financetom
Economy
financetom
/
Economy
/
US, Chinese officials face off on export controls, Trump tariff threat in Malaysia
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
US, Chinese officials face off on export controls, Trump tariff threat in Malaysia
Oct 23, 2025 8:45 PM

KUALA LUMPUR/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Top economic officials from the U.S. and China are due to arrive in Kuala Lumpur on Friday for talks to prevent a trade war escalation and keep next week's meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on track.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will meet with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng to find a way forward after Trump threatened new 100% tariffs on Chinese goods and other trade curbs starting November 1 in retaliation for China's vastly expanded export controls on rare earth magnets and minerals.

The talks, due to start on Saturday on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Summit in the Malaysian capital, are the fifth meeting between He, Bessent and Greer since May, shifting from European cities to a key Asian exporter dependent on both China and the U.S.

RARE EARTHS STRANGLEHOLD

The talks are again focused on China's stranglehold over global supplies of rare earth minerals and magnets essential for high-tech manufacturing, which Beijing has used as an effective leverage point against Washington.

In April, Trump hit Chinese imports with new tariffs that quickly escalated to triple-digit rates on both sides, and Beijing cut off rare earths supplies to U.S. buyers, a move that threatened to halt U.S. production of electric vehicles, semiconductors and weapons systems.

Bessent and Greer's first meeting with He in Geneva in May led to a 90-day truce, which brought down tariffs sharply to about 55% on the U.S. side and 10% on the Chinese side and restarted the flow of magnets. The terms were refined in London and Stockholm and September talks in Madrid produced a deal to transfer Chinese short video app TikTok to U.S. ownership control.  

But the delicate truce frayed two weeks later, when the U.S. Commerce Department vastly expanded a U.S. export blacklist to automatically include firms more than 50% owned by companies already on the list, banning U.S. exports to thousands more Chinese firms.

China struck back with the new global rare earth export controls on October 10, aiming to prevent their use in military systems by requiring export licenses for products using Chinese rare earths or rare earth refining, extraction or processing technology developed by Chinese firms. 

Bessent and Greer blasted China's move as a "global supply chain power grab" and vowed the U.S. and its allies would not accept the restrictions. Reuters reported that the Trump administration is considering a plan to up the ante with curbs on a dizzying array of software-powered exports to China, from laptops to jet engines, according to sources familiar with the deliberations.

STEPPING BACK FROM BRINK 

But their challenge in Kuala Lumpur, analysts say, is to negotiate a return to the prior status quo to keep magnets flowing and avoid a massive U.S. tariff hike. If they fail, next Thursday's Trump-Xi meeting in South Korea during the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit may be canceled.

"Ultimately, I'm optimistic that at this particular meeting there will be tactical decisions to sort of extend the pause," said Dennis Wilder, a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Initiative for U.S.-China Dialogue on Global Issues.  

"Trump won't go to the 100% tariffs. The Chinese will back away a little bit from this idea that rare earths exports to defense sectors around the world will not happen," Wilder told an online forum hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The U.S. side is also likely to press Beijing to resume buying American soybeans after China bought none in September, heaping economic pain on farmers, a key Trump political constituency.

But the talks are less likely to dig into the core U.S. complaints about China's export-driven economic model that prompted Trump's tariffs in the first place, which include a long-sought rebalancing of Chinese economy towards more consumption and reducing its excess production capacity. 

"We're not able to get to that because we've got to ask them to buy soybeans, right?" said Philip Luck, director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Economics Program. "It's not the core issue."   

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 >
ADP says it will publish weekly US private employment data, payrolls up average 14,250 in 4 weeks to Oct 11 
ADP says it will publish weekly US private employment data, payrolls up average 14,250 in 4 weeks to Oct 11 
Oct 28, 2025
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. private payrolls increased by an average 14,250 jobs in the four weeks ending October 11, the ADP National Employment Report's inaugural weekly preliminary estimate showed on Tuesday. ADP said in a statement it would be publishing a weekly preliminary estimate of the ADP National Employment Report every Tuesday effective October 28, based on its high frequency data. ...
Trump slams Fed chair, eyes replacement in a few months
Trump slams Fed chair, eyes replacement in a few months
Oct 28, 2025
TOKYO (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday said there was a long list of people who could take over the Federal Reserve, slamming current chairman Jerome Powell as the central bank prepared to meet this week. We have an incompetent head of the Fed... we got a bad Fed guy, but he'll be out of there in a few...
US single-family home prices increase in August, FHFA says
US single-family home prices increase in August, FHFA says
Oct 28, 2025
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. single-family house prices increased in August even as supply has improved significantly, suggesting affordability would remain a challenge for many prospective home buyers.   House prices rose 0.4% on a month-over-month basis, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said on Tuesday. Data for July was revised up to show prices being unchanged instead of dipping 0.1%, as initially reported....
US consumer confidence slips in October as worries over jobs persist
US consumer confidence slips in October as worries over jobs persist
Oct 28, 2025
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. consumer confidence eased in October as households worried about the availability of jobs over the next six months and persistently higher prices because of tariffs on imports. The Conference Board said on Tuesday its consumer confidence index fell to 94.6 this month from an upwardly revised 95.6 in September. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index...
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved