Trump says he agreed with Xi to hold off on new tariffs and to let Huawei buy US products

FAN Editor

Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump chat at a G-20 event a day before their highly anticipated bilateral meeting.

Bernd von Jutrczenka | picture alliance | Getty Images

U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed on Saturday to proceed with negotiations after a series of escalations to their nations’ trade war threatened to disrupt the global economy.

On the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Osaka, Japan, the two leaders held a highly anticipated meeting, which Chinese media outlets reported ultimately took about 80 minutes.

Both sides confirmed in separate comments that they did not plan to levy any new tariffs against each other’s products at the present time. For one, Chinese state-run press agency Xinhua described the meeting result as the presidents agreeing “to restart trade consultations between their countries on the basis of equality and mutual respect.”

Speaking after the bilateral, Trump said it had gone as well as it could have, and that negotiations with China would continue. “We are right back on track,” the president said.

On the subject of Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications behemoth that Washington has described as a security risk to the U.S. and allies, Trump suggested he will be reversing his government’s decision to ban American companies from selling products to the tech giant. Still, Trump said the issue of Huawei will be resolved only at the conclusion of the negotiations.

“We mentioned Huawei. I said we’ll have to save that until the very end,” Trump said during a post-summit news conference. “One of the things I will allow, however, is — a lot of people are surprised we send and we sell to Huawei a tremendous amount of product that goes into a lot of the various things that they make — and I said that that’s OK, that we will keep selling that product.”

Trump added that he would allow sales to the company where there is not a national security problem, and there will be a U.S. meeting to more fully discuss the plan regarding Huawei.

The American president also projected that China would be buying large quantities of U.S. agricultural products following his meeting with Xi. “We’re holding on tariffs, and they’re going to buy farm product,” he said.

Separately, Trump emphasized that he did not want there to be increased restrictions on Chinese students entering American schools, saying he wants them to be treated “just like anybody else.”

China’s foreign ministry, meanwhile, said in a statement that negotiators from both sides would discuss specific issues, but gave no details. Xi told Trump he hoped the United States could treat Chinese companies fairly, the statement added.

The result of talks between Trump and Xi appeared to align with what many experts predicted ahead of the event. That is, analysts and former diplomats who spoke with CNBC had projected there would be an agreement to temporarily pause any trade war escalation.

Still, markets were on edge about the meeting because Trump himself had suggested that he would be deciding whether to hit China with more punitive trade taxes if he didn’t like what he heard from Xi. On the other hand, there had been sporadic hopes that the meeting could have resulted in the announcement of a framework for some sort of long-term deal.

Saturday’s summit was a continuation of Trump’s years-long crusade to overhaul the U.S. trade relationship with China. He has long accused Beijing of unfair trade practices that sap American manufacturing jobs, and ran for president in 2016 on cracking down on China.

Leading up to the meeting

At the outset of the high-stakes talks, Trump said he was open to a trade deal that would be “monumental.”

“I actually think that we were very close and then something happened where it slipped a little bit and now we’re getting a little bit closer,” Trump said on the sidelines of the G-20 meeting.

“But it would be historic if we could do a fair trade deal. We’re totally open to it and you’re totally open to it,” he said.

“I think this will be a very productive meeting and I think we can go on to do something that truly will be monumental,” he added.

Xi, meanwhile, said at the beginning of the meeting that he was ready to exchange views on fundamental issues.

“Forty years on, enormous change has taken place in the international situation and China-U.S. relations, but one basic fact remains unchanged: China and the United States both benefit from cooperation and lose in confrontation,” Xi said.

“Today I’m prepared to exchange views with you on the fundamental issues concerning the growth of China-U.S. relations,” the Chinese leader added.

The commentary ahead of the meeting from Chinese state media suggested the two countries would not have an easy time reaching an agreement. China’s Communist Party-run Global Times said earlier on Saturday the world had to “contain capricious U.S. actions,” pointing to examples like Trump withdrawing from the Paris climate accord.

“The world needs to rein in the U.S., although it’s difficult,” the paper said in an editorial. “The problem is that many countries have misgivings in expressing their opposition to U.S. bullying tactics out of fear for U.S. power, or hope to profit from the U.S. stirring up the global order through opportunism.”

What was at stake

The Trump-Xi meeting had been deemed a globally significant event because the ongoing trade war has threatened to disrupt many countries’ economies and has roiled businesses’ international supply lines.

OECD Secretary-General Jose Angel Gurria told CNBC on Friday that, if talks between Trump and Xi fell through, that would “be very, very destructive.”

A fallout, he added, “would spill over to practically every single economy in the world … because (the U.S. and China) have this massive relationship with the rest of the world, you would have this inevitable impact, very negative impact.”

The International Monetary Fund warned in June that the implemented and proposed tariffs between the two countries could potentially cut global economic output by 0.5% in 2020.

On Saturday, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde commented on the latest trade war development.

“While the resumption of trade talks between the United States and China is welcome, tariffs already implemented are holding back the global economy, and unresolved issues carry a great deal of uncertainty about the future,” she said.

–Reuters, CNBC’s Grace Shao, Evelyn Cheng and Jacob Pramuk contributed to this report.

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