EPISODE · Dec 19, 2025 · 15 MIN
[Cindy's Version] The Manuscript of Trade in 2025
from Simply Trade · host Global Training Center
Host: Cindy Allen Published: December 19 Length: ~15 minutes Presented by: Global Training Center In this year-end “Cindy’s Version” of Simply Trade, Cindy Allen, CEO of TradeForce Multiplier, uses Taylor Swift’s “The Manuscript” to frame a look back at 2025’s trade story. She recaps the latest developments—from the Court of International Trade’s surprise ruling on the Costco injunction and IEPA liquidation concerns to a new Switzerland–Liechtenstein trade deal and CBP’s long‑awaited “stacking” spreadsheet. Cindy also highlights the U.S. government’s announcement that it collected 200 billion dollars in new tariffs this year, and what that really means for importers’ bottom lines. Using “The Manuscript” as a metaphor, Cindy walks through the big chapters of this year in trade: unprecedented use of authorities like IEPA and 232, the temporary shock of 145% China tariffs, the demise of de minimis, a jump in effective average duty rates, and a surge in complexity around stacking, derivative tariffs, and country‑of‑melt reporting. She also touches on ACE edit‑check gaps, compressed implementation timelines, expanded ACAS data requirements, and pilots like the Global Business Identifier that signal a move toward progressive filing and deeper supply chain visibility. Cindy closes by reflecting on the vital role of trade associations, community, and collaboration—and shares her hope that next year’s “manuscript” reads more like a romantic comedy than an action thriller. What You’ll Learn in This Episode What the CIT’s ruling in the Costco/IEPA case really means for injunctions and refunds Key updates: Switzerland–Liechtenstein trade deal, CBP stacking spreadsheet, and tariff collections How IEPA and 232 were used in new, expansive ways—including derivative and fentanyl‑related tariffs The “demise of de minimis” and its impact on trade flows and compliance workloads Why average effective duty rates have jumped from ~2–3% to around 17% How trade “deals” differ from formal FTAs and why they complicate stacking rules New data, timing, and ACE challenges: melt/cast reporting, missing edit checks, and 1‑day rollouts The growing role of pilots like GBI and progressive filing in reshaping future entry processes Why uncertainty itself—legal, financial, and operational—has become a major cost driver Key Takeaways 2025’s trade “manuscript” is defined by unprecedented authority use, higher duty rates, and much more complexity. Rapid‑fire changes, thin guidance, and limited ACE edit checks have shifted more risk and responsibility onto importers, brokers, and software providers. Community, collaboration, and strong industry groups (ICPA, NCBFAA, AAEI, COAC) are essential to interpreting and managing ongoing change. As the trade community turns the page to a new year, the goal is a calmer, more predictable “script”—with fewer action scenes and more stability. Credits Host: Cindy Allen, TradeForce Multiplier Subscribe & Follow New “Cindy’s Version” trade roundups periodically. Presented by: Global Training Center — providing education, consulting, workshops, and compliance resources for trade professionals. 👉 www.GlobalTrainingCenter.com Connect with us: Simply Trade Podcast on LinkedIn Global Training Center on LinkedIn YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Trade Geeks Community Don’t forget to rate, review, and share with your fellow trade geeks! Want to Be on the Show or Have Topic Suggestions? 📩 Reach us at [email protected] or DM us on Twitter/X @SimplyTradePod
What this episode covers
Host: Cindy AllenPublished: December 19Length: ~15 minutesPresented by: Global Training Center In this year-end “Cindy’s Version” of Simply Trade, Cindy Allen, CEO of TradeForce Multiplier, uses Taylor Swift’s “The Manuscript” to frame a look back at 2025’s trade story. She recaps the latest developments—from the Court of International Trade’s surprise ruling on the Costco injunction and IEPA liquidation concerns to a new Switzerland–Liechtenstein trade deal and CBP’s long‑awaited “stacking” spreadsheet. Cindy also highlights the U.S. government’s announcement that it collected 200 billion dollars in new tariffs this year, and what that really means for importers’ bottom lines. Using “The Manuscript” as a metaphor, Cindy walks through the big chapters of this year in trade: unprecedented use of authorities like IEPA and 232, the temporary shock of 145% China tariffs, the demise of de minimis, a jump in effective average duty rates, and a surge in complexity around stacking, derivative tariffs, and country‑of‑melt reporting. She also touches on ACE edit‑check gaps, compressed implementation timelines, expanded ACAS data requirements, and pilots like the Global Business Identifier that signal a move toward progressive filing and deeper supply chain visibility. Cindy closes by reflecting on the vital role of trade associations, community, and collaboration—and shares her hope that next year’s “manuscript” reads more like a romantic comedy than an action thriller. What You’ll Learn in This Episode What the CIT’s ruling in the Costco/IEPA case really means for injunctions and refunds Key updates: Switzerland–Liechtenstein trade deal, CBP stacking spreadsheet, and tariff collections How IEPA and 232 were used in new, expansive ways—including derivative and fentanyl‑related tariffs The “demise of de minimis” and its impact on trade flows and compliance workloads Why average effective duty rates have jumped from ~2–3% to around 17% How trade “deals” differ from formal FTAs and why they complicate stacking rules New data, timing, and ACE challenges: melt/cast reporting, missing edit checks, and 1‑day rollouts The growing role of pilots like GBI and progressive filing in reshaping future entry processes Why uncertainty itself—legal, financial, and operational—has become a major cost driver Key Takeaways 2025’s trade “manuscript” is defined by unprecedented authority use, higher duty rates, and much more complexity. Rapid‑fire changes, thin guidance, and limited ACE edit checks have shifted more risk and responsibility onto importers, brokers, and software providers. Community, collaboration, and strong industry groups (ICPA, NCBFAA, AAEI, COAC) are essential to interpreting and managing ongoing change. As the trade community turns the page to a new year, the goal is a calmer, more predictable “script”—with fewer action scenes and more stability. CreditsHost: Cindy Allen, TradeForce Multiplier Subscribe & FollowNew “Cindy’s Version” trade roundups periodically.Presented by: Global Training Center — providing education, consulting, workshops, and compliance resources for trade professionals.👉 www.GlobalTrainingCenter.com Connect with us:Simply Trade Podcast on LinkedInGlobal Training Center on LinkedInYouTubeSpotifyApple PodcastsTrade Geeks Community Don’t forget to rate, review, and share with your fellow trade geeks! Want to Be on the Show or Have Topic Suggestions?📩 Reach us at [email protected] DM us on Twitter/X @SimplyTradePod
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[Cindy's Version] The Manuscript of Trade in 2025
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