China's soybean shift reveals the fatal flaw in Team Trump's trade policy

Once supply chains reorganize, they don't come back. American farmers are learning this lesson the hard way.

In 2024, China bought $12.6 billion in US soybeans. This year: $0.

The collapse exposes a fundamental misunderstanding of how modern trade works. While Washington treats soybeans as a bargaining chip, Beijing recognized them as what they actually are: an intermediate input in a tightly integrated agricultural-industrial supply chain. Crushing facilities process soybeans into animal feed and oil, sustaining livestock production and food security. Disrupt one node, and the entire system reorganizes—permanently.

Twenty years ago, China learned this lesson the hard way when it lost control of its soybean-crushing capacity in 2004. It spent two decades ensuring that vulnerability would never recur. The US is now discovering the same principle from the opposite side.

The economics of concentration

The math is unforgiving. China imports 100 million to 105 million tons of soybeans annually, accounting for 60% of global trade. US farmers cannot replicate that demand elsewhere. More than 90 countries export soybeans, but Brazil, the United States, and Argentina dominate. For China, a concentrated buyer, diversifying supply sources is straightforward. For dispersed US sellers, finding equivalent markets is impossible.

Trump's 2018 tariffs accelerated China's diversification, but the infrastructure was already in place. Chinese investment had financed the ports, railways, and logistics networks moving South American soybeans to Asian markets. When tariffs disrupted US-China trade, the supply chain rerouted. Beijing's retaliatory tariffs made American soybeans prohibitively expensive, and Chinese buyers did not return.

US farmers typically sell more than half their soybean exports between October and December, after Brazil's February-March harvest season ends. If Chinese buyers continue to be absent, the upcoming quarter will inflict severe damage.

The Argentina paradox

The contradictions in the US trade and tariff strategy crystallize in Argentina. Washington recently provided Buenos Aires with roughly $20 billion in financial aid to prevent it from drifting into China's orbit. Argentina responded by scrapping export taxes, instantly making its soybeans more competitive, and then sold them to China.

The episode reveals how the US treats trade as a bilateral issue, whereas in reality, it operates multilaterally.

Tariffs may protect final assembled goods and industries with high switching costs, but they backfire catastrophically for intermediate goods in flexible supply chains where buyers easily substitute suppliers. The current Team Trump US trade policy fails to recognize this essential distinction.

The post-Brexit parallel

The parallels with the United Kingdom's post-Brexit trade policy are striking. Both strategies feature grand rhetoric about sovereignty and leverage, yet they ignore how complex supply chains adapt to disruption. Both overestimate their indispensability and underestimate adjustment costs.

Jun Du, professor of economics at Aston University, frames the problem precisely: "Once supply chains reorganize, they never return to their previous form."

The lesson

In modern trade, control over supply-chain nodes matters more than control over raw materials.

China lost its crushing capacity in 2004 and restructured its entire import strategy to prevent recurrence. The United States is losing access to its largest export market because it failed to understand that supply chains, once reorganized, don't revert simply because tariffs change.

American farmers are paying the price for that miscalculation.

-Marc

US-China trade war 2.0: Why this time is different

The US-China trade conflict just entered dangerous new territory, and the warning signs are flashing red across multiple fronts. If you've been treating tariff headlines as background noise, it's time to pay attention. The latest escalation carries implications that will reshape strategic planning for the next 18-24 months.

President Trump's announcement of 100% tariffs on Chinese goods, triggered by Beijing's restrictions on rare earth mineral exports, marks a qualitative shift in economic confrontation. China's commerce ministry responded with defiance, declaring it's "not afraid to fight." Markets reacted swiftly—the S&P 500 shed more than 2% as investors repriced risk. Meanwhile, diplomatic channels remain frozen, with Trump threatening to cancel his scheduled meeting with Xi Jinping.

Previous trade disputes centered on traditional manufactured goods and agricultural products. This conflict targets the circulatory system of modern manufacturing: rare earth elements essential for semiconductors, electric vehicles, defense systems, and consumer electronics. 

China's dominance in rare earth processing—controlling roughly 70% of global supply—gives Beijing asymmetric leverage. This isn't just another round of tit-for-tat tariffs; it's economic coercion aimed at critical infrastructure.

