Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
'Exports to China look dismal,' leader of busiest US seaport says

‘Exports to China look dismal,’ leader of busiest US seaport says

Posted on 18 February 2026 By jobuzo

LOS ANGELES – Exports from the Port of Los Angeles, the busiest US gateway for ocean trade, fell 8 per cent in January to the lowest monthly output in nearly three years, Executive Director Gene Seroka said on Tuesday (Feb 17).

“Exports to China look dismal,” Seroka said after the Port of Los Angeles handled 104,297 20-foot equivalent units (TEUs) of loaded export containers in January.

President Trump’s aggressive use of tariffs has upended global trade and retaliatory trade duties from China and other nations have hit US exporters like farmers particularly hard.

Soybean shipments from the Port of Los Angeles to China dropped 80 per cent last year, Seroka said, adding that the trade did not improve in November or December, following discussions between representatives of the two nations on the sidelines at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit.

“There’s not much that the United States is exporting to China these days,” said trade expert Chad Bown, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute of Economics, who added that outgoing US shipments of everything from beef and corn to crude oil and coal also fell in 2025.

Closely watched imports to the Port of Los Angeles came in at 421,594 TEUs in January, down 13 per cent from the unusually strong result the year earlier, Seroka said.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

So far, imports in February appear relatively flat compared with a year earlier. Imports will slow in March due to China factory closures for the Lunar New Year holiday, he said.

Still, Seroka expects total first-quarter volume at the port to fall less than 10 per cent versus the year-earlier quarter, when US importers were rushing in goods before President Donald Trump’s threatened tariffs on countries like China took effect.

“I don’t see the economy or cargo volume dropping off a cliff after that, and even though holiday sales were softer than we would have liked, I don’t see a dire situation,” Seroka said, referring to lackluster US December retail sales that signaled potential weakness in consumer spending that drives about 70 per cent of the nation’s total economic activity.

[[nid:729385]]

‘Exports to China look dismal,’ leader of busiest US seaport says


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Christy Carlson Romano Tearfully Shares Positive Cancer Screening Test Results
Next Post: Man in M’sia goes missing after CNY reunion dinner, found dead as car plunged into river

Related Posts

China, Zambia sign development cooperation agreement China, Zambia sign development cooperation agreement News
Beeper’s all-in-one messaging app relaunches with an on-device model and premium upgrades Beeper’s all-in-one messaging app relaunches with an on-device model and premium upgrades News
Hermes agent maker Nous Research in talks for new funding at .5B valuation Hermes agent maker Nous Research in talks for new funding at $1.5B valuation News

Latest

  • Taco Bell removes Taylor Farms lettuce amid cyclosporiasis outbreak; producer issues clarification: ‘We are committed…’
  • Spencer Steer’s inside-the-park homer sparks Reds’ 7-2 win over Rockies
  • Josh Duhamel Reveals Daunting Moment He Realized He’s “Too Old” for Wife Audra Mari
  • Applications close in 48 hours — here’s everything Australian founders need to know about Stripe x Startup Battlefield
  • Vertu wants executives to pay $6,880 for an AI agent — here’s how it actually performs
  • French parliament approves assisted dying
  • Xi’s call on AI, Trump blasts China, US tariffs
  • Andy Burnham confirmed as Britain’s Labour Party leader, set to become new PM
  • Cartel video fuels fears of drug violence reaching Mexico City
  • Is Claude’s Fable 5 down? Anthropic responds as users report ‘usage credits are required’ error

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs