Tuesday 24 December 2019

Savile Row braces for US tariffs / ‘Absolutely draconian’: British brands brace for Trump’s tariffs


OCTOBER 21, 2019
USA Tariffs

With the introduction of today's 25% tariff on the import of bespoke suits into the USA, an increase from the previous 12%, the UK’s bespoke tailors have undoubtedly been dragged into a wider, long-running trade dispute relating to the airline industry.

Imposition of this USA tariff comes at a particularly sensitive time. There’s a high degree of uncertainty amongst all UK businesses in all sectors about the short-term and long-term effects of Brexit, and now we have to contend with these new imposed tariffs in the US, a traditionally strong and stable market for British bespoke tailors.

Historically the USA has been a very strong market for Savile Row tailors; everyone from Presidents to Hollywood actors, musicians to businessmen have chosen to buy British bespoke tailoring for its superior quality. Savile Row's bespoke tailors have hosted trunk shows in US since half-way through the last century!

Curious then that Trump hasn't imposed tariffs on French or Italian tailors. Unlike previous Presidents, it may not come as a surprise to find out that Trump is not dressed by Savile Row!

William Skinner, Chairman of the Savile Row Bespoke Association and MD of Dege & Skinner said: "Since the WTO ruling at the start of this month, we’ve had a matter of days to prepare for what initially and unfortunately inevitably, will have a negative impact on our US business, and our US-based customers.

The imposition of a 25% price hike on bespoke suits is a significant amount of money for any business to merely absorb overnight, without consequence.


We're in discussion at government level to see how we can resolve this unfortunate trading situation in the interests of our business and most importantly, our long established, valued and loyal customer base in the US."


Savile Row braces for US tariffs
BY GEORGE ARNETT
8 OCTOBER 2019

Caught up in a dispute over aviation subsidies, Savile Row tailors and Scottish knitwear brands are staring down 25 per cent duties on £35 million worth of US exports.

Key takeaways:

Savile Row suit makers and Scottish woollen mills will face additional tariffs of 25 per cent on their US exports from 18 October. The move is part of a dispute over aviation subsidies between the US government and the EU.
The US is a key export market for these firms, which are likely to raise prices.
Italian and French fashion houses escaped sanction, leaving the UK textile industry complaining of an unlevel playing field.
Savile Row suits are about to get even more expensive for US shoppers.

Tailors and Scottish knitwear firms were among those left reeling last week after the US government announced that 25 per cent tariffs would soon be applied to a significant portion of their product range upon export to the US.

The Trump administration is attempting to recoup the $7.5 billion it won in a 15-year-long trade dispute with the EU over illegal subsidies to European aviation firm Airbus through a series of punitive duty rises. Among the list of British-exported clothing items affected include most types of men’s suits, cashmere sweaters, women’s anoraks and pyjamas.

The measures will affect £35 million in exports, per the UK Fashion and Textile Association (UKFT). Around 23 per cent of exports from British luxury brands in 2017 headed to the US, with a majority of firms seeing it as the primary market for future growth, according to Walpole.

The tariffs take effect at a particularly bad time for UK firms, which are still grappling with the possibility of a no-deal exit from the EU later this month. UK manufacturing activity in August fell to its lowest levels since 2012. The British Fashion Council recently calculated that a no-deal Brexit could cost the fashion industry nearly £1 billion per year in lost revenue.

Savile Row will be particularly badly squeezed by the new tariffs, as the US is its most important export market. Wall Street bankers have long had a taste for British-made bespoke suits, which retail for between £2,500 and £30,000.

“We’re better known in New York than we are in Newcastle, so we’ve always had a very strong American presence,” says Sean Dixon, co-founder of Savile Row tailor Richard James. The company opened its first store in the US at the end of last year and has plans to expand further in the country.

Although Richard James plans to absorb the costs where it can, the scale of the tariff increases means that some prices hikes are inevitable. “There’s not much we can do. We’ve just got to work out what we can do to mitigate it as best as possible without damaging the business,” Dixon says.

Many of Savile Row’s occupants have been in business for decades if not centuries, but they are hardly invulnerable. Hardy Amies, founded in 1946, went bust earlier this year. James Sleater is the founder of the youngest brand on Savile Row, Cad and the Dandy. He says it took three and a half years to find a space on the central London stretch before his brand opened in 2008, but now several empty storefronts are available.

Sleater also opened a store in the US last year as a “hedge against Brexit”. Sleater now expects that many Savile Row firms will have to encourage US businessmen to come to London to get their suits made and develop a greater presence in markets like China and Russia.

Why them?
Come 18 October, Scotch whisky and European cheeses will also face duty increases. Not all of the items on the list drawn up by the US Trade Representative (USTR) are particularly lucrative, but many of them are headline-grabbing. Taking aim at such iconic products gains outsize media impact.

“The selected products reflect a variety of considerations, many of which were raised through the notice and comment process, including the potential impact on the US economy,” a spokesperson for the USTR writes by email. “USTR also considered the likelihood that tariffs on certain products would be most likely to encourage the EU finally to abandon its harmful WTO-inconsistent subsidies for Airbus.”

Many in the British fashion industry think the tariffs have targeted them unfairly. Italian and French tailors and cashmere manufacturers will not face similar 25 per cent duty increases.

“The UK is the only country facing tariffs on our fashion and textile exports so if these tariffs do come in, our companies will be at a massive disadvantage to our European competitors,” Adam Mansell, CEO of UKFT, writes via email.


One company that has withstood several trade disputes between the US and Britain is Johnstons of Elgin, a Scottish woollen mill founded in 1797. The US is the third-biggest export market for the company, and the new duties are likely to apply to around half of the products it sells there. Aware of the potential ramifications of the US government move, the US country manager for the firm made representations to Congress before the tariffs were announced.

Simon Cotton, CEO of Johnstons, says the majority of the products it is sending to the US this year have already been shipped and that the company will fulfil any orders currently made at the price they were sold. Given the ongoing negotiations, that may buy Johnstons a bit more wiggle room than other less prepared companies. Its US business has expanded by 40 per cent in the last year, and Johnstons has no plans to pull back its investment just yet.

“We’re waiting to see what happens because these things can get delayed or cancelled,” Cotton says.

Indeed, the UK government is hoping to resolve this dispute quickly. A spokesperson from the Department for International Trade wrote: “Resorting to tariffs is not in the interests of the UK, EU or US. The UK is working closely with the US, EU and European partners to support a negotiated settlement to the Airbus and Boeing disputes.”

But for the firms affected, the tariffs are another big unknown to contend with because of geopolitical tensions that lie beyond their control. “We’re being punished for a big old war about aeroplanes,” says Helen Brocklebank, CEO of Walpole. “I don’t think brands that put so much into the country should have to deal with that.”



‘Absolutely draconian’: British brands brace for Trump’s tariffs

UK expected to be hit hardest by Trump’s latest tariffs after the 25% tax on $7.5bn of goods is set to start against the EU

Edward Helmore in New York
Fri 11 Oct 2019 06.00 BSTLast modified on Thu 17 Oct 2019 13.23 BST

There is a corner of Manhattan’s Greenwich Avenue that is forever England – and right now it’s bloody angry.

“This is absolutely draconian, ridiculous,” huffed Sean Kavanagh-Dowsett, co-owner of the restaurant, Tea & Sympathy, the adjoining general products store and its neighbor, A Salt & Battery, a fish and chip shop, that has been serving all things British to locals and expats for 29 years.

Behind a store front of Union Jack flags, a red phone box and other symbols of Britishness, Kavanagh-Dowsett is bracing for the impact of a 25% tariff on $7.5bn of EU goods that is set to start on 18 October , the latest salvo in the Trump administration’s trade war with the European Union.

Kavanagh-Dowsett went through the products that would be hit, including Jammie Dodgers, Scottish shortbread, clotted cream and Irish bacon. “It’s going to impact us, and as always it’s going to get passed on to customers.”

The latest tariffs follow a World Trade Organization (WTO) ruling that the European Union unfairly subsidized the aerospace giant Airbus but it is just the latest in a seemingly neverending spat over tariffs that started even before Donald Trump’s election.

Kavanagh-Dowsett had few kind words for Trump.

“I think because he lives in this rarified world where he’s never had to think about the cost of anything, because he doesn’t pay his bills, he’s detached from reality and doesn’t really understand the cost of anything,” he said.

The UK is the country expected to be hardest hit by Trump’s latest tariffs, even though the UK is still in the midst of a messy and protracted exit from the European Union. And it’s not just scones and cream that will be affected.

Among those speaking out against the tariffs have been textile and clothing makers, who face the raised duties on wool and cashmere.

The trade group Walpole, which represents more than 250 luxury British brands including Alexander McQueen, Burberry and Tanqueray gin, voiced “deep frustration” at Trump administration’s tariffs on goods including whisky, liqueur and wine; cashmere; bed linen and men and women’s clothing.

“It is of particular concern that these tariffs come at a time when there is already so much political and economic uncertainty,” said a spokesperson, noting that 24% of British luxury goods are destined for North America and that a majority of firms see it as the primary market for future growth.

According to the group, two-thirds of its members name the US as their priority export market.

“To penalize businesses that are in significant expansion phases, looking for new routes into the US and creating products American consumers desire – Johnston’s of Elgin cashmere, Peter Reed bed linen, Savile Row suits, English wine and numerous Scotch whiskies – will likely impact consumer choice as well as business growth.

Overall, the British luxury sector, which employs 160,000 workers, is bracing for new pressure from the tariffs on top of a projected loss of £6.8bn in revenue in the event of no-deal Brexit.

The fashion and textile sector, itself anticipating a £1bn-a-year loss in revenue from a no-deal Brexit, will see exports worth £35m affected by the tariffs, according to the UK Fashion and Textile Association (UKFT).

Savile Row’s tailors, a favorite of Wall Street bankers with several outposts in Manhattan, are expected to be especially badly hit, in part because French and Italian competitors are not affected by the additional levies. If UK manufacturers were hoping the US would provide a hedge against Brexit, the opposite is now true.

London’s Savile Row tailors are expected to be hit hard by Trump’s latest tariffs

The Department for International Trade in London, which is requesting an exception on British goods arguing that the Airbus trade infringements were not related to UK manufacturing, said in a statement:

“Resorting to tariffs is not in the interests of the UK, EU or US. The UK is working closely with the US, EU and European partners to support a negotiated settlement to the Airbus and Boeing disputes,” said a spokesman.

Another of the industries likely to feel the hit is the cashmere industry. The US imported $362m worth of cashmere sweaters last year. Bruce Gifford of the e-commerce brand Naked Cashmere told Women’s Wear Daily the cost of the tariffs would almost certainly be passed on to the consumer.

“I think anybody that in the long run says that they’re not going to be raising prices is just lying to you. You have to make a certain amount of money to stay in business,” he told trade paper Women’s Wear Daily.

But the US trade representative, Robert Lighthizer, has defended the measures, accusing Europe of “providing massive subsidies to Airbus that have seriously injured the US aerospace industry and our workers”.

Now the row looks certain to escalate. The European commissioner for trade, Cecilia Malmström, warned the US countermeasures would be push “the EU into a situation where we will have no other option than to do the same”.

According to Ana Boata, European economist at trade credit insurer Euler Hermes, the countries hardest hit by US tariffs will be the UK, with annual losses of $1.4bn, followed by France, Germany, Spain and Ireland.

“We estimate the new sanctions will result in an $8.6bn annual export loss for the EU,” she wrote in a report. And Boata predicts the Europeans are unlikely to accept the tariffs passively. “We expect Brussels to retaliate with duties on up $20bn of goods and a decision from the WTO is expected next March,” she added.

Back at Tea & Sympathy, Kavanagh-Dowsett reeled off his favorite British brands that will be affected, including the shoemakers Grenson and John Lobb. Two years ago, the store initiated a PR war with Hershey’s after the confectioner insisted they sell US versions of its most popular UK chocolate bars.

In that instance, Kavanagh-Dowsett said, the chocolate maker backed down after receiving an avalanche of bad publicity. He said the store was gearing up for another campaign. “We’re British for a living at this stage. Just the hike in chocolate is going to impact so many people,” he said.

• This article was amended on 17 October 2019 because an earlier version referred to a 25% tariff on $7.5bn of UK goods, when EU goods was meant. This has been corrected.

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