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Honduras Reviews China Deal As Shrimp Exports Crash

Published May 8, 2026
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Summary:
  • Honduras' new president Nasry Asfura is reviewing all China deals before deciding whether to restore ties with Taiwan.
  • Honduran shrimp sales to Taiwan fell from over $100 million in 2022 to about $16 million in 2025, with losses near $150 million.
  • US-Honduras trade hit $15.8 billion in 2024, and the US is open to talks on lower tariffs.

Three years ago, Honduras dropped Taiwan and shook hands with China. The pitch was a bigger market and more cash.

Instead, Honduras' shrimp farmers are out about $150 million. The new president is now reading every China deal he was handed.

President Nasry Asfura told Bloomberg on May 6 that his team is going through the deals one by one. He spoke from the Milken Global Conference in Beverly Hills.

For investors who watch Latin America, this is a real-time look. A big trade pivot can fail when the math stops working.

The Shrimp Math That Started The Rethink

In 2022, Honduras sold over $100 million of shrimp to Taiwan. By the end of 2025, that number had crashed to about $16 million.

That count comes from Honduras' shrimp farming group. The Chinese buyers who were meant to fill the gap never showed up.

Think of it like swapping your gym for a bigger one. Then the new gym has no working gear.

The result: total shrimp losses are creeping toward $150 million in three years. Farmers are pushing back hard. Asfura is treating that as real input.

Washington Sees An Opening

Asfura flew to Washington in mid-January. He met Marco Rubio, who runs the State Department.

After that meeting, the US said it would open talks on cutting tariffs on Honduran goods.

US-Honduras trade hit $15.8 billion in 2024. So this is not a small bond.

For investors, the signal is clear:

  • Firms tied to Central American exports could see lower tariffs if these talks land.
  • Food, apparel, and auto wiring makers are the names to watch.
  • A Taiwan reset would unlock a whole new market for shrimp and other goods.

The Honduran team is not promising a hard pivot. Aides say any change will be slow and step by step.

Why This Matters Beyond Honduras

Honduras is a small economy. But the story is bigger than its size.

Several Central American countries switched from Taiwan to China in recent years. The pitch was always the same: big trade, big growth, big cash.

Most of those promises did not show up. If Asfura walks any of his deals back, it sets a path others could follow.

The shift would also fit with the new US push for Latin America. The Trump team has made tariff offers to a few countries in the region this year.

Investors who hold Latin America funds should track how this plays. Watch what happens in places like Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Panama.

The China Pitch That Did Not Pay Off

When Honduras switched, the deal was simple. China would buy more, build more, and put more money into the country.

That did not show up. Trade with China grew, but not by enough to fill the gap left by Taiwan.

The shrimp story is the loudest sign. But coffee, textiles, and other key goods have all hit their own snags.

For investors, that is a useful case study. A big trade pivot looks great on paper. The follow-through is what counts.

What to Watch

Watch the Washington tariff talks. Watch any update on Taiwan ties.

Either move would shift the cost picture for shrimp, textiles, and other goods coming into US ports.

The shrimp farmers already cast their vote.

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