
Trump Announces Framework for US-China Trade Truce, Details Emerging, ET Manufacturing
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Framework for a deal
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'Back to square one'
President Donald Trump on Wednesday said he was very happy with a trade deal that restored a fragile truce in the US -China trade war, a day after negotiators from Washington and Beijing agreed on a framework covering tariff rates.The deal also removes Chinese export restrictions on rare earths minerals and allows Chinese students access to US universities."We made a great deal with China. We're very happy with it," Trump told reporters before a performance at Washington's Kennedy Center on Wednesday evening. "We have everything we need, and we're going to do very well with it. And hopefully they are too."Earlier, Trump used his social media platform to offer some of the first details to emerge from two days of marathon talks in London that had, in the words of US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, put "meat on the bones" of an agreement reached last month in Geneva to ease bilateral retaliatory tariffs that had reached crushing triple-digit levels."Our deal with China is done, subject to final approval with President Xi and me," Trump said on Truth Social. "Full magnets, and any necessary rare earths, will be supplied, up front, by China. Likewise, we will provide to China what was agreed to, including Chinese students using our colleges and universities (which has always been good with me!). We are getting a total of 55per cent tariffs, China is getting 10per cent ."A White House official said the 55per cent represents the sum of a baseline 10per cent "reciprocal" tariff Trump has imposed on goods imported from nearly all US trading partners; 20per cent on all Chinese imports because of punitive measures Trump has imposed on China, Mexico and Canada, associated with his accusation that the three facilitate the flow of the opioid fentanyl into the US ; and pre-existing 25per cent levies on imports from China that were put in place during Trump's first term in the White House.Lutnick said the 55per cent rate on Chinese imports is fixed and unalterable. Asked on Wednesday on CNBC if the tariff levels on China would not change, he said: "You can definitely say that."Still, many specifics of the deal and details on how it will be implemented remain unclear.Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told lawmakers that the deal would not reduce US export restrictions on high-end artificial intelligence chips in return for access to Chinese rare earths."There is no quid pro quo in terms of chips for rare earths," Bessent told a US Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing.China's commerce ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment and more information.Officials from the two superpowers had gathered at a rushed meeting in London starting on Monday. The meeting followed a call last week between Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping that broke a standoff that flared just weeks after the preliminary deal reached in Geneva.The Geneva deal had faltered over China's continued curbs on critical minerals exports, prompting the Trump administration to respond with export controls preventing shipments of semiconductor design software, jet engines for Chinese-made planes and other goods to China.Lutnick said the agreement reached in London would remove restrictions on Chinese exports of rare earths minerals and magnets and some of the recent US export restrictions "in a balanced way," but did not provide details after the talks concluded around midnight London time (7 p.m. EDT)."We have reached a framework to implement the Geneva consensus and the call between the two presidents," Lutnick said. Both sides will now return to present the framework to their respective presidents for approvals, he added."And if that is approved, we will then implement the framework," he said.In a separate briefing, China's vice commerce minister, Li Chenggang, also said a trade framework had been reached in principle that would be taken back to US and Chinese leaders.Trump's shifting tariff policies have roiled global markets, sparked congestion and confusion in major ports, and cost companies tens of billions of dollars in lost sales and higher costs.US stocks drifted lower on Wednesday but have recouped most of the losses suffered earlier in the spring during Trump's wave of tariff announcements."It's a done deal, according to President Trump, but we haven't seen any details, which is why I think the market is not reacting to it yet. As with just about everything, the devil is in the details," said Oliver Pursche, senior vice president and adviser at Wealthspire Advisors in Westport, Connecticut.The World Bank on Tuesday slashed its global growth forecast for 2025 by four-tenths of a percentage point to 2.3per cent , saying higher tariffs and heightened uncertainty posed a "significant headwind" for nearly all economies.The US -China deal may keep the Geneva agreement from unravelling over duelling export controls, but does little to resolve deep differences over Trump's unilateral tariffs and longstanding US complaints about China's state-led, export-driven economic model."If China will course correct by upholding its end of the initial trade agreement we outlined in Geneva - and I believe after our talks in London, they will - then the rebalancing of the world's...two largest economies is possible," Bessent told a separate House of Representatives hearing hours after returning from the London talks.The two sides left Geneva with fundamentally different views of the terms of that agreement and needed to be more specific on required actions, said Josh Lipsky , senior director of the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center in Washington."They are back to square one, but that's much better than square zero," Lipsky said.It was not immediately clear from Trump's comments where things stood regarding the timeline for a more comprehensive deal that was reached last month in Geneva, a deadline set at that time for August 10.(Reporting by Doina Chiacu in Washington and Alistair Smout in London; Additional reporting by Jeff Mason in Washington, David Milliken and William James in London, and Sachin Ravikumar; Ethan Wang, Shi Bu, Yuhan Lin and Alessandro Diviggiano in Beijing, Caroline Valetkevitch in New York; Writing by David Lawder, Kate Holton and Liz Lee; Editing by Lincoln Feast, Paul Simao, Jamie Freed and Leslie Adler)

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