff Tsunami Forces Chinese Amazon Sellers To Rethink US Strategy: Report

A fresh wave of economic turbulence is brewing between the US and China as President Donald Trump announced a steep increase in tariffs on Chinese imports, raising them to 125 per cent from the current 104 per cent, reported Reuters. The move is sending shockwaves through China’s massive cross-border e-commerce sector, especially among Amazon sellers who are now facing a stark choice: hike prices or exit the US market altogether.

'This is truly an unprecedented blow'

Wang Xin, head of the Shenzhen Cross-Border E-Commerce Association, which represents over 3,000 sellers on Amazon, didn’t mince words. “This isn't just a tax issue, it's that the entire cost structure gets entirely overwhelmed,” she said. With rising tariffs expected to trigger delays at customs and increased logistics costs, many sellers are beginning to panic.

“So for all of us in the cross-border e-commerce business today, this is truly an unprecedented blow,” Wang added.

According to Wang and five Shenzhen-based Amazon sellers who spoke to Reuters, some sellers are planning to raise prices for US customers, while others are preparing to abandon the market altogether. The impact is particularly acute in Shenzhen, a hub for e-commerce where over 100,000 Amazon businesses generate annual revenues of more than $35 billion, according to SmartScout.

Price hikes already in motion

For seller Dave Fong, whose inventory includes schoolbags and Bluetooth speakers, the response has been swift. “For us and anyone else, you can't rely on the US market, that's quite clear,” he said. Fong has already increased prices by as much as 30 per cent and is scaling back Amazon ad spending, which previously consumed 40 per cent of his US revenue. His strategy now includes pivoting to markets like Europe, Canada, and Mexico.

Brian Miller, an Amazon seller for seven years, said the math simply doesn’t add up anymore. Children’s building blocks that once cost $3 to produce now carry a $7 cost after tariffs. Maintaining profitability would require a minimum 20 per cent price hike — 50 per cent for more expensive items. “I don’t see a scenario, if things don't change, that serving the US from China is viable any more,” Miller said, adding that manufacturing may have to shift to Vietnam or Mexico.

Risk of wider economic fallout

Beyond Amazon, China is also a key base for other global e-commerce giants like Shein and Temu. In 2023 alone, cross-border e-commerce trade was valued at 2.63 trillion yuan (approximately $358 billion), according to China’s State Council. However, no market matches the consumption capacity of the US, and losing access could force Chinese exporters into fierce global price wars, further eating into their already thinning margins.

Wang warned that the cascading effects of these tariffs could ripple through China’s economy. “It'll be very hard for anyone to survive in the US market,” she said, pointing to a looming threat of higher unemployment as small businesses and factories struggle to stay afloat.

As tensions escalate, Chinese sellers are scrambling to adapt, but one thing is clear: the US market no longer offers the security it once did.

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