Southeast Asia rushes to avert tariff pain by enticing Trump
Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia have said in recent days that they’re open to negotiations over the “reciprocal tariffs” Trump announced this week, while Singapore, a finance and trade hub, said it didn’t plan to strike back

Countries in Southeast Asia, major sources of exports to the US, are angling to accommodate President Donald Trump rather than retaliate against his punishing tariffs, seeking to keep exports flowing to one of their biggest markets.
Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia have said in recent days that they're open to negotiations over the "reciprocal tariffs" Trump announced this week, while Singapore, a finance and trade hub, said it didn't plan to strike back.
The offers come as nations worldwide weigh how to respond to Trump's decision to slap tariffs from 10% to as high as 50% on every country. Since his announcement, trillions of dollars in market value have been wiped out globally and triggered widespread recession alarms. Southeast Asia's offers to negotiate contrast with China's immediate retaliation, while the European Union is preparing its own countermeasures if talks fail.
Vietnam has been trying to avoid severe tariffs since Trump re-entered the White House in January. Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh said he'd golf with him at Mar-a-Lago if it would help resolve trade issues. The government has moved to placate the US by cutting tariffs on American cars, ethanol and liquefied natural gas.
Trump has indicated his openness to agreements if countries offer something "phenomenal."
"The tariffs give us great power to negotiate," Trump said aboard Air Force One on Thursday, adding that "every country has called us."
Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said on Friday that he'd spoken with leaders of Indonesia, the Philippines, Brunei and Singapore "to exchange views and coordinate a collective response" to the US tariffs, according to a post on X.
"Malaysia remains committed to fostering consensus among member states and upholding the principles of fairness and equity in all trade negotiations," Anwar said. Malaysia is the current chair of the Asean group of 10 Southeast Asian countries whose economy ministers will meet next week to deliberate broader implications of the tariffs.
The Malaysian trade ministry has denied a US claim that it imposes a tariff of 47% on American imports and said it will continue to engage with Washington to find a fair solution to trade issues.
Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said on Friday that the likelihood of a full-blown global trade war is growing.
"More and more countries will act based on narrow self-interest and use force or pressure to get their way," he said. "This is the harsh reality of our world today."
Vietnam's leader To Lam has offered to drop tariffs on US goods and heighten imports, in order to dodge a 46% tariff, Trump said. The American president described a call between them as "very productive" and indicated that the two leaders would meet.
It's as yet unclear if lowering tariffs on the US would be enough for Vietnam. The country's manufacturing sector has boomed since the first Trump term, when companies accelerated a shift in manufacturing out of China to avoid trade restrictions. Trump's effort to target Vietnam, as well as Cambodia and Thailand, has upended that strategy.
Hints that Vietnam could get entangled in Trump's trade clashes began in 2019, when he accused the country of taking advantage of the US "even worse than China." Vietnam has been among Asia's fastest growing economies, expanding 7.1% last year. It also has one of the biggest trade surpluses with the US, about $100 billion, just behind massive trading partners such as China, Mexico and Canada.
Cambodia, among the poorest countries to be affected and facing the highest US tariff of any Asian economy, at 49%, promised to slash its own duties on US goods and promote their imports.
"Cambodia is a serving a useful purpose, smoking out the level of negotiating ambition of the United States," said Simon Evenett, founder of the St. Gallen Endowment for Prosperity Through Trade, a group based in Switzerland that tracks trade policies. "If the Americans push too hard, they'll scare away other bigger fish."
At the same time, Indonesia, which faces a 32% US tariff, pledged to ease trade rules and is sending a delegation to Washington next week.
Hints of a deal with Vietnam buoyed the stocks of sneaker and apparel makers in the US, which have become increasingly reliant on the country given its skilled and low-waged labor, infrastructure and trade agreements with the US.
Shares of Nike Inc. and Lululemon Athletica Inc. soared, while household appliance maker SharkNinja Inc. and home furnishings company RH reversed or pared earlier losses.
About half of all Nike brand shoes and 39% of Adidas shoes are made in Vietnam, according to regulatory filings, with the country being the largest supplier of footwear for both companies.
Analysts from Jefferies estimate that only about 2.5% of the US apparel market and 1% of footwear are produced domestically. Vietnam exported $44 billion in textiles last year, with the US as its largest market, according to the nation's textile and apparel association.