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Trump Announces ‘Phase One’ Trade Deal With China Trump Announces Deal With China and Delays Planned Tariffs
(32 minutes later)
WASHINGTON — President Trump said Friday that he had reached a “substantial deal” with China that will forestall a planned tariff increase on Oct. 15, providing a temporary détente in a yearlong trade war. WASHINGTON — President Trump said Friday that he had reached a “substantial” deal with China that will forestall a planned tariff increase on Oct. 15, providing a temporary détente in a yearlong trade war.
Mr. Trump said the United States had reached a “phase one” agreement that would take several weeks to write. The deal includes China buying $40 billion to $50 billion of American agricultural products, along with agreeing to guidelines on how it manages its currency. The agreement would also include some provisions on intellectual property, including forced technology transfer. Mr. Trump said the two sides had reached a “phase one” agreement that would take several weeks to write and could be signed by both sides in November. The initial deal would involve China buying $40 billion to $50 billion worth of American agricultural products, along with agreeing to guidelines on how it manages its currency, Mr. Trump said. The agreement would also include some provisions on intellectual property, including forced technology transfer.
“We have an agreement on intellectual property,” Mr. Trump said. In exchange, the United States will not go ahead with plans to raise tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods to 30 percent next week.
The agreement, which came during the 13th round of negotiations, will help defuse a prolonged trade fight that has begun inflicting pain on the global economy and was set to escalate. In his quest to force China to acquiesce to America’s terms, Mr. Trump has already taxed $360 billion worth of Chinese products and was poised to tariff nearly every laptop, dresser and toy that China sells to the United States before year-end. The president, who just weeks ago said he was looking for a “complete” China deal, said that the two sides would now break the agreement into phases.
It will provide welcome relief to businesses, farmers, investors and others who have suffered financially from a bitter trade dispute that has dragged on for more than a year. “It’s such a big deal that doing it in sections” makes sense, Mr. Trump said during a meeting with Liu He, China’s vice premier, in the Oval Office. The first phase could be signed when Mr. Trump appears alongside his Chinese counterpart at a meeting of global leaders in Santiago, Chile, in November.
But it is far from the type of comprehensive deal Mr. Trump has been pushing for and leaves many of the administration’s biggest concerns about China’s economic practices unresolved. The agreement, which came during the 13th round of negotiations, will help defuse a prolonged trade fight that has begun inflicting pain on the global economy and was set to escalate next week. In his quest to force China to acquiesce to America’s terms, Mr. Trump has already taxed $360 billion worth of Chinese products and was poised to tariff nearly every laptop, dresser and toy that China sells to the United States before year-end.
On Wall Street, stock and commodity prices climbed on Friday as investors began anticipating a détente in the trade war. Stock and commodity prices climbed as investors anticipated a trade agreement that could help resolve economic concerns about ongoing damage from the dispute.
The S&P 500 was up roughly 1.8 percent shortly before 11:30 a.m., putting the benchmark stock market index on track to snap a three-week string of losses. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index rose 1.9 percent. The Russell 2000 index of small capitalization stocks, typically viewed as closely tied to the health of the American domestic economy, rose 2.7 percent. The S&P 500 rose 1.1 percent. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index rose 1.3 percent. The Russell 2000 index of small capitalization stocks, typically viewed as closely tied to the health of the American domestic economy rose 1.8 percent.
Benchmark crude oil prices rose 1.5 percent. Prices for key industrial metals such as copper and iron ore, often looked to as a barometer of the outlook for China’s large industrial economy, rose as well. Crude oil prices rose as did prices for key industrial metals such as copper and iron ore, often looked to as a barometer of the outlook for China’s large industrial economy.
The stakes for an agreement were high with the trade war set to worsen if the two sides did not made progress. In addition to the October tariff increase, Mr. Trump had planned check phrasing to impose another round of levies in December. But the deal is far from the type of comprehensive agreement Mr. Trump has been pushing for and leaves many of the administration’s biggest concerns about China’s economic practices unresolved. Although exact terms of the agreement are still under discussion, the details Mr. Trump announced include many of the concessions that China has previously floated, including purchases of agricultural products and limits on Beijing devaluing its currency to gain a competitive advantage.
And it does not appear to address some of the thorniest issues that the two countries have been grappling over.
For instance, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Friday that the United States would decide whether to rescind the designation of China as a currency manipulator in a future phase of negotiations.
In August, the Treasury Department formally designated China a currency manipulator for the first time since 1994 at the direction of Mr. Trump. The largely symbolic move came amid frustration among American officials that China was counteracting Mr. Trump’s tariffs by devaluing the renminbi.
And Robert Lighthizer, Mr. Trump’s top trade negotiator, said the deal did not resolve the fate of Chinese telecom giant Huawei, which has been placed on a United States blacklist, much to China’s dismay.
Still, any pause in future tariff increases and reduction in trade tensions will provide welcome relief to businesses, farmers, investors and others who have suffered financially from a bitter trade dispute that has dragged on for more than a year.
The stakes for an agreement were high with the trade war set to worsen if the two sides did not made progress and some of Mr. Trump’s biggest political constituencies — including farmers and small businesses — in the cross hairs. In addition to the October tariff increase, Mr. Trump had planned to impose another round of levies in December, at which point the United States would have taxed nearly every Chinese import.
Those additional tariffs have prompted concern from farmers and businesses, who say the levies Mr. Trump has already placed on more than $360 billion of Chinese goods are weighing on sales and investment. While the president and his advisers maintain that the trade war is having a limited impact on the economy, they have admitted that these tariffs could impact American consumers as the holiday season approaches.Those additional tariffs have prompted concern from farmers and businesses, who say the levies Mr. Trump has already placed on more than $360 billion of Chinese goods are weighing on sales and investment. While the president and his advisers maintain that the trade war is having a limited impact on the economy, they have admitted that these tariffs could impact American consumers as the holiday season approaches.
Mr. Trump’s defenders say China’s concessions will generate positive momentum for future talks and result in more business for farmers and manufacturers as they continue to press China for a comprehensive pact to correct longstanding economic abuses. Critics say the move will go only partway toward resolving a crisis of the president’s own making, and that the trade war will continue to inflict pain across the global economy.Mr. Trump’s defenders say China’s concessions will generate positive momentum for future talks and result in more business for farmers and manufacturers as they continue to press China for a comprehensive pact to correct longstanding economic abuses. Critics say the move will go only partway toward resolving a crisis of the president’s own making, and that the trade war will continue to inflict pain across the global economy.