financetom
Business
financetom
/
Business
/
Factbox-What have China and the United States agreed to in Geneva?
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Factbox-What have China and the United States agreed to in Geneva?
May 26, 2025 5:39 AM

BEIJING (Reuters) - China and the United States announced a truce in their trade war on Monday after talks in Geneva that will roll back the bulk of tariffs and other countermeasures by Wednesday.

The United States is dropping the extra tariffs it imposed on China this year to 30% from 145%, while China is cutting them to 10% from 125%.

Tariffs imposed before April 2, including those dating back to U.S. President Donald Trump's first term, and other restrictions, such as the U.S. measures to end low-value package tariff exemptions, known as the "de minimis" rule, appear to remain. 

TARIFFS ARE COMING DOWN, BUT UNEVENLY AND NOT TO ZERO

The United States has agreed to adjust or remove three executive orders, which collectively put 115% tariffs on imports from China. 

Washington agreed to drop its so-called "Liberation Day" tariffs from 34% to 10% for 90 days, and remove all tariffs imposed during the tit-for-tat escalation that followed.

China has matched the de-escalation, removing all but 10% of the tariffs imposed since April 2, leaving the current rate at 10%.

However, that leaves China still facing a 30% tariff once duties imposed before April 2 are counted, including the two rounds of fentanyl tariffs imposed in February and March.

Chinese products ranging from electric vehicles, steel and aluminium will also still face separate tariffs imposed over the past several years.

SOME NON-TARIFF BARRIERS PAUSED

China also committed to removing non-tariff countermeasures imposed against the United States since April 2, although it remains unclear how some of these measures will be walked back.

As part of its retaliation in April, China added rare earths to its controlled export list, opened an anti-dumping probe into chemical firm DuPont's China business and blacklisted some U.S. defense and tech firms.

The wording of the agreement suggests those firms will be removed from the list, which barred trade and investment with China and the anti-dumping probe shelved. 

The statement only said countermeasures imposed after April 2 will be removed, which would therefore not include a dozen companies blacklisted in March, and the anti-dumping investigation into Google announced in February.    

DuPont did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

QUESTIONS REMAIN OVER RARE EARTHS

In the case of rare earths, because China's decision applied to all countries, it is unclear whether it will count as a U.S.-specific countermeasure under the agreement.

There is no mention of the U.S. in the original Ministry of Commerce announcement, which required all exporters to seek licenses before shipping seven types of rare earths.

Reuters reported last month that U.S. clients were likely to face a long and uncertain wait for licenses given the trade war. 

China's Ministry of Commerce did not immediately respond to faxed questions about the rare earths restrictions. 

A Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson referred questions on the subject to the text of the agreement.

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
LaFleur Minerals Closes a Share-Unit Offering, Raising $0.55 Million
LaFleur Minerals Closes a Share-Unit Offering, Raising $0.55 Million
Sep 21, 2025
01:53 PM EDT, 09/19/2025 (MT Newswires) -- LaFleur Minerals ( LFLRF ) on Friday said it closed a non-brokered private placement of units that raised $0.55 million. The company issued around 1.15 million units priced at $0.48 each and made up of a share and a two-year warrant to buy a second share for $0.75. Proceeds from the offering will...
Fitness tracking app Strava looks to hire banks for IPO
Fitness tracking app Strava looks to hire banks for IPO
Sep 21, 2025
(This Sept. 17 story has been refiled to add dropped words in paragraph 3) By Echo Wang and Milana Vinn (Reuters) - Strava, the popular fitness tracking platform, is looking to hire investment banks for its U.S. initial public offering, people familiar with the matter said. The San Francisco-based company, valued at $2.2 billion in a funding round completed in May,...
MOVES-Citigroup taps Adam Inzirillo from Cboe for equities business
MOVES-Citigroup taps Adam Inzirillo from Cboe for equities business
Sep 21, 2025
Sept 19 (Reuters) - Citigroup ( C/PN ) has hired Adam Inzirillo from Cboe Global Markets ( CBOE ) to lead its cash and futures execution platform within the bank's equities division, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. In his new role, Inzirillo will oversee Citi's electronic execution platform, focusing on trading algorithms and direct market access...
K-Bro Linen to Benefit From Canada's Aging Population, Says Stifel Canada
K-Bro Linen to Benefit From Canada's Aging Population, Says Stifel Canada
Sep 21, 2025
01:59 PM EDT, 09/19/2025 (MT Newswires) -- K-Bro Linen ( KBRLF ) is a provider of linen and laundry services for the hospitality and healthcare sectors, servicing primarily hotels and hospitals in Canada and the UK at a ~50/50 geographic split. We identify KBL as a beneficiary of the aging population given its outsized exposure to hospitals, where inpatient hospital...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved