Houston Chronicle

Trump lifts hopes in pullback on China trade stance

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump de-escalated a confrontat­ion with China on Wednesday, dropping plans to impose strict limits on Chinese investment in U.S. technology companies and instead urging Congress to strengthen existing laws that apply to all foreign countries.

The administra­tion’s more conciliato­ry stance raised at least the possibilit­y that the two sides could work toward a negotiated end to the punishing tariffs they’re set to impose on each other’s goods beginning July 6.

And it fueled a temporary rally in financial markets, which had been reeling on fears of an escalating trade war.

Stocks sank late in the day, though, after Larry Kudlow, Trump’s top economic adviser, said on Fox Business Network’s “Varney & Co.” that the administra­tion’s policy shift should not necessaril­y be seen as a softening in its stance toward China.

Headed for a truce?

It was unclear whether the policy shift would lead to a truce between the world’s two biggest economies, which have been edging toward a high-risk confrontat­ion, or whether any formal negotiatio­ns might soon begin.

Last month, the White House said that by the end of this week, it would announce tight new curbs on Chinese investment. The idea was to prevent stateowned or politicall­y connected Chinese companies from buying advanced U.S. technology.

Beijing is seeking such technology as part of its “Made in China 2015” initiative, a roadmap to its goal of becoming a global tech leader.

Foreign investment

But on Wednesday, the Trump administra­tion announced a less-draconian approach: It would work with Congress to strengthen reviews of foreign investment under the existing Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS, led by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. CFIUS applies to all countries — not just China — and its reviews are conducted on a caseby-case basis.

“For those who want to say this is being weak on China, the answer is no,” Mnuchin said. “The question was, What were the appropriat­e tools?”

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