China Sending Top Trade Negotiator to U.S. To Sign Phase-One Deal Next Week
China officially confirms that Vice Premier Liu He will attend the signing of the Phase One trade deal.
China officially confirms that Vice Premier Liu He will attend the signing of the Phase One trade deal.
“I will be signing our very large and comprehensive Phase One Trade Deal with China on January 15,” Trump said on Twitter
The two sides had constructive discussions on each other’s core concerns in the “phase one” deal, Xinhua said.
The major stock indexes surged higher Friday on signs that the U.S. and China may have reached “partial deal” on trade issues. President Donald Trump said that “good things are happening” in the trade negotiations. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said
President Donald Trump said Wednesday evening that he would delay proposed tariffs on China in October, as a positive gesture to Vice Premier Liu He.
Sens. Steve Daines (R-MT) and David Perdue (R-GA) pressed high-ranking Chinese government officials Wednesday on their unfair trade policies and security concerns.
The South China Morning Post reports that trade talks in Beijing are likely to happen as early as next week.
Trade negotiations are underway at the White House and are expected to last late into the night. Tariffs should rise at midnight.
President Donald Trump told reporters from the Oval Office Thursday just before meeting with the Chinese Vice Premier that they will probably know if there will be a trade deal between the two nations within four weeks.
Kudlow told CNBC that the China trade talks stalled last week before Lighthizer got tough with Chinese officals.
President Donald Trump delayed the 90-day tariff truce deadline with China after a “very productive” extended round of trade talks in D.C.
President Donald Trump met with Special Envoy for President Xi Jinping Friday, promoting great promise for a trade deal and openness to extending the tariff truce deadline.
Chinese officials agreed to increase purchases of U.S. soybeans by ten million metric tons on Friday during a meeting with President Donald Trump.
President Donald Trump expects to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping “probably” in March at Mar-a-Lago, he told reporters at the top of a meeting with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He Friday.
United States trade officials lined up opposite Chinese counterparts at a Washington, DC, negotiating table Thursday morning to begin two days of time-sensitive trade negotiations.
Top U.S. and Chinese trade officials made progress in Beijing this week, but the White House says there’s much more work to do as talks continue next week in D.C. and a tariff truce deadline looms.
China’s Vice Premier pledged to President Donald Trump in the Oval Office Thursday that China will purchase five million tons of soybeans a day from the U.S.
China and the U.S. are at a “critically important stage” in their relations, according to a letter from the President of China to President Donald Trump which was read aloud in the Oval Office Thursday.
The U.S. Trade Representative will lead pivotal, top-level trade meetings with China’s delegation at the White House this week.
D.C.-based trade meetings with China’s top economic official are still on for the end of the month, a White House official said, refuting reports Tuesday they were called off.
President Donald Trump called on China to do a ‘Real Deal’ after numbers revealed it is experiencing the slowest economic expansion in 28 years.
China’s top economic official will “likely” visit the U.S. for trade talks in January according to Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin.
China’s top economic adviser unexpectedly participated in trade meetings involving high-level U.S. trade representatives in Beijing Monday.
President Donald Trump issued the additional tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese goods that he’s been warning about for months should China refuse to change “unfair” trading practices with the U.S.
Five top Trump administration officials are returning from two days of trade meetings with officials in China, bringing with them the message that the administration needs to give “immediate attention” to changing the U.S.-China trade and investment relationship.