
Trump caves handing China another 90-day tariff extension before threatened doomsday
He reportedly signed an executive order to pause a scheduled hike as talks between China and the United States continue.
The president signed an executive order to postpone the tariff deadline, according to a report from CNBC citing a White House official one day before it was scheduled to snap into place.
Currently, Chinese imports are subject to the president's 10 percent baseline tariffs with an additional 20 percent tariff.
The president threatened a massive 245 percent tariff on Chinese goods in April, but has extended it as long as talks and negotiations continue.
United States and Chinese officials spent two days in Stockholm in late July emerging in a settlement to extend the ongoing trade 'truce' between both countries.
'They've been dealing quite nicely — the relationship is very good with President Xi and myself,' Trump said.
The new deadline is set for early November.
'Tariffs are making our Country Strong and Rich!!!' Trump boasted on social media on Monday.
President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are also in talks to meet to wrap up trade talks and set a deal as negotiations continue.
The two leaders last spoke on the phone in June.
Both sides are optimistic that they can wrap up talks in late October, according to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in an interview with Nikkei Asia.
Trump continues using tariffs to force foreign countries into negotiations, even as some of the deadlines keep getting extensions depending on whether progress is made.
Tariffs on over 60 countries went into effect at midnight on August 7th, following 18 weeks of tough negotiations.
Trump allowed tariffs on Canada to jump to 35 percent, even as the president granted Mexico a 90-day extension.
India now faces an additional 25 percent tariff scheduled for August 27 on top of a 25 percent tarrif set on August 1.
Brazil also has a 50 percent tariff on many of its products.
Other countries that have yet to make a trade deal with the United States include Switzerland, South Africa, Brunei, Cambodia, Bolivia, Ecuador, Iceland, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, Turkey, Norway, Iran, North Korea and Russia.
Trump announced Monday afternoon there would be no tairrfs on Swiss gold bars, after the price of gold spiked.
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