Bangkok Post

ROLLING BACK

Trump, Xi could meet in London

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China and the US agree to cancel in phases the tariffs imposed during their trade war.

BEIJING: China and the United States have agreed to cancel in phases the tariffs imposed during their months-long trade war, the Chinese Commerce Ministry said yesterday, without specifying a timetable.

An interim US-China trade deal is widely expected to include a US pledge to scrap tariffs scheduled for Dec 15 on about $156 billion worth of Chinese imports, including mobile phones, laptop computers and toys.

Tariff cancellati­on was an important condition for any agreement, ministry spokesman Gao Feng said, adding that both must simultaneo­usly cancel some tariffs on each other’s goods to reach a “phase one” trade deal.

“The trade war started with tariffs, and should end with the cancellati­on of tariffs,” he told a regular news briefing.

The proportion of tariffs cancelled for both sides to reach a “phase one” deal must be the same, but the number to be cancelled can be negotiated, Gao added, without elaboratin­g.

“In the past two weeks, the lead negotiator­s from both sides have had serious and constructi­ve discussion­s on resolving various core concerns appropriat­ely,” he said. “Both sides have agreed to cancel additional tariffs in different phases, as both sides make progress in their negotiatio­ns.” Gao did not give a timeline. Stocks rallied, with Hong Kong’s

Hang Seng Index climbing 0.6%. US and European stock futures jumped. The yuan strengthen­ed.

“The question right now is what the two sides have actually agreed on — the market’s focus has shifted to how the US may react to China’s tariff remarks tonight or in coming days,” said Tommy Xie, an economist at OverseaChi­nese Banking Corp. “Investors are still cautious.”

A source previously told Reuters that Chinese negotiator­s wanted the United States to drop 15% tariffs on about $125 billion worth of Chinese goods that took effect on Sept 1.

They also sought relief from earlier 25% tariffs on about $250 billion of imports, ranging from machinery and semiconduc­tors to furniture.

A person familiar with China’s negotiatin­g position said it was pressing Washington to “remove all tariffs as soon as possible”.

A deal may be signed this month by US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at a yet-to-be determined location.

Dozens of venues have been suggested for a meeting, which had originally been set to take place on the sidelines of a now-cancelled mid-November summit of Asia-Pacific leaders in Chile, a senior Trump administra­tion official told Reuters on Wednesday.

One possible location was London, where the leaders could meet after a Nato summit that Trump is due to attend from Dec 3-4, the official said.

Gao declined to say when and where such a meeting could be.

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