Category: News

The 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Forum to Be Held on January 24

The 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Forum to Be Held on January 24

Focusing on China–U.S. Film Co-Productions and Industry Collaboration

Los Angeles, January 15 — As a key industry and academic event of the 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles, the 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Forum will be held on January 24 from 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. in Los Angeles. The forum is expected to attract more than 300 attendees from Hollywood and international film communities, including filmmakers, producers, actors, investors, and industry professionals.

The forum will feature six distinguished keynote speakers, all of whom will also serve as awards presenters at the 7th Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony later that evening:

• Benjamin Chen: Forum Host, Keynote Speaker, 15 international film festivals Awards winning director and producer.

• Brian Connors: Keynote Speaker and Awards Presenter, Hollywood actor, director, screenwriter, and producer.

• Misha Segal: Keynote Speaker, recipient of Emmy Awards and Israeli Academy Awards.

• Vince Toto: Keynote Speaker and Awards Presenter, veteran American filmmaker.

• Alain Azoulay: Keynote Speaker and Awards Presenter, recipient of many  awards, producer, 

• Misty Chang: Movie star and producer.

The forum will focus on the advantages, opportunities, and practical experience of China–U.S. film co-productions, with in-depth discussions on creative collaboration, production frameworks, financing structures, distribution strategies, and cross-cultural storytelling. The speakers will share insights drawn from their extensive experience in international co-production projects.

Notably, the forum will also include a dedicated China–U.S. Film Co-Production Investment Signing Session. Representatives from film studios and investment institutions from both countries are expected to sign cooperation agreements for several potential co-production projects, marking a transition from dialogue to concrete industry collaboration and advancing the implementation of China–U.S. co-production initiatives.

According to the organizers, the Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Forum aims to serve as a high-level platform connecting the film industries of China, the United States, and the global market. The forum will also set the professional and intellectual tone for the 7th Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony taking place later that evening, further highlighting the growing influence of the Asian Film Festival Los Angeles on the international stage.

The Asian Film Festival Los Angeles (AFFLA) is authorized by the American Chamber of Commerce (AICC) and is organized by the Asian Film Festival Committee. The Confederation Institute of Education ( CIE) has been an important co-organizer of the Asian Film Festival Los Angeles since its inception. It has jointly offered Film Master Classes and MBA in Cooperative Master’s degree programs in film performance management with the festival.

The 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Announces Golden Diamond Awards Winners

The 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Announces Golden Diamond Awards Winners

Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony to Be Held on January 24 at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES, Dec 28 — The Organizing Committee of the 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles (AFFLA) has officially announced the winners of this year’s Golden Diamond Awards, recognizing outstanding achievements by Asian and Asian American filmmakers, artists, and cinematic works from around the world.

The Golden Diamond Awards are among the festival’s highest honors, celebrating excellence in filmmaking, storytelling, cultural expression, and artistic innovation. This year’s selections reflect the diversity, depth, and growing global influence of Asian cinema across narrative features, documentaries, animation, short films, student works, and new media.

The award recipients of the Golden Diamond Awards at the 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles are as follows:

The 7th Golden Diamond Awards – Winners List
Best Feature Film
Sae — USA
Best Foreign Language Film
Harmony — China
Best Documentary
Knowledge in Light — Italy
Best Animated Film
Dragon Heart — Japan
Best Short Film
The Time Permeates on the Street — South Korea
Best Director
Elvis Hau Chor Fun — When I See You Again — Hong Kong
Best Actor
Zhang Chenguang —Home, Sweet Home — China
Best Actress
He Saifei — Home, Sweet Home — China
Best Script
Kumiho: Legend of the Jades — USA
Best Screenwriter
Masahiro Ota — S — Japan
Best Student Short Film
The Sun Rises Again — China
Best Student Director
Out of Cage — China
Best Cinematography
Zhao Hongfu, When I See You Again — China
Best Child Actor
Juncheng Hu — Tropical Fish — China
Best Child Actress
Sun Yicheng — When I See You Again — Hong Kong
Best New Media Award
Tomb of Butterflies — China

Golden Diamond Award for Lifetime Achievement
• Liu Xiaoqing, China
• Ding Shaoguang, USA

The jury, composed of distinguished directors, producers, screenwriters, and film scholars from Hollywood and the international film community, praised this year’s winners for their artistic merit, cultural significance, and powerful storytelling that bridges cultures and generations.

The Organizing Committee also announced that the Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony of the 7th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles will be held on January 24, 2026, at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel Los Angeles. Filmmakers, industry professionals, cultural leaders, and media representatives from around the world will gather to celebrate this milestone event honoring Asian cinema.

Since its founding, the Asian Film Festival Los Angeles has been dedicated to promoting Asian films on the global stage and fostering dialogue between Asia, Hollywood, and the international film industry. The Golden Diamond Awards embody the festival’s mission to recognize artistic excellence and amplify diverse voices in global cinema.

For more information about the winners and the awards ceremony, please visit the official website and follow AFFLA on social media.

Official Website: asianfilmfestival.us
Presented by: Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Committee

As a co-organizer of the Los Angeles Asian Film Festival, the Confederation Institute of Education has been providing professional discussion and training exchange opportunities for outstanding young filmmakers, and will continue to offer both offline and online master training courses for young filmmakers from Asian countries.

The 6th Los Angeles Asian Film Festival Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony was grandly held in Los Angeles 

Los Angeles, Dec 19 – The 6th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony was held in Sheraton Hotel Los Angeles San Gabriel on December 18th. More than 300 filmmakers and celebrities and guests from Hollywood and other countries and regions attended the awards ceremony. 

In his speech, Jason Quin, Executive Chairman of the Los Angeles Asian Film Festival, welcomed and thanked the elected officials, diplomatic officials, filmmakers, sponsors, contractors and partners who attended the film festival. At the same time, the 7th Los Angeles Film Festival was officially launched. Nearly 120 films were shortlisted at this film festival, and nearly 80 films and filmmakers were nominated. 

The award-winning films came from the United States, China, Hong Kong, Japan, the Iran, India.

After a two-hour red carpet ceremony, they first held a grand awards ceremony, then held a song and dance performance, and the 36th Miss Asia International Global Finals beauty contest. Film producers, directors, actors and beautiful players, celebrities and celebrities, laughter, thunderous applause, jubilation. 

The two bilingual masters of Chinese and English, announced the winners of the Golden Diamond Awards at this film festival at the award ceremony, and played trailers of the award-winning film flower and film festival.

The winner list of the 6th Golden Diamond Awards 2024:

BEST FEATUREHanky Panky, USA
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGEWe are forever, China
BEST DOCUMENTARYFallen Treasures, Hong Kong
BEST SHORT FILMSong of the Conscripts,China
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORTMad Honey Documentary, Iraq
BEST ANIMATION SHORTDancing Dhamaal!, USA
BEST SCRIPTSach is Life, USA
BEST DIRECTORNearest Distance, China
BEST MUSICKuch Sapney Apne, Inida
BEST STUDENT SHORT FILMLamb of Vengeance, China
BEST DIRECTOR STUDENTSky is the limit, China, Sheng Liu
BEAT ACTOROkamoto, Japan
BEST ACTRESSHi Dad, India
BEST CHILD ACTORGrowing Pains, China
BEST CHILD ACTRESSPaper Flowers, USA
BEST WRITER, Performing Kaoru’s Funeral, Japan

第36届世界亚裔小姐全球总决赛在洛杉矶圆满举行

洛杉矶12月18日讯,第36届世界亚裔小姐(Miss Asia International)全球总决赛今天在洛杉矶圣盖博喜来登酒店隆重举行。这场由美国国际商会(AICC)授权,亚洲电影节(AFF) 和美国全美电视台(AMTV) 联合出品,以及DJM3艺术教育学校与美国南加州华人经贸文化协会联合主办的顶级盛事吸引了全球目光。

世界亚裔小姐选美大赛执行主席秦嘉豪(Jason Quin),主创制作团队的美国全美电视台(AMTV)总经理、本次大赛的总策划董宏兴(Charles Dong),DJM3首席执行官、大赛总导演沈平(Julie Shen)、大赛艺术总监李敏(Mindy Li)、财务总监谢亚丽(Xie Yali),以及本届大赛主办方之一的美国南加州华人经贸文化协会会长黄冬平(Dongping Huang)先后致辞。

本届大赛从全球范围内挑选了21位优秀佳丽晋级总决赛,在运动时尚自我介绍、泳装比赛、才艺展示、晚装比赛以及机智问答等多个环节中一展风采,角逐总决赛冠亚季军、网络冠亚季军以及单项奖、优秀奖等多个奖项。

本届大赛得到了众多品牌和合作机构的慷慨支持,包括纽约华丽之美、麦莱光子脱毛仪、旅程杂志、凯皮美容、倾城国际时尚医美、克里斯蒂娜·富尔顿、点火精神,以及卢特康、美宝护肤品、新力教育、钟子磊美国税务专家等。特别呜谢首领航空(Prima Air)和飞马航空(Pegasus Elite Aviation )。

本届大赛强大的评审阵容与精彩环节引人瞩目,由13位来自美国、加拿大及全球各地的知名时尚、电影、音乐、舞蹈及艺术界的专家和领军人物组成的评委团队。出席今天盛会的还有,卡斯特巴黎精英模特主任和签约超模王欧文(Owen Wang),演员、企业家和慈善家富尔顿(Christina Fulton )、艺术之心时尚时装周的创始人和首席执行官罗斯特(Erik Rosete)、时装设计师克斯托(Merlin Castell)和杰西(Jesse)、中美时装周及玫瑰公主选美创始人于凯瑞(Kerry Yu), 演员、导演、制片人贾一平(超模管理公司首席执行官、商业投资及电影制片人穆林(Jim Mullin),演员牛琳(Liu Lin)、著名青年舞蹈家刘晓智(Liu Xiaozhi)、温哥华国际舞蹈艺术学院创始人及院长岳莹(Tracy Yue )、时尚品牌投资人和创始人陈玥廷(Chen Yueting),品牌官及质量工程师于秋石(Yu Qiushi)。

总决赛评委们从专业视角评估参赛者的才艺与综合素质,确保赛事的公平性与权威性,佳丽们以运动时尚装、晚装、泳装、才艺展示和机智问答的五大环节全面展现了个人魅力与才艺。

经过激烈角逐,以及经过层层角逐与严格评审,12号选手尹智莹 (Michelle Yin )凭借卓越的舞台表现力、优雅的气质以及出色的综合能力,成功摘得第36届世界亚裔小姐全球总决赛的桂冠。13号选手于凯莉(Kelly Yu)凭借其优雅的台风与非凡的个人魅力,在多个环节中展现出色表现,荣获亚军殊荣。15号佳丽李燕华(Yuhan Li)、20号佳丽王万婷(Wanting Wang)、1号佳丽陈美希(Rita Chen)在比赛中展现了各自独特的风采与才艺,最终并列季军,彰显了赛事的多元魅力。

13号佳丽于凯莉凭借超高的人气和观众支持,在网络投票中脱颖而出,还荣膺了网络人气奖冠军。10号佳丽高明燕(Mingyan Gao)以亲和的魅力和超高人气赢得了网络人气奖亚军的殊荣。

荣获冠军桂冠的尹智莹除摘得本大赛的冠军桂冠之外,还获得了最佳礼服表演奖。荣获亚军桂冠的李燕华还展现了她在网络社群中的影响力,荣获了网络人气奖季军。

此外,本次赛事还特别新增了世界亚裔小小姐奖(Miss Little Asia)和世界亚裔夫人奖(Miss Mrs Asia),世界亚裔小姐特殊贡献奖(Miss Asia Specialist Contribution),充分展现不同年龄段参赛者的风采与多元魅力,旨在表彰更多年龄段的女性才华和魅力,进一步丰富了比赛的文化内涵。

首位世界亚裔夫人得主和总统奖– 终生成就奖王丽红(Wang Lihong)女士作为励志榜样,为女性展现自信与力量树立了典范。首位世界亚裔小小姐米里(Eliya Miri),这位充满活力和快乐的4岁女孩凭借她天生的魅力和活力,与大家分享她对生活的热爱。首位世界亚裔小姐特殊贡献奖得主是资深创意与艺术总监、国际比基尼小姐大师赛冠军薛伊茜(Xue Yixi),她通过其影响力推动了亚裔文化的全球传播与融合,她的努力和贡献为本次大赛树立了典范,也彰显了亚裔女性的智慧与力量。

作为全球瞩目的亚裔选美赛事和艺术盛典,第36届世界亚裔小姐全球总决赛不仅是一场美与才艺的盛宴,更是亚裔文化自信的象征。主办方希望通过此次盛事,将亚裔女性的智慧、魅力与多元文化推广至更广的国际舞台。本届大赛的成功举办,也为明年的比赛奠定了坚实基础。主办方更期待明年迎来更多佳丽、更多支持以及更高的国际关注,为亚裔文化书写新的篇章。

联盟智库是第36届世界亚裔小姐全球总决赛的联合主办及赞助机构。

Asian Film Festival Los Angeles announces the nominees for the 6th Golden Diamond Awards 2024

Los Angeles, November 17th – The Asian Film Festival Los Angeles today announced the nominees for the 6th Golden Diamond Awards 2024, including films and scripts from the United States, Canada, India, Japan, Austria, Germany, Spain, Turkey, United Kingdom, France, Iraq, Malaysia, Netherlands, Nigeria, Russia, Singapore, Iran, as well as mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

Earlier, the Asian Film Festival Los Angeles stated at a press conference held on November 2 that the 6th Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony will be held on December 11 at the Sheraton San Gabriel Hotel in Los Angeles. At that time, filmmakers from various countries and regions participating in the festival, special guests, celebrities, representatives of sponsors, producers, directors, actors and award-winning guests from Los Angeles and Hollywood will gather together to celebrate the event.

The 36th Miss Asian International beauty pageant global finalists and winners will also present a splendid visual feast and showcase the magnificent Asian cultural style to guests from all walks of life at the 6th Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony.

The organizer said that tickets for the 6th Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony are now on sale, Welcome to order.

The complete list of nominees for the 6th Golden Diamond Awards of the 36th Asian Film Festival Los Angeles 2024 is as follows:

BEST FEATURE
Brave Girls, India
Hanky Pank, USA
Kuch Sapney Apne, India
Return To Planet Undergroun, Netherlands
Redemption with Life, China

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
Performing Kaoru’s Funeral, Japan
4 by 4, India
Flight animal,Sweden
Okamoto,Japan
We are forever, China

BEST DOCUMENTARY
Okhaldhunga, Germany
Saving Walden’s World, USA
CACAO,Japan
Deconstructing Beijing, France
Fallen Treasures, Hong Kong

BEST SHORT FILM
Límites, Spian
Song of the Conscripts,China
Suburban Story ,USA
The Other Moon Goddess, USA
Midsummer Dream. China

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
RETURN TO KAWTHOOLEI: A Refugee Rapper’s Journey to His Homeland in Burma, SA
Mad Honey Documentary, Iraq
Agong, USA
Gierogi Appa, USA
Koroneburg, USA

BEST ANIMATION SHORT
Dancing Dhamaal!, USA
World Naked Bike Tour , Canada
The Pinto Variety Hour, USA
Son & Moon, USA
CHAIN, USA

BEST SCRIPT
Homeless Dogs Never Bite, China
Frank Truman, Iran
First Launch, USA
Sach is LifeUSA
Baby Gladiator, Iran

BEST DIRECTOR
Return To Planet Underground (Part1) , Netherlands
Flight Animal, Sweden
Nearest Distance, China
Growing Pains, China

BEST MUSIC
Kuch Sapney Apne, Inida
Nearest Distance, China
Hi, Dad, India
Aeon Oz, Austria

BEST STUDENT SHORT FILM
Identified, Hong Kong
It is your Turn, China
You Can Never Go Home, USA
Lamb of Vengeance, China
Her Nails, USA

BEST DIRECTOR STUDENT FILM
Sky is the limit, China, Sheng Liu
Pei-an Chen,Blue Birds, Taiwan, Pei-an Chen
Chase, USA, Chao Han
Echo. China, Zhiping Li
A Palm Tree in The Distanc, USA, Moxie Zhang

BEAT ACTOR
Surge, China, Chen Wang Hanfei
Deep Into the Forest , USA, Jack Wang
We are forever, China, Zeawo
A Black Dog By The Reef, China, Zhong Linyu
Okamoto, Japan, Kentarou Tomita

BEST ACTRESS
Brave Girls, India, Rakhi Lohchab
Hi Dad, India, Mrunal Thakur
Suger, China, Jin Shan
Performing Kaoru’s Funeral, Japan, Kano Ichiki
The Story of a Stranded Frog, USA, Lexi Kim

BEST CHILD ACTOR
It is your Turn, China, Chao Yimo, Shu Yiyi, AI Lei, Zhou Yiming
So Long Mom, China, Zhou Chuxi
Growing Pains, China, Zhiquan Yang

BEST CHILD ACTRESS
Paper Flowers, USA, Sylvia Ye
Nearest Distance, China, Ruidong Zhou
Happy Love, USA, Lilyan Luu
Hi, Dad, India, Kiara Khanna
Pari and the Witch, Iran, Jana Karimi

CIE is one of the co-organizers of the Asian Film Festival Los Angeles, and has collaborated with the organizer to provide film-producing, director, and performance short-term master training courses for the AFF film winners and young filmmakers from various countries and regions.

The 6th Golden Diamond Awards Ceremony of Asian Film Festival 2014 will be held on November 18th, at 3:30pm in Sheraton Hotel San Gabriel Los Angeles. 

2023年第五届洛杉矶亚洲电影节金钻奖颁奖盛典成功落幕

洛杉矶12月19日讯,2023年第五届洛杉矶亚洲电影节金钻奖颁奖盛典今天在洛杉矶成功落幕,20名金钻奖获奖名单出炉。颁奖盛典现场500多名电影明星、艺术家、各界名流和赞助商等嘉宾,精英汇聚、群星闪耀,从下午开始的红毯仪式、颁奖盛典,直至晚上的精彩选美比赛及演出环节高潮迭起,现场一片欢声笑语,热闹非凡。

2023年第五届洛杉矶亚洲电影节金钻奖提名影片包括美国、中国、印度、日本、哈萨克、伊朗、加拿大、印尼、伊拉克、泰国、中国台湾和香港等国家和地区共有100部电影作品获得了提名,20部电影作品和2名特别奖项摘取了金钻奖桂冠。

洛杉矶亚洲电影节主席斯托纳(Holmes Stoner)今天在金钻奖颁奖盛典上致辞时,对各国电影界人参与2023年第五届亚洲电影节的开闭幕式、影片展映、论坛会议、推介洽谈和金钻奖颁奖盛典活动表示感谢。

斯托纳还表示,亚洲电影节作为开放性国际电影文化艺术平台,欢迎与各国电影界开展合作,凭借美国国际商会的商业资源背景,以洛杉矶亚洲电影节为主题开展包括产业园区、内容合作、衍生品开发、以及影片制作发行、教育培训、专项投资等多元化的全方位紧密合作。

洛杉矶亚洲电影节执行主席秦嘉豪(Jason Quin)今天表示,做为世界范围内规模最大的洛杉矶亚洲电影节,将继续以立足世界电影之都好莱坞的地域优势及契机,充分发挥美国电影技术及优势,扩大国际及亚洲朋友圈,特别是支持扶持青年电影人的发展,为促进各国电影产业有序衔接,共襄盛举、共享机遇、共创未来,以洛杉矶亚洲电影节的最高荣誉金钻奖促进电影事业发展,表彰为电影艺术全球化做出贡献的优秀电影人。

第五届洛杉矶亚州电影节颁奖盛典,除了颁奖给20名金钻奖得主之外,本届组委会还为对亚洲电影节及青年电影文化事业做出杰出贡献的美第奇家族战略合伙人,美第奇珠宝品牌合伙人和劳德珠宝创始人毛界武女士,颁发了亚洲电影特别贡献奖。

亚洲电影组委会今天还正式宣布,第六届洛杉矶亚洲电影节将于2024年1月8日正式启动,接受申请报名,欢迎各国家及地区的电影人参加申请,也欢迎各国电影文化机构及投资人支持合作,共襄盛举。

此外,第35届世界亚裔小姐选美大赛全球总决赛也在今晚亚洲电影节金钻奖颁奖盛典后接力登场,使整场盛典接力活动充满了亚洲文化的迷人活力和魅力风采。

亚洲电影节(Asian Film Festival) 最初由美国国际商会为推动亚洲电影在全球发展在洛杉矶创立,于2018年5月2日获批为美国加州非营利性机构,首届金钻奖颁奖盛典于2019年12月12日在洛杉矶比特摩尔千禧酒店隆重举行。洛杉矶亚洲电影节金钻奖致力于构建亚洲和全球各国之间的电影文化纽带,是美国目前规模最大的亚洲电影节,堪称亚洲电影节的“奥斯卡”,多年来持续为青年电影人教育项目提供支持和募捐,每年均向非营利教育机构提供直接捐助。亚洲电影节目前由亚洲电影节委员会管理,并运营金钻奖颁奖盛典等一系列主题活动。

U.S. Import and Export Price Indexes summary

COEUSA, May 13 - U.S. import prices were unchanged in April, after increasing 2.9 percent in March, the U.S. Bureau of Labor 
Statistics reported today. Higher nonfuel prices in April offset lower fuel prices. Prices for U.S. exports
advanced 0.6 percent in April following a 4.1-percent increase the previous month.

Imports

The price index for U.S. imports was unchanged in April, after rising 6.8 percent over the first quarter of
2022. U.S. import prices have not recorded a monthly decline since the index fell 0.4 percent in December
2021. Prices for U.S. imports advanced 12.0 percent for the year ended in April, down from the 13.0-percent
increase recorded last month. (See table 1.)

Fuel Imports: Import fuel prices declined 2.4 percent in April following a 39.2-percent increase from
December to March. The decrease in April was the first 1-month drop since the index fell 7.7 percent in
December 2021. Lower petroleum prices in April more than offset higher natural gas prices. Despite the
decrease in April, import fuel prices rose 64.3 percent over the past 12 months. Petroleum prices fell 2.9
percent in April, after advancing 19.4 percent the previous month. In contrast, natural gas prices increased
6.8 percent in April following a 9.5-percent decline in March. Petroleum and natural gas prices rose over the
past year, advancing 63.0 percent and 102.2 percent, respectively.

All Imports Excluding Fuel: Prices for nonfuel imports increased 0.4 percent in April following advances
of 1.2 percent, 0.9 percent, and 1.4 percent the 3 previous months. Nonfuel import prices have not recorded
a 1-month drop since the index decreased 0.2 percent in November 2020. Higher prices for nonfuel
industrial supplies and materials; capital goods; foods, feeds, and beverages; and automotive vehicles all
contributed to the April increase in nonfuel import prices. The price index for nonfuel imports rose on a 12-
month basis, advancing 7.2 percent.

Foods, Feeds, and Beverages: Foods, feeds, and beverages prices increased 0.9 percent in April, after rising
0.4 percent in March. Prices for foods, feeds, and beverages have not recorded a monthly decline since the
index fell 0.1 percent in November 2021; the index advanced 12.1 percent for the year ended in April.

Nonfuel Industrial Supplies and Materials: Prices for nonfuel industrial supplies and materials rose 0.6
percent in April following a 4.6-percent advance in March. Higher prices in April for steelmaking materials,
fertilizer, and steel mill products more than offset lower prices for unfinished building materials and
precious metals.

Finished Goods: Prices for most of the major finished goods categories increased in April. Import capital
goods prices advanced 0.4 percent for the second consecutive month and the index increased 3.8 percent for
the year ended in April. The 12-month rise in capital goods prices was the largest over-the-year advance
since September 1992. The price index for automotive vehicles also increased in April, rising 0.3 percent
following a 0.1-percent advance in March. Prices for consumer goods were unchanged in April, the first
time the index has not recorded a monthly increase since February 2021.
Exports 

U.S. export prices rose 0.6 percent in April following a 10.5-percent advance from December to March.
Higher prices for both agricultural and nonagricultural exports contributed to the overall increase in U.S.
export prices in April. The price index for U.S. exports rose 18.0 percent over the past year. (See table 2.)

Agricultural Exports: The price index for agricultural exports advanced 1.1 percent in April, after
increasing 4.3 percent the previous month. Agricultural export prices have not declined on a monthly basis
since September 2021. Higher prices in April for corn, cotton, meat, and nuts more than offset lower prices
for wheat and soybeans. Prices for agricultural exports rose 20.9 percent from April 2021 to April 2022, led
by higher prices for wheat, soybeans, corn, cotton, and meat.

All Exports Excluding Agriculture: Prices for nonagricultural exports advanced 0.5 percent in April
following increases of 4.1 percent in March, 3.3 percent in February, and 2.8 percent in January. In April,
higher prices for capital goods; nonagricultural industrial supplies and materials; automotive vehicles; and
consumer goods all contributed to the rise in nonagricultural export prices. The price index for
nonagricultural exports advanced 17.6 percent for the year ended in April, led by higher nonagricultural
industrial supplies and materials prices.

Nonagricultural Industrial Supplies and Materials: Nonagricultural industrial supplies and materials prices
increased 0.4 percent in April following a 20.7-percent advance from December to March. Higher prices for
chemicals and nonferrous metals more than offset a 1.3-percent drop in fuel prices. Despite the April
decline, export fuel prices rose 72.8 percent over the past year.

Finished Goods: Prices for each of the major finished goods categories advanced in April. Capital goods
prices increased 0.9 percent following consecutive 0.4-percent advances in March and February and a 0.9-
percent rise in January. Prices for export capital goods increased 5.1 percent for the year ended in April, the
largest 12-month advance since September 1982. The price index for automotive vehicles rose 0.8 percent
in April and consumer goods prices advanced 0.5 percent for the same period.

More information for the major import and export price indexes can be found at
www.bls.gov/web/ximpim/largest.htm.

Measures of Import and Export Prices by Locality

Imports by Locality of Origin: The price index for imports from China advanced 0.2 percent in April
following a 0.5-percent increase in March. The April rise was driven by higher prices for fabricated metal
products manufacturing. Prices for imports from China rose 4.6 percent over the past year. Import prices
from Japan advanced 0.3 percent in April, after increasing 0.5 percent the previous month. Prices for
imports from Japan rose 1.9 percent from April 2021 to April 2022. The price indexes for imports from the
European Union and Mexico also increased in April, advancing 0.2 percent and 0.6 percent, respectively. In
contrast, the price index for imports from Canada declined 1.4 percent, after rising 20.1 percent from
December to March. (See table 7.)

Exports by Locality of Destination: Export prices to China decreased 0.3 percent in April, the first
monthly drop since a 1.0-percent decline in December 2021. The decrease in April followed a 10.4-percent
rise from December to March. Despite the April drop, prices for exports to China advanced 14.5 percent
over the past 12 months. The price index for exports to Japan rose 0.7 percent in April following a 4.8-
percent increase in March. Export prices to Japan advanced 18.7 percent for the year ended in April, the
largest 12 month increase since May 2021. Prices for exports to the European Union fell 0.6 percent in
April, after rising 4.5 percent the previous month. The price index for exports to Canada increased 1.3
percent in April and export prices to Mexico rose 1.4 percent over the same period. (See table 8.)

Terms of Trade Indexes: Terms of trade indexes are based on country, region, or grouping and measure
the change in the purchasing power of exports relative to imports. U.S. terms of trade with China declined
0.5 percent in April, after rising 9.0 percent from December to March. Higher import prices from China and
decreasing export prices to China each contributed to the April drop in the U.S. terms of trade. Despite the
April decline, the index for U.S. terms of trade with China rose 9.4 percent from April 2021 to April 2022.
U.S. terms of trade with Japan advanced 0.4 percent in April following a 4.2-percent increase in March.
U.S. terms of trade with Japan rose 16.5 percent for the year ended in April, the largest over-the-year
advance since a 17.1-percent increase in May 2021. U.S. terms of trade with the European Union decreased
0.8 percent in April, after rising 3.1 percent the previous month. The index for U.S. terms of trade with
Canada advanced 2.8 percent in April and U.S. terms of trade with Mexico increased 0.8 percent over the
same period. (See table 9.)

Import and Export Services

Imports: Import air passenger fares advanced 3.6 percent in April following an 8.6-percent rise in March
and a 6.1-percent increase in February. In April, higher Asian, Latin American/Caribbean, and European
fares all contributed to the overall advance. Import air passenger fares rose 14.2 percent over the past year,
the largest 12-month increase since September 2021. Prices for import air freight declined 4.6 percent in
April, after increasing 2.7 percent the previous month. Import air freight prices advanced 6.5 percent from
April 2021 to April 2022. (See table 10.)

Exports: The index for export air passenger fares ticked up 0.1 percent in April following a 7.0-percent
advance in March. Higher Latin American/Caribbean fares in April offset declining Asian and European
fares. Export air passenger fares rose 9.7 percent for the year ended in April. Export air freight prices were
unchanged in April, after advances of 4.6 percent and 6.3 percent the previous 2 months. Prices for export
air freight have not recorded a 1-month decline since July 2021 and rose 23.3 percent over the past year.
The April 12-month advance was the largest over-the-year increase since the index rose 23.7 percent in
August 2008.

U.S. Import and Export Price Index data for May 2022 are scheduled for release on Wednesday, June 15, 2022
at 8:30 a.m. (ET).

2022 Gender Summit of the MDB Working Group on Gender

16 – 19 May 2022
Cairo
Summit: European Investment Bank; Islamic Development Bank Day 2: EBRD

The European Investment Bank and Islamic Development Bank are co-hosting the 2022 Gender Summit of the Multilateral Development Banks Working Group on Gender.

The theme is “Building back better: advancing gender equality for a more resilient future”.

The three-day summit will focus on a different topic each day, namely the care economy, climate action and digitalisation.

The EBRD is organising Day 2 of the summit on 18 May with the theme “Gender equality and climate action nexus”. There will be a panel session entitled “Inequality and external shocks: creating opportunities and building resilience”, along with two further sessions: “Beyond barriers: women’s access to climate finance” and “Building back better: green skills and new employment opportunities” led by the Caribbean Development Bank and the African Development Bank, respectively.

The three-day event will take place in a hybrid format under the patronage of the Egyptian Ministry of International Cooperation, the Ministry of Planning and Economic Development, and the National Council for Women, and paves the way for COP27 hosted by Egypt later this year.

EEOC TO HOLD HEARING ON RACE, SEX, AND NATIONAL ORIGIN DISCRIMINATION IN CONSTRUCTION

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), will host a hearing on May 17 to examine discrimination based on race, national origin, and sex in construction and consider potential solutions to increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion in the sector.

The hearing, “Knocking Down Walls: Discrimination and Harassment in Construction,” will provide historical, statistical and experiential evidence of race- and sex-based harassment and discrimin­ation that has limited opportunities for Black, Asian, Hispanic, Native American and female workers in construction. The hearing will also explore promising practices to prevent and address systemic discrim­ination so that historically marginalized workers can contribute to the $1.2 trillion federal effort to improve America’s infrastructure.

WHO:

  • Japlan “Jazz” Allen, Treasurer & Iron Worker, Chicago Women in Trades
  • Janel Bailey, Co-Executive Director of Organizing & Programs, Los Angeles Black Workers Center
  • James Bobseine, Trial Attorney, EEOC Buffalo Local Office
  • David Chincanchan, Policy Director, Workers Defense Project
  • Trevor Griffey, Lecturer of U.S. History, UC Irvine
  • Nicole Mason, President & CEO, Institute for Women’s Policy Research
  • Ken Simonson, Chief Economist, Associated General Contractors of America
  • Melissa Wells, Special Assistant to the President for Diversity and Inclusion, North America’s Building Trades Union
  • Chris Winters, Military & Tribal Liaison, International Union of Painters and Allied Trades District Council # 5
  • Gary, Iron Worker

WHEN: Tuesday, May 17, 10:30 a.m. EDT

WHERE:

The meeting will be held as a live-streamed videoconference, with an option for listen-only audio dial-in by telephone. More instructions will be posted on www.eeoc.gov 24 hours before the meeting.

The EEOC advances opportunity in the workplace by enforcing federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination. More information about the EEOC’s work generally can be found at www.eeoc.gov. Stay connected with the latest EEOC news by subscribing to our email updates.

U.S. International Investment Position, Third Quarter 2021

The U.S. net international investment position (IIP), the difference between U.S. residents’ foreign financial assets and liabilities, was –$16.07 trillion at the end of the third quarter of 2021, according to statistics released today by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). Assets totaled $34.45 trillion, and liabilities were $50.53 trillion. At the end of the second quarter, the net investment position was –$15.91 trillion.

The –$165.1 billion change in the net investment position from the second quarter to the third quarter came from net financial transactions of –$114.0 billion and net other changes in position, such as price and exchange-rate changes, of –$51.1 billion that mostly reflected the depreciation of major foreign currencies against the U.S. dollar that lowered the value of U.S. assets in dollar terms.

U.S. assets increased by $181.2 billion to a total of $34.45 trillion at the end of the third quarter, reflecting increases in portfolio investment and reserve assets. Portfolio investment assets increased by $194.3 billion to $16.16 trillion, driven by net U.S. purchases of foreign securities. Reserve assets increased by $105.0 billion to $695.1 billion, reflecting the allocation of $112.8 billion in new special drawing rights (SDRs) in August 2021 to the United States as its share of the $650 billion SDR allocation approved by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The SDR is an international reserve asset created by the IMF to supplement its member countries’ official reserves and can be exchanged between members for currencies such as the U.S. dollar, the euro, or the yen. The allocation in the third quarter was the largest in the history of the IMF.

U.S. liabilities increased by $346.3 billion to a total of $50.53 trillion at the end of the third quarter, mostly reflecting increases in other investment liabilities. Other investment liabilities increased by $294.8 billion to $7.77 trillion, reflecting increases in deposit liabilities and in SDR allocation liabilities that represent the U.S. long-term obligation to other IMF member countries holding SDRs. In an SDR allocation, the increase in U.S. liabilities offsets the increase in U.S. assets, so the allocation has no impact on the net international investment position.

Releases of New Statistics

With this release of the U.S. IIP Accounts, BEA is introducing two new IIP tables—tables 2.2 and 4.1. IIP table 2.2 features annual statistics on direct investment positions in U.S. resident special purpose entities (SPEs), which are U.S. legal entities with little or no employment or physical presence. The increased prevalence of SPEs heightens the need for separate statistics on their activities for analysis and for improved interpretability of macroeconomic statistics. IIP table 4.1 features quarter-end position statistics on U.S. debt positions by currency, sector, and maturity for U.S. assets and liabilities. These statistics will be valuable for assessing U.S. exposure to foreign currency risks and for helping to identify potential future financial crises. The new tables fulfill commitments to the IMF Task Force on Special Purpose Entities and the G–20 Data Gaps Initiative to release these statistics by yearend 2021. For more information, see “New Statistics on U.S. Resident Special Purpose Entities in the International Investment Position Accounts” and “New Statistics on U.S. Debt Positions in the International Investment Position Accounts.”

Accelerating Release of Annual IIP Statistics

BEA will accelerate the publication of the annual IIP table 1.3 usually released in June each year to March each year. Table 1.3 provides details for the annual change in the IIP, such as financial transactions, price changes, exchange-rate changes, and other changes in volume and valuation. For the upcoming IIP release on March 29, 2022, BEA will include table 1.3 for 2021, which will also be available in BEA’s Interactive Data Application. The table will subsequently be updated as part of the annual update in June each year.