The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trump says China trade deal likely as talks extended

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Friday a trade summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping was likely next month, and hailed two days of ‘very good talks’ by negotiator­s.

The negotiatio­ns were extended through Sunday as officials race to reach a deal ahead of a deadline next week when US duty rates are due to rise sharply.

But Trump again said he was considerin­g pushing back the deadline for raising tariffs on more than US$200 billion in Chinese exports.

“We expect to have a meeting sometime in a not too distant future,” he said of the meeting with Xi. “Probably fairly soon in the month of March.”

Xi also sounded a positive note in a letter delivered to Trump by China’s lead negotiator Liu He.

The Chinese president expressed hope that the talks maintain “a mutually respectful, cooperativ­e and win-win attitude” and lead to a “mutually beneficial” agreement.

“I am ready to maintain close contact with the President through various means,” state-run China Central Television quoted Xi’s letter saying.

Details remained scant about any concrete progress in the seven-month-old trade war, which has rattled global markets and prompted stark warnings about the risks to the world economy.

“I think there is a very, very good chance that a deal can be made,” Trump told reporters at the White House on a second day of trade negotiatio­ns with Chinese officials.

“If we are doing well, I could see extending that” deadline for the end of the three month tariff truce.

And Trump said an agreement on currency manipulati­on will be included in the trade pact. Officials from Beijing also expressed optimism about a positive outcome.

“From China, we believe that it is very likely that it will happen,” Liu said, speaking through an interprete­r.

Global stock markets were higher on expectatio­ns the two sides would avoid further deteriorat­ion in their trade relations.

William Reinsch, a former senior Treasury official for trade in the administra­tion of President Bill Clinton, told AFP a risk for Trump is whether any agreement holds and the Chinese honor their commitment­s.

“If it unravels and we have a string of unmet commitment­s and then US retaliatio­n right before the election, we’re kind of right back where we started,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Trump meets with Liu in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, US. — Reuters photo
Trump meets with Liu in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, US. — Reuters photo

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