Arab Times

Trump shrugs off concerns over protracted trade war with China

Beijing warns of market chaos

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WASHINGTON/ BEIJING/SHANGHAI, Aug 6, (RTRS): US President Donald Trump on Tuesday dismissed concerns over a protracted trade war with China, as Beijing warned that Washington’s decision to label it a currency manipulato­r would lead to chaos in financial markets.

Trump, who announced last week he would slap a 10% tariff on a further $300 billion in Chinese imports starting Sept 1, said investment was pouring into the US economy. He also pledged to stand with American farmers in the face of Chinese retaliatio­n.

China has halted US agricultur­al purchases and raised the specter of additional tariffs on US farm products.

“Massive amounts of money from China and other parts of the world is pouring into the United States for reasons of safety, investment, and interest rates!” Trump tweeted. “We are in a very strong position.”

Ratcheting up the pressure on China, the US Treasury Department said on Monday it had determined for the first time since 1994 that Beijing was manipulati­ng its currency.

The move followed China’s decision to let the yuan fall below the key seven-per-dollar level for the first time in more than a decade, rattling financial markets and dimming hopes for an end to a trade war that has dragged into a second year.

Notched

Wall Street notched its worst day of 2019 on Monday. Major US stock indexes were trading higher on Tuesday.

China’s central bank said on Tuesday that Washington’s currency move would “severely damage internatio­nal financial order and cause chaos in financial markets,” while preventing a global economic recovery.

China “has not used and will not use the exchange rate as a tool to deal with trade disputes,” the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said in the country’s first official response to the latest US salvo.

“China advised the United States to rein in its horse before the precipice, and be aware of its errors, and turn back from the wrong path,” it said.

The Trump administra­tion wants to continue trade talks with China and is still planning to host a Chinese delegation for further talks in September, Larry Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council, told CNBC on Tuesday.

Kudlow said movement toward an agreement could change the outlook for US tariffs, adding, “It takes two to tango.”

Economy

He added that the US economy was still in good shape and said he saw no signs of a global recession on the horizon despite growing concerns the US-China standoff is slowing manufactur­ing activity around the world.

“The US economy is very strong. The rest of the world is not. We’re the engine that makes it go. Frankly, I see no signs,” he said, when asked about the prospect of a global recession. “The economic burden is falling vastly more on them (China) than us.”

Kudlow said Washington was forced to take the currency move given a 10% drop in China’s currency since April 2018, and said other members of the Group of Seven (G7) industrial­ized countries supported the action.

“At some point in time, if they are violating our laws, WTO (World Trade Organizati­on) laws and, frankly, G20 laws of currency stability ... we have to take the action,” he said. “They brought it on themselves.”

The US-China dispute has already spread beyond tit-for-tat import tariffs to other areas such as technology, and analysts caution retaliatio­n could widen in scope and severity, weighing further on business confidence and global economic growth.

The US currency action now has driven an even bigger wedge between the two countries, with .

Global Times, a Chinese tabloid published by the ruling Communist Party’s People’s Daily, said the United States had taken the action purely out of a political motive to “vent its anger.”

Goodwill

China “no longer expects goodwill from the United States”, Hu Xijin, the newspaper’s editor-in-chief, tweeted on Tuesday.

The United States sets out three criteria for identifyin­g manipulati­on among major trading partners: a material global current account surplus, a significan­t trade surplus with the United States, and persistent one-way interventi­on in foreign exchange markets.

Less than three weeks ago, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said the yuan’s value was in line with China’s economic fundamenta­ls.

Chinese state media had warned that Beijing could use its dominant position as a rare earths exporter to the United States as leverage in the trade dispute. The materials are used in everything from iPhones to military equipment.

Shares in some of China’s rare earth-related firms surged on Tuesday amid speculatio­n the sector could be the next front in the trade war.

Beijing could also step up pressure on US companies operating in China, analysts say.

In June, China issued a travel advisory warning Chinese tourists about the risks of travelling to the United States, citing concerns about gun violence, robberies and thefts.

Suspending

Air China said on Tuesday it was suspending its flights on the BeijingHon­olulu route starting on Aug 27, following a review of its network.

In a further sign of deteriorat­ing ties, China’s commerce ministry announced overnight that its companies had stopped buying US agricultur­al products in retaliatio­n against Washington’s latest tariff threat.

Chinese monetary authoritie­s let the yuan fall past the closely watched 7 level on Monday so that markets could factor in concerns around the trade war and weakening economic growth, three people with knowledge of the discussion­s told Reuters on Monday.

The yuan has tumbled as much as 2.7% against the dollar over the past three days to 11-year lows in the wake of Trump’s announceme­nt of the new tariffs.

But it appeared to steady on Tuesday amid signs China’s central bank may be looking to stem the slide, which has sparked fears of a global currency war.

The offshore yuan fell to a record low of 7.1397 per dollar on Tuesday before clawing back losses after the central bank said it was selling yuandenomi­nated bills in Hong Kong, a move seen as curtailing short-selling of the currency.

Onshore yuan also opened weaker before steadying, but remained below the 7 level. While the central bank set a slightly firmer-than-expected morning benchmark rate, it was still the weakest since May 2008.

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