White House Deputy Press Sec, Deere: “Negotiations are continuing and progress is being made on the text of the phase-one agreement” - Fox
|According to Fox News' Edward Lawrence, White House Deputy Press Secretary, Judd Deere said just now about a Phase One China trade deal: "Negotiations are continuing and progress is being made on the text of the phase-one agreement."
Update
Fox News' Edward Lawrence also said that President Donald Trump, on his departure for Texas, said about a Phase One China Deal: "China wants to make a deal. The question is: Do I want to make a deal? Because I like what's happening right now. We're taking in billions and billions of dollars.
This all follows a Reuters report entitled: "'Phase One' U.S.-China trade deal may not be completed this year -trade sources"
Full report - RTRS
Completion of a “phase one” U.S.-China trade deal could slide into next year, trade experts and people close to the White House say, as Beijing presses for more extensive tariff rollbacks, and the Trump administration counters with heightened demands of its own.
U.S. president Donald Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in an Oct. 11 news conference here that an initial trade deal could take as long as five weeks to ink.
Just over five weeks later, a deal is still elusive, and negotiations may be getting more complicated, trade experts and people briefed on the talks told Reuters.
Trump and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer recognize that rolling back tariffs for a deal that fails to address core intellectual property and technology transfer issues will not be seen as a good deal for the U.S., a person briefed on the matter said.
Officials from Beijing had suggested earlier that Chinese president Xi Jinping and Trump might sign a deal in early December. Some experts say the next date to watch is Dec. 15, when tariffs on some $156 billion in Chinese goods are set to take effect, including holiday gift items like electronics and Christmas decorations.
“If talks are really going well, that hike will be suspended,” said Christian Whiton, a senior fellow for strategy and trade at the Center for the National Interest, and a former Trump and George W. Bush administration adviser. “If not, the U.S. will implement them and that will throw the game into next year.”
The crackdown on Hong Kong protesters may also complicate the deal’s completion.
The U.S. Senate passed a bill on Tuesday night condemning the crackdown and pledging support for Hong Kong, which was immediately criticized by Beijing.
“The violent crackdown against protesters in Hong Kong, which Beijing is directing, decreases the odds of a deal,” Whiton said. “Is Xi really going to be invited for a grip-and-grin with the president as his cops are beating students in Hong Kong?”
Negotiations also are complicated by conflicts within the White House about the best approach to China, and by the fact that Trump could veto any agreed deal at the last minute.
“China is going to have to make a deal that I like,” Trump said on Tuesday at a cabinet meeting. “If we don’t make a deal with China, I’ll just raise the tariffs even higher,” he said.
The flare-up in tensions between Washington and Beijing helped knock global stock markets from 22-month highs reached in recent weeks when some sort of resolution on the trade war appeared likely.
To be sure, some China and trade experts briefed on the talks told Reuters they were still optimistic a deal might come together in the coming weeks, and Trump said on Wednesday his team continues to talk with China.
A Saturday call between Mnuchin, Lighthizer and China’s Vice Premier Liu He was described as “constructive” by Chinese state media Xinhua.
And the U.S. government has begun issuing licenses for some companies to supply goods to Huawei Technologies Co Ltd , the world’s largest telecoms equipment maker whose blacklisting by the administration has been another point of contention.
Nonetheless, Chinese media pundits now also say they are pessimistic about a deal.
“Few Chinese believe that China and the US can reach a deal soon,” Hu Xijin, the editor of the state-backed Chinese tabloid Global Times, tweeted on Wednesday.
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The Global Times is not the official media outlet of the Chinese Communist Party - the People's Daily is - but Hu has described his role here as giving voice to what Beijing officials wish they could say in public.
Hu concluded his tweet: “China wants a deal but is prepared for the worst-case scenario, a prolonged trade war.” (Reporting by Heather Timmons Editing by Dan Burns and Bill Berkrot)
FX implications:
There was a slight pullback in risk appetite reflected in the stocks and Yen on the back of some air of reassurances in these Tweets. However, the Federal Open Market Committee minutes were on tap at the top of the hour as well.
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