Dayton Daily News

China mum about Trump-Xi meeting; Huawei sales slowing

- By Wong Wai Bor

SHANGHAI — Attention is turning to a possible meeting of President Donald Trump with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at a summit in Japan later this month as the next step in the vexing trade standoff between the two biggest economies.

The Chinese government would not confirm Tuesday that such a meeting will take place.

“We note that for some time, the U.S. has made multiple public statements that it looks forward to a meeting between the two heads of state during the G-20 Osaka Summit,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters in Beijing when asked about the issue. “We will release informatio­n on this when we have it.”

Trump has imposed 25% tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese exports and is preparing to expand them to cover another $300 billion. Beijing has hit back with its own retaliator­y tariff increases.

Trump wants China to commit to curbing its long- standing, huge trade surplus with the U.S. The con- flict also reflects deeper con- cerns over China’s ambitions to help its own industries gain a lead in key technol- ogies such as robotics and artificial intelligen­ce.

Nearly a year after Trump began imposing the higher tariffs to ramp up pressure on Beijing, hopes are focused on a possible top-level compromise to break a stalemate in talks that were suspended last month.

Trump said in an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Monday that if Xi doesn’t meet with him at the Group of 20 major economies gath- ering in Osaka, more U.S. tariffs on Chinese exports may go into effect, though he expects Xi to attend.

No talks are planned in Beijing or Washington before the Osaka event, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told reporters over the week- end.

Each side is blaming the other for the logjam in nego- tiations.

“We do not want a trade war, but we are not afraid of fighting one,” Geng said, reiteratin­g earlier statements. “If the US is ready to have equal consultati­ons, our door is wide open. But if it insists on escalating trade frictions, we will respond to it with resolution and perseveran­ce.”

Meanwhile, at a consumer electronic­s show in the business hub of Shanghai, a top executive of telecom gear maker Huawei Technologi­es hinted that pressure from Washington on other countries to exclude it from next-generation, or 5G, telecom networks is taking a toll on its sales.

Huawei vaulted past Apple to become the No. 2 global smartphone brand behind South Korea’s Samsung last year, as its total sales surged almost 20% to exceed $100 billion.

“If we had not encountere­d anything unexpected, we would have become number one in the world by the fourth quarter,” Huawei’s chief strategist, Shao Yang, said Tuesday at the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Shanghai.

“But now we have to wait a little bit longer to achieve that,” he said, without referring directly to President Donald Trump or the trade war.

Washington last month put Huawei on a blacklist that effectivel­y bars U.S. firms from selling to the company without government approval. U.S. officials have accused Chinese technology companies such as Huawei of stealing trade secrets and threatenin­g cybersecur­ity — possibly at the behest of the ruling Communist Party.

Chinese authoritie­s say the United States is exaggerati­ng security concerns to block a potential competitor.

Huawei has denied it would share user secrets with the Chinese government and demanded that the U.S. provide evidence to show that such a risk exists. Earlier, it insisted that the trade friction with Washington was not taking much of a toll on its global business.

 ?? ARTYOM IVANOV /TASS 2017 ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump shake hands in 2017 during a meeting in Beijing.
ARTYOM IVANOV /TASS 2017 Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump shake hands in 2017 during a meeting in Beijing.

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