(Bloomberg) -- The first round of Chinese sanctions to hit US oil were received with a whimper, and traders are speculating that the move is unlikely to rattle American exports of crude. Most Read from Bloomberg State Farm Seeks Emergency California Rate Hike After Fires New York’s First ‘Passive House’ School Is a Model of Downtown Density NYC’s Newest Transit Leader Builds a Worker-Driven Strategy When French Communists Went on a Brutalist Building Boom Historic London Elevator Faces Last Stop in Labour’s Housing Push After China hit crude purchases from the US with 10% retaliatory tariffs, the futures market took an initial dip — but most of those losses have already been recovered. The reason for the lackluster response is that US oil exports to China have recently taken a backseat to other buyers that are snapping up more barrels. Last year, China imported close to 180,000 barrels of US oil a day, accounting for less than 5% of America’s total oil exports. The volume can be easily absorbed by other refiners in Europe and Asia, including South Korea and Japan, according to traders. South Korea is already the second-largest buyer of US crude, taking close to half a million barrels a day. US exports to China, which peaked at roughly 450,000 barrels a day in 2020, have fizzled as the Asian country struggles to revive its economy and as its shift to electric vehicles dims demand for motor fuels. China’s importers have also turned to other suppliers. Preliminary data shows that China took 40% less US crude in 2024 while ramping up purchases from Russia and Iran before the latest round of sanctions disrupted flows. As China seeks to continue to replace US oil, it may tap into supplies from places like the Middle East, Brazil and Guyana. The Chinese tariffs enter into effect on Feb. 10. After Trump gave a last-minute reprieve on levies to both Canada and Mexico, though, President Xi Jinping may seek negotiations as well. While with Mexico and Canada chances are that tariffs will be scrapped altogether, the same can’t be said of China, according to Vikas Dwivedi, Macquarie Group’s global energy strategist. “Tariffs on China will likely be implemented because China is seen more like a trade adversary, unlike Mexico and Canada, which are seen as allies,” Dwivedi said. --With assistance from Mariana Durao. (Updates with analyst quote in penultimate and last paragraphs.) Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek Elon Musk Inside the Treasury Department Payment System Amazon and SpaceX Want In on India’s Satellite Internet Market The NFL’s Flawed DEI Program Still Beats What Most Companies Are Doing The Internet Almost Killed Barnes & Noble, Then Saved It Indy Pass, the Anti-Vail Seasonal Ski Ticket, Is Gaining Fans ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. View Comments
China Tariffs on US Oil Come as Exports Have Sunk From Peak
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