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cover of episode How flood-damaged businesses in Asheville are rebuilding

How flood-damaged businesses in Asheville are rebuilding

2025/7/3
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Marketplace Morning Report

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D
David Brancaccio
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Devin DeHall
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Katie Silver
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Lisa Raleigh
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Mark Oliver
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Nancy Marshall-Genzer
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Nancy Marshall-Genzer: 特朗普总统声称美国与越南达成了一项贸易协议,协议内容包括对越南进口商品征收20%的关税,对转运商品征收40%的关税,并取消越南对美国进口商品的所有关税。这项协议旨在限制中国制造商通过越南向美国出口商品以规避关税。前总统拜登在2023年访问越南后也曾与越南达成贸易协议,但具体细节尚不清楚。目前,越南公司的股票因此消息而上涨。 Katie Silver: 美国芯片设计公司正在恢复与中国客户的业务。此前,美国商务部已允许Synopsis和Cadence等公司向中国销售软件。特朗普政府曾在五月份停止了这一行为,作为对北京限制稀土出口的回应。美国实施出口管制是出于国家安全考虑,现在这些公司正在努力恢复其在中国的产品供应。

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The US reached a trade deal with Vietnam, including tariffs on imports and exports. American semiconductor companies are resuming business with Chinese customers after a period of restrictions. Economic forecasts show mixed signals.
  • US-Vietnam trade deal reached
  • Resumption of US-China semiconductor business
  • Economic forecasts show mixed signals, with some weakness in private sector hiring

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Learn more at energytransfer.com. We're tracking trade and market reaction to the giant money ball about to pass Congress. I'm David Brancaccio in Los Angeles. President Trump says the U.S. has reached a trade deal with Vietnam. This is one of many agreements the White House is trying to hammer out before higher tariff rates on hundreds of countries snap back into place this

Props possibly the middle of next week, Marketplace's Nancy Marshall-Genzer reports. Details on the Vietnam agreement are scarce. In a social media post, President Trump says there'll be a 20 percent tariff on imports from Vietnam and a 40 percent tariff on trans-shipped goods, that is, products that pass through Vietnam on their way to the U.S. That provision appears to be aimed at Chinese manufacturers trying to avoid steep tariffs on products from China.

Trump says Vietnam also agreed to drop all tariffs on things it imports from the U.S. In his post, Trump talked about increasing exports of American-made SUVs to Vietnam, but it's not clear that Vietnamese consumers could afford that. Former President Biden also negotiated a trade deal with Vietnam after visiting the country in 2023. I'm Nancy Marshall-Genzer for Marketplace.

Stocks in Vietnam-based companies are trending higher this morning, as you might expect. More evidence now that the U.S.-China trade truce is sticking. American companies that do high-tech semiconductor design are resuming business with Chinese customers. Our editorial partners at the BBC are following this for us. Here's Katie Silver. Synopsis and cadence design systems of two of the world's most important companies when it comes to chip design. And they're both American.

They've told the BBC that they've received notices from the US Commerce Department now allowing them to sell their software to China. The Trump administration stopped this in May as part of a number of measures in response to Beijing limiting rare earth exports.

Semiconductors, or chips, have been a sticking point in relations between Beijing and Washington. Three years ago, under President Biden, the US implemented export controls on many advanced chips and chip-making technology, citing national security concerns. The companies say they are now working to restore access to the products in China. Rival chip design software giant Siemens and the US Commerce Department did not immediately respond to a BBC request for comment.

Katie Silver reporting there. As you've been hearing, the big tax cutting and program cutting bill has cleared a procedural obstacle with a final vote likely this morning. S&P and Nasdaq futures are essentially unchanged at the moment. Dow futures are up just slightly ahead of the big

Hiring and unemployment reports due in just over an hour and a half. Forecasters are expecting 100,000 more people on payrolls during the month of June, but a private sector hiring report yesterday showed surprising weakness. We'll see how that resolves. Interest rates are lower this morning with bonds up. The 10-year is down at 4.26%.

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Now to the economics of rebuilding after natural disaster. This is something that businesses in Asheville, North Carolina have been facing since the fall after the most destructive storm in state history, Hurricane Helene. Blue Ridge Public Radio's Laura Hackett reports on the rebuild. Before Hurricane Helene, the waterfront of the French Broad River was a bustling, colorful destination in Asheville's Arts District. We got about 16 feet of water in the building and so the front of the building fell off.

Mark Oliver is talking about his woodworking studio, which was housed in an old leather tannery. It's one of hundreds of structures in the county that were damaged. He did not have flood insurance, and he thought his business was done for. I was going to quit and go work for a friend. But just before filing for bankruptcy, his church stepped in. Volunteers donated labor and money to rebuild and made him a makeshift studio space, a massive industrial tent. It seems crazy because it is crazy.

Local artists also use the space. Today, the tent is abuzz with woodworkers sawing and hammering everything from shelves and bowls to acoustic guitars. The second we got our power hooked up, it was like so nice and freeing. It's just nice to work again. The tent is temporary. Oliver is repairing his original workshop and hopes to reopen this summer with a better drainage system and stronger roof. I've got one major rebuild in me because the conversation is if we ever get this much water again, I'm out.

Rebuilding is expensive, but it's crucial to do it thoughtfully, says Lisa Raleigh. She directs a nonprofit that works to protect the French Broad River. Because unless you have people invested in a river, unless you bring an economy to a river, sometimes it's harder to get people to care and protect the asset.

And she wants Asheville to remember that another, quote, thousand-year flood could happen at any time. Hurricanes and other tropical storms are getting bigger and wetter and are moving further inland into mountainous areas. So businesses should rebuild with the expectation that they'll flood again. This is a chance for us to sort of rethink the way that we're doing things.

Devin DeHall is resurrecting his rock climbing gym, an airy concrete building that filled with 10 feet of water in the storm. It's a shell of its former self. I mean, you can see the bones are still okay. The steel structure is fine. They're getting creative about floodproofing. The HVAC system will be near the top of the building, and it'll have tall, bright windows. Next time, if it were to flood, it'll break through the windows and the water will flow through the building, and it won't knock the walls down.

So when the next flood comes, the new waterfront will be built for it. The idea is that by owning the risk, business owners may save in the long run. In Asheville, North Carolina, I'm Laura Hackett for Marketplace.

And next week marks six months since one of this year's Southern California wildfires started. An investigation into the power company's possible role in starting the Eaton fire is ongoing. Southern California Edison's CEO told investors in May it is probable the company will incur material losses.

Utilities in California paid into a common fund to handle lawsuits when power companies cause wildfires. The Eden firestorm destroyed 9,400 structures, mostly homes. Another 6,800 structures were destroyed in the Palisades fire to the west, where the power company is not implicated. Southern California Edison stock is down 34 percent since just before the January fire. In Los Angeles, I'm David Brancaccio, Marketplace Morning Report.

From APM, American Public Media. Hey, everyone. I'm Rima Khez, and I'm excited to join Kimberly Adams on Make Me Smart. Together, we'll unpack the day's news, whether it's a tariff switch up, the latest on Trump's immigration policy, or the future of clean energy. Join us each weekday so we can make sense of it all together, because none of us is as smart as all of us. Listen to Make Me Smart wherever you get your podcasts.