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Maersk estimates that effective US tariffs currently average 21%

Maersk, a Danish shipping company, estimates that companies pay an average of 21% in U.S. import duties per container, according to the Danish shipping company on Wednesday. This is less than half what it was before Washington stopped its tariffs.

Maersk stated in its regular update on the global market that, at its height, just after President Donald Trump announced tariffs against almost all U.S. Trading Partners, the average effective rate reached 54%. The estimate was based upon the container-weighted average effective tariff rate of the group.

The Trump administration is urging more than a dozen of its major trading partners to come to an agreement with it by the July 9 deadline in order to prevent import tariffs from increasing.

In April, Trump announced a 90-day suspension of the steep levies that he announced a week before and sent global financial markets into turmoil.

Maersk stated that "the whole world is on tariff-watch in July and August when various deadlines of potential trade agreements with the U.S. are about to expire."

The report added that "the outcome of these talks will, of course, colour global trade as well as consumer sentiment in months to come."

The company reported that it saw a robust growth in container demand during the first half year.

The report said that "what happened was not entirely unexpected and customers did advance orders before the tariff announcements."

Maersk's large U.S. clients have reduced their import dependence on China over the past few years.

It said that many apparel and fashion clients have reached a single-digit China dependence.

It added that "other commodities, such as home improvements, have a higher level of Chinese production due to the nature and quality of the product." Reporting by Jacob GronholtPedersen and Louise Rasmussen, Editing by Anna Ringstrom & Emelia SitholeMatarise

(source: Reuters)