Trump told reporters this week the USMCA could expire right away, even though the treaty itself runs until at least 2036. Both statements are technically true.
That gap matters for anyone planning a North American supply chain.
What's Happening July 1
Mexico, the US, and Canada were supposed to meet in person to decide the fate of the six-year-old trade pact. Instead, they're getting on Zoom.
Mexican Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard said the July 1 session will be virtual, landing on the same date the original deal set for a built-in check called the "joint review."
Two paths are on the table:
- Auto-renew the deal for another 16 years if all three countries sign off.
- Keep it running for 10 more years with yearly check-ins if anyone passes.
After the virtual session, the next in-person round comes July 20 in Mexico City, when Ebrard said the three sides will dig into the actual text.
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Mexico's Stake In The Deal
Mexico's economy runs on selling things to the United States, with exports making up nearly 40% of its GDP, according to World Bank data.
About 80% of those exports go to one buyer: the US.
That makes the USMCA less of a trade deal and more of an economic lifeline, since anything blocking goods from crossing the border tax-free hits Mexico harder than its trading partners.
Canada faces a softer version of the same problem, with the US buying roughly three-quarters of its exports - mostly energy, autos, and lumber.
Why it matters: USMCA replaced NAFTA in 2020 and covers more than $1.5 trillion in yearly cross-border trade, making it one of the largest free-trade zones in the world.
That history is exactly what Trump is now testing. He's sent mixed signals on the deal for years, and this week the volume got louder.
He told reporters the agreement might end right away, adding that the US doesn't actually need Mexican or Canadian goods - though he'd still be open to a new deal.
What To Watch
The USMCA doesn't vanish if July 1 comes and goes without a renewal, and the deal stays in force until 2036.
The only way it ends sooner is if one of the three countries formally walks away.
What changes: The deal shifts into annual reviews instead of a long-term agreement.
For companies deciding where to build factories or route supply chains, that shift is the real cost. A stable deal lets a CEO commit to a 10-year, billion-dollar factory bet in Monterrey or Saskatoon.
Annual reviews turn that into a yearly guessing game for every cross-border investment.
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