18/07/2025 06:59 AST

China wants to bring its trade ties with the US back to a stable footing, its commerce minister said, adding that recent talks in Europe showed there was no need for a tariff war while urging the US to act in a manner befitting of a superpower.

According to Reuters, Commerce Minister Wang Wentao told reporters on Friday that the "ups and downs" in the two countries' relationship underscored their economic interdependence.

Asked about the United States specifically, Wang said: "Major countries should act like major countries. They must shoulder their responsibilities," adding that China would protect its national interests.

China is facing an August 12 deadline to reach a durable tariff agreement with the United States, after Beijing and Washington reached a preliminary deal last month to end weeks of escalating tit-for-tat tariffs.

If no deal is reached, global supply chains could face renewed turmoil from duties exceeding 100%.

Wang said negotiations in Geneva and London earlier this year demonstrated there was no need to return to a trade war.

"Practice has proven that through dialogue and consultation, with leadership and communication at the highest levels, we can properly manage contradictions and resolve our differences," he said.

"We will continue to strengthen dialogue and communication, deepen consensus, reduce misunderstandings, enhance cooperation, to jointly put China-US economic and trade relations back on track to achieve healthy, stable and sustainable development."

China's rare earths exports rose 32% month-on-month in June, customs data showed on Monday, in a sign that agreements struck last month in London to free up the flow of the metals were possibly bearing fruit.

Chipmaker Nvidia will also resume selling its H20 AI chips to China, Chief Executive Jensen Huang said at an event in Beijing this week, a move US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said was also part of negotiations on rare earths.

Wang said on Friday that he had met Huang the previous day, describing the meeting as evidence that "as the dust settles, everyone has come to the conclusion - especially the US side - that forced decoupling is impossible."

Wang said the current overall tariff level imposed by the US on China was "still high" at 53.6%. Analysts have said that additional duties exceeding 35% will probably wipe out Chinese manufacturers' profit margins.

"Both sides have come to understand that they need each other, as lots of the goods and services that we exchange are irreplaceable, or at least difficult to exchange in the short-term," Wang said.

"China does not want a trade war, but it is not afraid of one," he reiterated.


Asharq Al Awsat

Saudi bank loans hit $845bn as corporate lending booms

18/07/2025

Saudi banks' total outstanding loans reached SR3.17 trillion ($844.7 billion) at the end of May, an annual increase of 16.28 percent, according to the latest official data.

Figures released

Arab News

Riyadh Expo 2030 hosts reception in Osaka to boost international cooperation

18/07/2025

Riyadh Expo 2030, in collaboration with the Kingdom's Embassy in Japan, hosted a reception in Osaka on Thursday to highlight Saudi Arabia's readiness and promise to deliver an exceptional World Expo.

Arab News

Dubai: Indian, Emirati, Pakistani investors lead in tokenised property deals

18/07/2025

More than Dh9 million worth of deals through tokenisation have been made in Dubai within a month of selling properties through Prypco Mint, Mena's first real estate tokenisation platform.

Ac

Khaleej Times

Ticker Price Volume
Index Closing Change
NIKKEI 225 36,581.76 -251.51 (-0.68%)
DAX 18,699.40 181.01 (0.97%)
S&P 500 5,626.02 30.26 (0.54%)
Ticker Price Change
BSFR 17.46 0.02 (0.11%)
ALRAJHI 94.20 -0.30 (-0.32%)
SNB 36.52 -0.66 (-1.78%)
SAB 33.14 -0.32 (-0.96%)
ALINMA 25.88 0.06 (0.23%)
German Central Bank Chief: US Tariffs Would Eat Up German Growth in 2025

18/07/2025

The Bundebank expects growth of 0.7% in Germany in 2026 but this could be eaten up if US tariffs of 30% threatened by President Donald Trump were implemented, the central bank's President Joachim Nag

Saudi Gazette

US STOCKS: Wall Street wobbles after Trump denies plans to fire Powell

17/07/2025

U.S. stock indexes pared losses on Wednesday after President Donald Trump said it was "highly unlikely" that he would fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, minutes after several reports said he w

Reuters

Fed on hold - but rate cuts are coming sooner, says expert

16/07/2025

The Federal Reserve will hold interest rates steady this month, but fresh inflation data has increased pressure for a cut sooner than previously expected, says Nigel Green, the CEO of one of the worl

Trade Arabia

EU blindsided by latest Trump tariff ultimatum

15/07/2025

Throughout the week leading up to US President Donald Trump's 30 percent-tariff threat on the EU, European officials and diplomats insisted they were closing in on a deal-right up until his letter la

AFP

China's Economy Set to Slow in Q2 as Pressure from US Tariffs Mounts

15/07/2025

China's economy is likely to have cooled in the second quarter after a solid start to the year, as trade tensions and a prolonged property downturn drag on demand, raising pressure on policymakers to

Asharq Al Awsat