Trade Working Group

Trade Task Force

Mission & Goals

The mission of the Trade Working Group is to engage the European and U.S. business community in the various EACC chapter locations to generate awareness about the relevant transatlantic trade initiatives & policies and the opportunities & challenges they present to businesses on both sides of the Atlantic.

Working Group members will work with EACC staff to identify relevant topics and thought-leaders to address them. One of the main objectives is to develop educational programs to help the business community better understand the key factors that are affecting transatlantic trade and to inform EACC members about new regulation, legal implications and business issues relevant to their global operations.

The goal of these programs is to utilize the EACC’s unique pan-European and US expertise to update the local and national business communities on either side of the Atlantic on what they need to know.

The Trade Working Group will help engage the relevant public and private sector participants involved in this dialog and showcase EACCNY’s unique positioning on transatlantic trade matters and highlight our members’ expertise in international trade & investment. 

The working group will provide EACC members and our larger audience with access to timely & relevant information and resources as they relate to transatlantic trade & investment as well as updates on the fall-out of Brexit for both the US as well as European markets.

Concretely, the Trade Working Group will:

  • Identify the key issues affecting business relations between the US and the European Union and develop informative programs to educate the EACC membership about topics in line with the priorities of the working group target audience
  • Contribute to and participate in trade related business activities, member development & engagement in accordance with the EACC strategic priorities
  • Raise the profile and visibility of the EACC as a resources for trade related questions locally, nationally and internationally and in particular within the working group’s primary target groups
  • Inform US executives about related regulatory issues in Europe and how they affect trans-Atlantic business transactions
  • Inform European executives about related regulatory issues in the United States and how they affect trans-Atlantic business transactions

The Trade Working Group is an initiative with local, chapter-specific members, its reach and cooperation on specific projects however will extend across all EACC chapters in the United State and Europe.

Trade Working Group Responsibilities

  • Meet at least quarterly as a group to identify, plan, and develop programs and activities related to trade and aligned with the EACC’s mission with the support of the EACC staff
  • Working Group members are encouraged to an active dialog with its relevant constituencies and help position the EACC as the go-to platform on the subject
  • Working Group leaders or their designated representative are encouraged to participate in annual committee leaders’ meetings and annual EACC strategic meeting
  • Engage in a regular discourse with the EACC leadership and Staff and committees to help identify relevant topics and regulatory and legislative changes that could affect transatlantic business relations, and help identify subject matter experts to present at seminars/contribute to thought-leader articles
  • Help promote the EACC and its activities to the working group’s main constituencies and identify prospective members within its target audience and help engage them with the goal to get involved and become members of the EACC

Trade News

Chapter News, News, Trade & TTIP Related

OECD | G20 Merchandise Trade Rose Sharply in Q1 2026 While Trade in Services Expanded Modestly

Despite disruptions to trade related to the current crisis in the Middle East, G20 merchandise trade expanded strongly in Q1 2026. Measured in current US dollars, both exports and imports increased by 5.3% quarter-on-quarter compared with Q4 2025, driven partly by trade of semiconductors and other high-tech products in East Asia. Preliminary estimates indicate that G20 trade in services1 expanded modestly, with exports rising by 1.7% and imports by 1.5% (Figures 1 and 3). In North America, merchandise trade exports from...

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Chapter News, News, Trade & TTIP Related

Eurostat | Euro Area International Trade in Goods Surplus €7.8 bn

Euro area The first estimates of euro area balance showed a €7.8 bn surplus in trade in goods with the rest of the world in March 2026, compared with +€34.1 bn in March 2025. The euro area exports of goods to the rest of the world in March 2026 were €265.3 billion, a decrease of 5.5% compared with March 2025 (€280.6 bn). Imports from the rest of the world stood at €257.4 bn, a rise of 4.4% compared with March 2025 (€246.5 bn). In March 2026, the euro...

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Member News, News, Trade & TTIP Related

Tradewind Finance | Non-Recourse vs Recourse Factoring: What Exporters Need to Know

Exporters selling internationally often face a difficult balance: offering competitive payment terms while protecting their business from non-payment risk. Factoring helps solve the cash flow challenge by advancing funds against unpaid invoices. However, exporters must choose between recourse factoring and non-recourse factoring. Understanding the difference is essential for managing financial risk in global trade. In a recourse factoring arrangement, the exporter remains responsible if the buyer fails to pay the invoice. Here is how it works: The exporter ships goods and issues an invoice. The factor advances...

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Trade Working Group Members

Laura Siegel Rabinowitz
Shareholder
GREENBERG TRAURIG

Claire O’Rourke
Senior Relationship Manager
HSBC

Deirdre Geraghty
Partner
A&L GOODBODY

Paul Burroughs
Head of Corporate Banking, North America
CITI