Latest News

US and China to hold trade talks on June 9 in London

Three of Donald Trump's closest aides are scheduled to meet their Chinese counterparts on Monday in London for talks on resolving a trade conflict between the two world's largest economies, which has been causing global markets to be on edge. U.S. Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent will be represented by the U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Grer, Commerce Sec. Howard Lutnick, and the U.S. Trade Rep Jamieson Greer in the talks. Trump announced the talks on his Truth Social platform, but did not provide any further details.

The identity of the China representative was not immediately known. The Chinese Embassy in Washington didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment.

Trump wrote that "the meeting should go well."

The meeting is scheduled a day after Trump called Chinese President Xi Jinping, in a rare call between leaders amid weeks of brewing tensions over trade and a fight over vital minerals.

Trump and Xi have agreed to meet and their staffs will hold discussions in the interim.

Both countries face pressure to ease tensions. The global economy is under pressure due to China's control of rare earth minerals, for which it is the leading producer. Investors are also concerned about Trump’s efforts to impose tariffs across the board on products from the majority of U.S. trading partner nations. China has also seen the supply of important U.S. products like chip-designing software cut off.

On May 12, the countries reached a 90-day agreement in Geneva, to reverse some of their triple-digit, tit for tat tariffs that they had imposed on each other after Trump's inauguration.

The preliminary agreement sparked an international relief rally on stock markets. U.S. indices that were in or near bear-market levels have recovered the majority of their losses.

Although stocks rose, the temporary agreement did not address the broader concerns straining the bilateral relationship. These range from the illicit fentanyl traffic to the democratically-governed Taiwan, and U.S. complaints against China's export-driven, state-dominated economic model.

Trump, since returning to the White House, has threatened a variety of punitive actions against trading partners. However, he has retracted some of these measures at the last moment. This on-again-off-again strategy has confused world leaders and scared business executives.

Beijing views mineral exports in the United States as a way to exert political pressure. If economic growth slows down because companies are unable to produce mineral-powered products, this could lead to domestic political pressure being placed on President Donald Trump.

The United States has identified China in recent years as its most important geopolitical competitor and the only nation capable of challenging the U.S. militarily and economically. (Reporting and editing by Costas Pittas, Anna Driver and Trevor Hunnicutt)

(source: Reuters)