Two leaders of the US Consumer Products Safety Commission called for the agency to investigate e-commerce retailers Shein and Temu after "deadly baby and toddler products" were sold on both websites, according to a letter posted on the US CPSC website.
US CPSC Commissioners Peter Feldman and Douglas Dziak want the agency to evaluate how Singapore's Shein, China's Temu and other foreign-owned e-commerce platforms comply with its rules, handle relationships with third-party sellers and represent imported products.
Shein and PDD Group's Temu, which both ship cheap merchandise into the US from China, are raising "specific concerns" for the Commission for their use of de minimis, a rule exempting packages valued at $800 (AED 3,000) or less from tariffs if they are sent directly to shoppers.
Critics of Shein and Temu attribute low prices and de minimis to Shein and Temu's success in the US. Both companies have also come under scrutiny for the quality of their products.
A bipartisan group of US lawmakers last year planned to introduce a bill to eliminate the de minimis, which is widely used by e-commerce platforms including third-party sellers on Amazon.com and Walmart.com.
Global shares rallied and the dollar extended declines on Tuesday after US President Donald Trump said Iran and Israel had agreed to a ceasefire, sending oil prices into a deep dive as concerns over supply disruptions ebbed.
Tesla deployed a small group of self-driving taxis picking up paying passengers on Sunday in Austin, Texas, with CEO Elon Musk announcing the "robotaxi launch" and social-media influencers posting videos of their first rides.
A US attack on Iranian nuclear sites could push oil prices even higher and trigger a knee-jerk rush to safety, investors said, as they assessed how the latest escalation of tensions would ripple through the global economy.
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