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U.S. sets China trade deal terms, sources say, but Beijing mum

Published 12/13/2019, 09:09 AM
Updated 12/13/2019, 09:09 AM
© Reuters. G20 leaders summit in Osaka

By Jeff Mason, Andrea Shalal, David Lawder and Se Young Lee

WASHINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) - Washington has set its terms for a trade deal with China, offering to suspend some tariffs on Chinese goods and cut others in exchange for Beijing's buying more American farm goods, U.S. sources said on Thursday.

Beijing has yet to confirm whether it is on board with the proposal, although officials will hold a press briefing Friday night local time to update progress on the talks, the State Council Information Office said. Officials from the state planner, ministry of finance, foreign ministry, agriculture ministry and ministry of commerce will attend.

In the hours since U.S. sources said terms for a phase-one deal were in place, Beijing's silence had raised questions over whether the two sides can agree a truce in their trade war before a new round of tit-for-tat tariffs takes effect on Sunday.

A source briefed on the status of bilateral negotiations said the United States would suspend tariffs on $160 billion in Chinese goods expected to go into effect on Sunday and roll back existing tariffs.

In return, Beijing would agree to buy $50 billion in U.S. agricultural goods in 2020, double what it bought in 2017, before the trade conflict began, two U.S.-based sources briefed on the talks said.

China's yuan jumped to a four-and-a-half-month high against the U.S. dollar and Chinese shares rallied on Friday on hopes the two sides will avoid further escalation of the trade war. U.S. equity index futures whipsawed on Friday morning as investors fretted over the lack of official confirmation.

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Neither Washington nor Beijing made official statements about a deal, however, raising questions about whether the terms had been agreed by both sides.

New Chinese tariffs on U.S. goods are due to take effect at 0401 GMT Sunday and new U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods will apply at 0501 GMT. Both would need to make formal announcements to postpone or cancel the tariffs.

Washington had offered to cut existing tariffs on Chinese goods by as much as 50% and suspend the new tariffs scheduled for Sunday to secure phase one of deal first promised in October, two people familiar with the negotiations had said earlier on Thursday.

One of those people told Reuters that U.S. President Donald Trump and his top advisers agreed on the terms for a proposal, possibly a final offer, and were now waiting for Beijing to sign off in writing.

A Beijing-based U.S. business community official also told Reuters he viewed the reported deal more as a "final offer" that has been approved by Trump but not yet affirmed by Beijing.

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying, asked about the status of the trade talks during a daily briefing on Friday, did not comment on whether an agreement has been reached or specific terms of any deal with the United Sates.

"China is committed to constructive dialogue to resolve and manage our differences, and believe ... the deal must be mutually beneficial," she said.

Some analysts doubted China could deliver such a dramatic increase in agricultural purchases. For instance, demand for soybeans - a key U.S. product used for animal feed - is down after African swine fever devastated China's pig herd. It also made a big increase in corn purchases unlikely, they said.

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Ramping up purchases of other U.S. farm products such as beef would be hard, too, they said.

"There's just no logistical way that they can double imports in a year," said Darin Friedrichs, senior Asia commodity analyst at INTL FCStone.

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Senior Chinese diplomat Wang Yi blasted Washington for damaging relations by criticizing Beijing over issues such as Hong Kong and the treatment of Muslim Uighurs. He did not mention the trade war.

"We will never accept the so-called unilateral sanctions and any acts of bullying," he during an event on Friday morning.

In the absence of a deal that at the least declares a truce in the 17-month trade war, U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, including products such as video game consoles and computer monitors, begin Sunday. China's retaliatory tariffs, targeting goods ranging from corn and wheat to small aircraft and rare earth magnets, will also take effect.

Beijing is also scheduled to begin reapplying on Dec. 15 an additional 25% tariff on U.S.-made vehicles and 5% tariffs on auto parts that had been suspended at the beginning of 2019.

Chinese officials and trade experts have warned that another exchange of tariffs could torpedo the trade negotiations and further escalate the dispute. Some experts say it's possible that talks may be suspended altogether until after the U.S. presidential election in November 2020.

Latest comments

There you have, two ignorant liberals bashing our president. Their hate overlook his success, all for America! what have their dims accomplished?????
Not even a little surprised. Trump caves on everything. A new car salesman with 6months experience is a better negotiator than the Big Orange Fiddle. He gets played by everyone.
This is what happens when you put a realtor in the White House that is controlled by something like the Koch Group.
What a joke. First it goes from a great deal with China to a phase 1 deal. Now it's a skinny deal.
Can both sides quit teasing and settle this issue once and for all
exactly we need technical to work again
so deal made. china silent.lol. equals no deal.lol.
chump change. and the meltup continues unabated. whewwweeee. what insanity. no gravity whatsoever...
Chicken. Or it was all a bluff to save face because we can't handle the repercussions if we go all the way through with it. You heard it from Colonel Sanders
what a joke. this is not all in Trump's control .
Trump will cave as always. Zero stamina.
We need to stand our ground..........China has more to lose. If not now when is the real question.
So it is better to HURRY UP and make a deal, that's not good for us. What is your philosophy Mr Wong. I think you would CAVE IN to Communism so you could trade today!!! Am I wrong. No. That's Wong with an R.
  indeed and whereas Trump has to have things looking sweet and rosie in the next twelve months, Xi can have his economy contract massively and not lose any power - he can blame the americans, the state owned press can make Xi look good and TRump dreadful and the Chinese will still think Xi the Pooh is awesome - Trump doesn't have any of those luxuries
China exported to US is $500 billion & US exported to China only $170 billion which only a fraction to US giant GDP. Anh also China doesnt have a semiconductor industry that needed gor China’s hitech fulfill.Do the math & use your brain abit.
China is weak - will bow down to USA
China is big lion but its 4 legs are made by clay. During WW2: only a few Japanese solders still invaded sucessfully China & that is a fact.
Danny Thai, Thailand open door for Japanese to invade South East Asia in WW2. China under Nationalist with poorly equipped troops managed to trapped millions of Japanese force.
Danny Thai, don't forget Thai King has Chinese blood and Chinese name too.
I told you guys ... is ain't no easy to win with China. China is the only country that can go toe to toe with US. They are not like the other countries where Trump can push them around. Trump needs to know, he only controls 300M consumers while President Xi sits atop a 1.4B consumer army. When they go head to head in this economic battlefield, who do you think will win? The Lion China will Roar if more tarriffs gets poked.
I think for the moment the US remains the largest consumer market by value. Otherwise China would have already walked away from the table. Chinese exporters need the US consumer because the volumes and margins are there.
why this always "china says"
Impose 30% tarrifs. We have plenty of chips to play with. No brainwr imo
Sources.... yeah...
They're gonna renege on and/or never enforce every part of any agreement ever, so what's the point of even picking up the phone? Seriously.
I CALLED THIS 23 HOURS BEFORE! I knew the Chinese were FOS! Sometimes it's not easy being constantly right about China.
Buzzy Jefferson is the real FOS, look at the rising sun flag he used as icon, how 'Patriotic'...
 . Just showing support for the remilitarization of one of our staunchest allies. It's also just a cool design. It will be interesting to see what kind of weapons Mitsubishi has been working on over the last 50 years. I can see I struck a chord with you there. Sorry about that, but as an American, you shouldn't have a problem with it. Have you tried breathing into a paper bag?
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