At US biggest retail show, China question never goes away for Walmart, Costco and others

Tariffs may ebb and supply chains may detour, but US shoppers and giants like Walmart and Amazon still rely heavily on Chinese goods. At the National Retail Federation (NRF) showcase, attendees expressed more optimism for the year ahead.

The National Retail Federation (NRF) showcase event, held in this nation of shopaholics, saw some 42,000 attendees descend on a space equivalent to five football fields, as corporate booths competed for attention with wine bars, talking robots, couches and extra thick carpeting for clients’ sore feet.

“I feel more optimistic for this year,” said Teagan Pollard, an IT expert with TP Industries, which sells vaping equipment from China. “The economy and tariffs have been rough. But something’s got to break, hopefully in the right direction.”

“Since the beginning of 2025, people were apprehensive about the way tariffs would play out,” said John Martin, a consultant with supply-chain software company Infios. “In 2026, people have changed their supply chains. So there’s less apprehension.”

That has put a spotlight on the American consumer, which chugs along through thick and thin, the secret sauce powering the world’s largest economy. Household consumption accounts for two-thirds of America’s US$31 trillion economy dominated by citizens who gleefully spend every last dollar – and often more – thanks to easy credit. Keywords like Bangladesh, Trump, Target, Amazon, Chinese, Greenland, Mexico, China, India, Walmart, Beijing, American consumer, El Salvador, New York, and Costco highlight efforts to diversify supply chains, yet China's influence persists.

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Furniture prices climb since 2020 as new tariffs and costs add pressure

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Prices for key furniture categories have risen since the pandemic, even as they trail overall inflation. Fresh U.S. tariffs on wood products and broad import duties could push costs higher, industry figures and federal data indicate.

Walmart, a leading omnichannel retailer, relies on its Everyday Low Prices strategy to maintain customer trust and drive growth through integrated eCommerce and physical stores. However, new tariff uncertainties pose operational challenges due to the company's heavy reliance on imports and foreign manufacturing. Recent actions by the U.S. Supreme Court and the Trump administration have heightened these concerns for Walmart's business outlook.

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As Donald Trump's first year of unpredictable tariffs drew to a close in 2025, major technology firms largely acquiesced rather than resisted, opting for deals and donations amid rising costs and legal uncertainties. From Apple's golden gift to the US securing stakes in chipmakers, the industry navigated a chaotic landscape of threats and negotiations. With Supreme Court challenges looming, the sector braces for more disruptions in 2026.

Das Wirtschaftsheft von Fenalco zeigt einen Rückgang des Geschäftsimmobilismus für 2026, mit nur 34 % der Befragten, die Verbesserungen in ihren Betrieben in den nächsten sechs Monaten erwarten. Während November durch Black Days Umsatzsteigerungen verzeichnete, belastet die Unsicherheit beim Konsum den Handelssektor. Der Bericht hebt Umwandlungen in Einkaufszentren und Bedrohungen durch Plattformen wie Shein und Temu hervor.

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Chinese contract drug makers including WuXi AppTec, WuXi Biologics and WuXi XDC face a less certain long-term revenue outlook as US pharmaceutical companies reshore production amid US-China tensions. Cui Cui, head of healthcare research for Asia at Jefferies, said earnings visibility for 2026 and 2027 remains strong due to order backlogs, but longer-term order growth lacks clarity.

Geopolitical tensions leading to Beijing's travel advisories caused a sharp drop in duty-free sales at major Japanese department stores in December. This decline underscores Japan's vulnerability to shifts in Chinese tourism, a vital engine for economic recovery.

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Japan's exports grew 3.1% in 2025 from the previous year, led by electronic parts and food, according to a Finance Ministry report. Despite a decline in shipments to the United States—the first since the pandemic—due to tariffs from President Donald Trump, exports to Europe and Asia excluding China remained strong.

 

 

 

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