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In First Trade War Shot, Mexico Cancels Sugar Export Permits To U.S.

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Originally appeared at ZeroHedge

While the Trump administration has in recent days withdrawn from calls for an all-out trade war with Mexico, and is seeking to re-establish calmer relations with the Mexican presidency after a sharp fallout over his plan to build a wall on the Mexican border and crack down on illegal immigrants arriving from Mexico, it appears that it is Mexico that has taken a pre-emptive step in the imminent trade dispute by canceling existing sugar export permits to the US in a dispute over the pace of shipments, Reuters reports citing a letter. The trade flare-up could temporarily disrupt supplies industry sources were cited as saying.

Reuters adds that the letter was sent by Mexico’s sugar chamber to mills on Monday, partly blaming the situation on unfilled positions at the U.S. Department of Commerce, which it said has led to a “legalistic” interpretation of rules with no U.S. counterparts in place in Washington for Mexican officials to negotiate with.

In First Trade War Shot, Mexico Cancels Sugar Export Permits To U.S.

The cancellations are the latest dispute of a years-long trade row between Mexico – the United States’ top foreign supplier of sugar – and its neighbor at a time when cane refiners are struggling with prices and tight supplies, U.S. industry sources said. The development also comes as ties between the United States and Mexico have frayed under U.S. President Donald Trump, who took office in January and wants to recast the North American Free Trade agreement as he sees the trade deal skewed to favor Mexico.

Monday’s letter made no mention of the political tensions between the twonations, instead saying that permits were “suspended” to comply with accords with the United States because the export limit for the six months up to March 31 was reached ahead of time, said Juan Diaz Mazadiego, director of foreign trade at Mexico’s Economy Ministry. The move affects 54 permits from 23 mills, although the amount of sugar affected was not mentioned. Existing permits would be reissued in April, the letter said.

U.S. sugar prices have soared since late last year when Washington said the 2014 deal that suspended large duties on sugar from Mexico after a trade investigation may not be working as intended. The U.S. domestic raw sugar contract on ICE Futures U.S. settled at 31.71 cents per lb on Tuesday, the highest in nearly five years. Nonetheless, with Mexico still responsible for over a third of US sugar imports, down from over half 4 years ago, any disruption in the supply-chain threatens to cause a transitory surge in US sugar prices.

In First Trade War Shot, Mexico Cancels Sugar Export Permits To U.S.

The letter also described as “absurd” an interpretation by “low-level” U.S. Commerce Department officials of a clause in so-called suspension agreements. The dispute centers on an interpretation of how the Mexican government issues export licenses to ensure supplies enter the United States at a regulated pace. The U.S. sugar industry late last year pressed the Commerce Department to withdraw from a 2014 trade agreement that sets prices and quota for U.S. imports of Mexican sugar, unless the deal can be renegotiated.

According to Richard Pasco, president of the Sweetener Users Association trade group, the Mexican license cancellation adds to protracted marketplace uncertainty. “We need adequate supplies and the lack of resolution is a problem,” he told Reuters in a phone interview on Tuesday.

Whether and how the Trump administration will respond to this pre-emptive trade dispute escalation, which could cause a spike domestic sugar prices, has yet to be seen. For now, the president appears to have his hands full with repealing Obamacare, which as we reported yesterday has been met with open rebellion by conservative groups, and will likely not have the required number of seats to pass the House while its passage in the Senate remains highly doubtful, in the process delaying the implementation of Trump’s tax -and trade – policies as well.

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DinkumThinkum

Apparently Mexico has never heard of Sugar Beets, Hawaii, or Brazil.

Bob

Or corn syrup a sweetener used in processed food/drinks with colossal US production as subsided by government agricultural policies.

Barba_Papa

American (Europeans too) could do with a little (a lot actually) less sugar. It might actually do them good.

Thegr8rambino

Why is it so addictive why does everything that tastes good have to be bad for us :((((

Barba_Papa

The universe has a perverse sense of humor?

Biologically probably because in nature high calorie foods are relatively rare, so its nature’s way of telling us if do we find some ‘eat up, this will sustain you in the days when there’s nothing to eat’.

Thegr8rambino

Haha yea that’s an interesting way of looking at it. I feel its more the universe sick sense of humor, or that some aliens messed with our DNA a long time ago and this was one of the results

dutchnational

Actually this is not a first punch by Mexico in a trade war withthe US.

It is Mexico taking a first volontary step to reduce the trade deficit of the US. It is a first step of the Mexicans to help the poor americans to regain jobs.

It is a first step to help the US reduce health expenses, necessary for Trumpcare.

It is a first step to show how stupid the US is if not in acting, then in talking.

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