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US-China trade war
EconomyGlobal Economy

For ‘fantastic deal’ with China, US-China Business Council looks at rolling back the clock

Negotiations in Malaysia suggest both sides are positioning for a potential meeting, but substantial policy shifts remain uncertain

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Sean Stein, president of the US-China Business Council, seen here in April, spoke at the Bund Summit in Shanghai on Saturday. Photo: AFP
Ji Siqiin Shanghai

A “fantastic deal” that US President Donald Trump has pledged to strike with China would be dialling the clock back to April 1 – before the launch of his massive tariffs, a top US business representative has said.

“I think things are pretty obvious at this point, of what’s gonna happen,” said Sean Stein, president of the US-China Business Council, at the Bund Summit in Shanghai on Saturday. “The tariff pause of 90 days will be extended without a doubt.”

Beyond that, there are only three things Trump would ask from the Chinese side: a deal on fentanyl, the resumption of soybean purchases, and rare earths, Stein said during a panel discussion.
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“But the problem of all of this is, all of those things are only necessary because of the trade war which he launched,” Stein said, adding that, in Trump’s eyes, a fantastic deal would be “sort of rolling the clock back” to the status quo of pre-Liberation Day tariffs.
Stein’s remarks came as China and the US – respectively led by Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng and US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent – began their fifth round of trade negotiations in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday. And the broad discussions were said to have brought both sides “to a spot where the leaders will have a productive meeting”, according to post-meeting comments by US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Sunday.
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He was talking about paving the way for a meeting between Trump and President Xi Jinping, which the US side has said will take place in South Korea on Thursday. China has yet to confirm the meeting between the two leaders.

After negotiations concluded in Malaysia on Sunday, Beijing said in a statement that the two sides had reached a preliminary consensus on issues related to export controls, a tariff-truce extension, port fees, agricultural trade, and fentanyl-related tariffs and cooperation.

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