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A year ago, “Liberation Day” reset how global trade works.

Tariffs weren’t new.

But the scale, speed, and unpredictability were.

We brought together three operators who lived through it:

  • Phil Neuffer (Supply Chain Dive)
  • Graham Anderson (Importal)
  • Alex Yancher (Passport)

Here’s what actually changed — and what didn’t.

1. Supply chains became political

Before Liberation Day, sourcing decisions were mostly economic.

Cost. Quality. Speed.

Now?

They’re geopolitical.

Tariffs are being used to:

  • Influence foreign policy
  • Respond to trade imbalances
  • Apply pressure across industries

One example from the panel: tariffs tied to India buying Russian oil.

That’s not a sourcing variable founders historically modeled.

Now it is.

2. China decoupling is real — but incomplete

There has been movement.

  • China’s share of U.S. imports declined
  • Brands actively explored alternatives

But the bigger story:

Most brands couldn’t fully leave.

At Sourcify, we saw it firsthand:

  • Mexico
  • Morocco
  • Peru
  • Canada
  • U.S.

Even after exploring all of them…

Many brands went back to China.

Why?

Because for certain SKUs, China still wins on:

  • Quality
  • Scale
  • Cost

This is the boomerang problem.

3. Reshoring didn’t materialize

One of the biggest expectations:

“Tariffs will bring manufacturing back to the U.S.”

That didn’t happen (yet).

Not because brands didn’t want to.

Because:

  • Building capacity takes years
  • Capex decisions require stability
  • Tariffs were applied broadly (not just China)

When everything is uncertain, nothing moves.

4. Trade got dramatically more complex

This was one of the clearest operational shifts.

Customs filings went from:

  • 1 classification→ to multiple layers of requirements

Including:

  • Material breakdowns
  • Steel/aluminum content
  • Country-of-origin nuance

The result:

  • More errors
  • More audits
  • More overpayment risk

And most brands weren’t equipped for it.

5. Inflation didn’t spike — but margins did

The narrative a year ago:

“Tariffs will crush consumers.”

That didn’t happen.

Instead, the impact spread across the system:

1. Suppliers absorbed some costs

Negotiations forced concessions.

2. Brands took margin hits

Public companies reported compression.

3. Production shifted

To lower-tariff regions where possible.

4. Consumers saw modest increases

Not zero — but not catastrophic.

The takeaway:

Tariffs didn’t disappear.

They just got redistributed.

6. The real impact: uncertainty

Every panelist converged on this.

The biggest issue wasn’t tariffs themselves.

It was unpredictability.

  • Policies changing weekly
  • Announcements by tweet
  • Tariffs rising and falling rapidly

That made long-term decisions nearly impossible.

And in supply chains, uncertainty is more dangerous than cost.

Because it freezes action.

7. A new type of risk: political risk

Before:

  • Demand risk
  • Supplier risk
  • Logistics risk

Now:

  • Political risk is a core variable

Examples:

  • Canada tariffs
  • EU retaliation
  • Forced labor investigations

These are:

  • Hard to predict
  • Hard to control
  • Increasingly common

8. Tariffs aren’t going away

One of the most important insights:

This is not temporary.

Why?

1. They generate revenue

Governments need it.

2. They’re bipartisan

Section 301 tariffs survived multiple administrations.

3. They’re strategic tools

Used for national security + trade leverage.

Expect evolution — not reversal.

9. What actually matters going forward

Three clear operator takeaways:

1. Supplier relationships matter more than ever

Not just price — partnership.

2. Compliance is now a core capability

HTS codes, audits, data accuracy.

3. Diversification is non-negotiable

Both:

  • Supply side
  • Demand side

Final thought

Liberation Day didn’t “break” global trade.

It exposed how fragile — and interconnected — it already was.

This isn’t a one-year story.

It’s the beginning of a new operating environment.

Watch the full webinar here