Trump Plans to Speak With Xi as Deadline for China Tariffs Looms

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US President Donald Trump said his administration plans to speak with China, raising the possibility of a potential reprieve on a 10% tariff set to take effect in hours after he delayed levies on Canada and Mexico.

Speaking to reporters in Washington on Monday, Trump said talks with China would take place “probably over the next 24 hours.” During the weekend, he announced that tariffs on China would take effect at 12:01 a.m. on Tuesday.

“If we can’t make a deal with China, then the tariffs will be very, very substantial,” Trump said.

The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, which tracks Chinese stocks traded in Hong Kong, rose as much as 4% on Tuesday. The offshore yuan rallied nearly 1% from Monday’s nadir to trade around 7.31 per dollar. The onshore markets will reopen on Wednesday following a Chinese New Year break.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt later told Fox News there’s a plan for Trump to speak with Chinese President Xi Jinping about “illegal Chinese fentanyl that is killing tens of thousands of Americans every single year.”

“The president has made it very clear to China that we are not going to tolerate that,” she said. “And I would also add that many of President Trump’s tariffs from the first term are still in effect.”

The focus has turned to the world’s No. 2 economy after Trump reached last-minute agreements with Mexico and Canada to delay 25% tariffs in return for tougher measures against migration and drug trafficking at the border. For Beijing, a deal for splitting ownership of China-owned app TikTok would likely also be on the agenda of any leaders’ call.

“GREAT INTEREST IN TIKTOK!” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform on Monday evening in the US. “Would be wonderful for China, and all concerned.” The Republican has given ByteDance Ltd.’s social media app, which has been flagged as a national security threat, 75 days to find a partner in the US to keep operating in the country.

China Playbook

China’s reaction to Trump’s initial tariff announcement — coming in the middle of a weeklong Lunar New Year holiday — was relatively muted. The Chinese Commerce Ministry issued a statement expressing strong “dissatisfaction” and vowed unspecified “corresponding countermeasures,” while saying China would file a complaint at the World Trade Organization.