The automotive sector illustrates the real-world impact. Detroit's Big Three are projecting $7 billion in combined tariff-related losses for 2025. One industry executive didn't mince words, calling the situation "existential." When established manufacturers with century-old business models use that language, it signals structural disruption, not cyclical turbulence.

Here's what should concern every CEO: Financial Times research warns of "cracks in the foundation" despite surface-level economic resilience. The US economy has appeared to weather previous tariff rounds, but economists gathering at the IMF and World Bank meetings are questioning whether we're "living on borrowed time." Strong consumer spending and employment figures can mask deteriorating business investment and supply chain degradation—problems that compound quietly before manifesting suddenly.

China's economy presents its own vulnerabilities. Growth was already decelerating before this latest escalation, creating a scenario where neither superpower has much cushion for miscalculation. Think of two boxers, both already fatigued, deciding to escalate rather than clinch. The risk of systemic damage increases exponentially.

Bloomberg reports that Trump and Vice President Vance have "opened the door" to potential deals with China. But optimism should be tempered. The fundamental contradiction—deep economic interdependence paired with strategic competition—remains unresolved. As a Washington Post editorial aptly noted, this resembles "a couple headed for divorce but still cohabitating."

First, scenario planning must now include sustained trade conflict through 2026. The days of assuming diplomatic breakthroughs are over. Second, supply chain resilience is no longer a cost center—it's a competitive advantage. Third, China exposure requires explicit board-level governance and regular stress testing. Fourth, capital allocation decisions should factor in heightened geopolitical risk premiums.

The cheap globalization era has ended. 

The question facing leadership teams: Has your strategy evolved accordingly, or are you still operating with yesterday's assumptions in tomorrow's reality?

How is your organization navigating this new landscape?

Enjoy the ride + Plan accordingly.

-Marc

The media trust crisis that should alarm every leader

A Gallup survey finds American confidence in mass media has collapsed to 31%.

This number is a historic low with profound implications for anyone leading in business or government. The latest numbers, from a survey conducted from September 2 to 16, 2025, mark the first time this Gallup measurement has fallen below 35%.

This isn't a partisan talking point.

When Gallup began measuring trust in news media in the 1970s, between 68% and 72% of Americans expressed confidence in reporting.

Today, trust has cratered across the political spectrum: Republican confidence sits at 12%, independents at 27%, and even Democrats have declined to 54%. When two-thirds of Americans actively distrust the institutions meant to inform public discourse, we face a crisis in our information infrastructure.

The generational data is particularly sobering. Only 38% of Americans 65 and older trust media, while younger cohorts register at 31% or below. As demographics shift, institutional credibility is likely to deteriorate further without significant intervention.

Top six insights:

1. Trust in media has reached a historic low: At 31%, this marks the lowest confidence level since Gallup began tracking this metric in the 1970s, when trust ranged from 68-72%.

2. Republican confidence has collapsed to 12%: This represents a dramatic decline from already-low levels, and Republican trust hasn't exceeded 21% since 2015.

3. Democratic trust has also declined significantly: Only 54% of Democrats now express confidence in the media, down from historical highs and representing a concerning erosion even among the media's most supportive demographic.

4. A generational divide persists, but everyone's trust is declining: While 38% of adults aged 65+ trust the media compared to 31% or less in younger age groups, even older Americans show substantially lower trust than in previous decades.

5. Two-thirds of Americans are actively distrustful: 67% of US adults express either "not very much" confidence (36%) or "none at all" (31%) in news media, demonstrating widespread skepticism rather than neutral indifference.

6. The decline is universal across all partisan groups: While partisan gaps remain significant, confidence has reached new lows among Republicans, independents, and Democrats alike, indicating this is a systemic issue affecting the entire media landscape.

Why this matters:

Communication becomes nearly impossible when your stakeholders don't trust information sources. Market-moving news faces immediate skepticism. Corporate reputation management operates in an environment where traditional media channels lack persuasive power. Crisis communication strategies built on earned media are fundamentally compromised.

For Capitol Hill staffers, this helps explain why constituents are increasingly rejecting expert consensus and official messaging. For CEOs, it underscores the importance of direct communication channels and authentic engagement more than ever, for private equity executives evaluating portfolio companies, media strategy and stakeholder trust should be top priorities in due diligence.

The challenge isn't simply fixing media. It's recognizing that every leader must now build trust directly with their stakeholders. Your voice, your transparency, and your accountability matter more than any press release ever will.

Access the full Gallup survey here:

-Marc