TRADE · EXPORTS · POLICY

Tariff Heat Check: Sector Winners/Losers from US Tariff Hike

Textiles, engineering, and IT services exposure—who’s most vulnerable, and how to hedge.
By bataSutra Editorial · September 2, 2025
In this piece:
  • What changed in US trade policy (and why India gets pulled in)
  • Winners & losers across textiles, engineering goods, and IT services
  • Buyer playbook: re-quote vs. re-route vs. re-spec
  • CFO checklist and template mail for US clients

The short

  • Context: The US has raised/expanded tariffs on certain China-origin goods under Section 301 and tightened forced-labor enforcement (UFLPA). Spillovers hit Indian supply chains where China-origin inputs or high-priority UFLPA sectors (e.g., cotton) are embedded. (Illustrative; see sources below.)
  • Winners: India-based exporters that can replace China supply on tariffed HS codes and prove clean provenance (traceable cotton, non-Xinjiang polysilicon/Al/PVC components).
  • Vulnerable: Apparel/textiles with cotton provenance gaps; engineering goods with China-content BOM; services exposed to US procurement cuts even if “tariff-free”.

Exposure map (illustrative)

Sector (HS/Service)US share of revenueChina-content in BOMUFLPA riskTariff pass-throughNet effect
Textiles & Apparel (61–63)Fill %Low–Med (yarn/fabric, trims)High (cotton provenance)Low–Med (price-sensitive)Mixed: winner if provenance clean; risk if tracing weak
Engineering Goods (84–85)Fill %Med–High (electronics, castings)Low–Med (PVC/Al sources)Med (B2B contracts)Risk where sub-assemblies/PCBs are China-origin
IT ServicesFill %N/A (services)LowHigh (time & material/SoW resets)Indirect risk via US capex/Opex deferrals & vendor consolidation
Replace Fill % with your disclosure; treat table as a worksheet for investor notes.

Winners & losers — by lens

Likely winners

  • Apparel exporters with traceable cotton + digital CoO; diversified trims (non-China).
  • Engineering firms with localized sub-assemblies and alternate BOMs (Taiwan/ASEAN/EU inputs).
  • IT service providers tied to cost-takeout/automation programs (counter-cyclical budgets).

Vulnerable pockets

  • Micro/small apparel vendors with weak provenance or Xinjiang-linked risk (detentions, delays).
  • Engineering exporters with China-dependent PCBs/castings and no alternates priced in.
  • Services exposed to US procurement pauses in tariffed end-markets (EVs/solar/steel value chains).

Buyer playbook (what to send US clients)

  1. Re-quote: Provide dual BOM pricing—status quo vs. China-free inputs with lead times.
  2. Re-route: If routing via third countries, ensure substantial transformation meets rules—avoid simple trans-shipment.
  3. Re-spec: Offer spec changes (yarn count, alloy grade, component swaps) that preserve function but de-risk tariffs.

CFO checklist (copy/paste)

  • Provenance Cotton trace → ginner → spinner → knitter/dyer → garment (retain docs; map to POs).
  • BOM alt. Pre-approve non-China components with clients; lock second-source SLAs.
  • HTS codes Validate correct HS/HTS classification; assess tariff-line sensitivity.
  • Contracts Add tariff change pass-through and UFLPA audit-cooperation clauses.
  • Buffers Build 2–4 week buffer for UFLPA holds; plan safety stock at US DCs.

Template note to US buyers

Subject: Tariff & UFLPA Update — Options to Keep Your Supply Chain On-Time

We’ve completed a tariff/UFLPA review for your programs. We can (a) maintain current specs with tariff pass-through, or (b) shift to alternate BOMs free of China-origin inputs with [X]-week lead time. Cotton provenance documents and audit trail are attached. Please advise your preferred path so we can hold production slots.