Tariff impact on margin analysis. Pass-through vs absorption decisions, customer elasticity, competitive pricing.
Tariff scenario planning for SMB importers. War-gaming policy moves, financial stress testing, decision triggers.
Tariff classification services pillar. Classification opinions, binding rulings, audit defense, ongoing classification programs.
Brexit-era US-UK trade consultant. UK’s independent trade status, Section 122 exposure, Section 232 pharma, whisky.

Introduction: A Historic Refund Window Opens The U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decision striking down the Trump administration’s IEEPA‑based tariffs has triggered one of the largest potential refund events in modern U.S. trade history. Billions of dollars in duties collected across thousands of importers were deemed unlawfully imposed, and the Court of International Trade has now…

The U.S. tariff landscape has shifted again fast, decisively, and with direct consequences for every importer operating into the United States. Following the Supreme Court’s rejection of the Administration’s IEEPA based “reciprocal tariff” program, the White House has executed a rapid pivot to a different legal authority: Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974,…

The Supreme Court’s February 20, 2026 ruling striking down the use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) for tariff actions didn’t end the tariff era it fractured it. Within hours, the Administration pivoted to Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 and signaled a 10% global tariff. More authorities are already being…

Your Options, and Why a TIB Should Be Your First Move By Peacock Tariff Consulting As we move into 2026, small and medium‑sized enterprises around the world are preparing for one of the most active U.S. trade show cycles in over a decade. Whether you’re shipping from Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, the Middle East, or…

Effective February 6, 2026 Federal Register 91 FR 21 (Jan. 2, 2026) U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has issued an interim final rule that fundamentally reshapes how importers receive refunds. Beginning February 6, 2026, CBP will issue all refunds electronically, with only narrow hardship exceptions. This rule amends 19 CFR Parts 24, 141, 159,…

The passage of Canada’s 2025 federal budget is not merely a fiscal event it’s a strategic inflection point. With over $1 trillion in capital commitments, a projected $78.3 billion deficit, and sweeping reforms to procurement, infrastructure, and industrial policy, Ottawa is signaling a decisive shift: away from passive trade dependence and toward proactive domestic resilience.…