American mattress makers welcomed the U.S. government’s firm response to allegations of Chinese mattress dumping with new tariffs — but it may not have been the king-size response some had hoped for.
What Happened
The Commerce Department said Wednesday that Chinese exporters have dumped mattresses in the United States and ordered the collection of tariffs of about 75 percent on mattresses from most producers. The duties will be as high as 1,731 percent for a number of mattress firms that didn’t participate in the U.S. investigation.
Why It's Important
The government estimates that more than $435 million worth in mattresses are imported from China.
"We are thrilled that Commerce has confirmed that Chinese producers are relying on significant dumping margins to unfairly compete in the US market with margins as high as 1,731.75 percent," said Yohai Baisburd, the lead counsel to the U.S. mattress companies that petitioned the government for the decision.
U.S. Department of Commerce Issues Affirmative Preliminary Antidumping Duty Determination on Mattresses from #China https://t.co/TpL3ctKbSe @TradeGov pic.twitter.com/lbIF4kc4YF
— U.S. Commerce Dept. (@CommerceGov) May 29, 2019The companies who sought the action include Tempur Sealy International Inc TPX, Leggett & Platt Inc. LEG and several privately held American mattress firms.
The new duties are separate from the 25-percent "Section 301" duties the government previously imposed on a wide range of Chinese goods, including mattresses.
What's Next
The dumping case technically won’t be final until November, but the Commerce Department said federal officials will begin collecting cash deposits from importers before then.
The Commerce Department applied dumping margins of 38.56 to 84.64 percent for two specific Chinese respondents, Healthcare Co., Ltd. and Zinus (Xiamen) Inc., and applied dumping margins of 74.65 percent to 33 other companies that U.S. officials said demonstrated independence from the Chinese government.
The 1,731.75-percent margin was applied to all other Chinese producers, though agency officials didn’t say how many mattresses were shipped into the U.S. in each category.
While the industry welcomed the move, at least one analyst said it wasn’t as strong as some wanted.
Keith Hughes of SunTrust Robinson Humphrey told Furniture Today that the rates “will level the playing field” but are “not the knock-out blow the industry was looking for, in our view, given prices on Amazon.”
In addition to mattresses, the Commerce Department also announced new dumping finds against Chinese beer keg makers and applied additional tariffs to them as well.
Price Action
Tempur Sealy shares were up 1.09 percent at $63.73 at the close Thursday, while Leggett & Platt shares were down 0.95 percent at $36.48.
Related Links:
Wedbush Remains Bullish On Tempur Sealy After Checks Indicate Good Start For Tempur Breeze
A Tempur Sealy-Mattress Firm Reunion? Raymond James Says It's Increasingly Likely
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.