Trade war, day 98: Trump and Xi to meet at end of November
Both American and Chinese stock markets plummeted today, and worries about the U.S.-China trade war was one of the major reasons cited for the global drops.
- Trade tensions were cited alongside โslowing global growth, rising bond yieldsโ by the Wall Street Journalย (paywall)ย to explain a 2.2 percent drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
- And in China, trade tensions were cited alongside โa slowing economy and weakening currencyโ by Bloombergย (porous paywall) to explain the largest drop since February 2016 โ โMore than 1,000 stocks fell by the daily limit, or more than one in four,โ and โThe Shanghai Composite Index ended below 2,600, a level not even breached during market crashes in 2015 and 2016.โ
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow are said to be especially concerned about the impact of the trade war on stock markets, so have been pushing for months to get trade negotiations back on track. Today, the Wall Street Journal reportsย (paywall)ย that they marked a small success:
- โThe White House is moving aheadย with plans for President Trump to meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at a multilateral summit in late November,โ at the G20 in Buenos Aires, which just yesterdayย seemed a highly doubtful prospect.
- While Mnuchin and Kudlowย are happy, China hawks such as trade representative Robert Lighthizer and trade adviser Peter Navarro are not: โThe plan is to get Trump in a room with Xi, get a small win and declare an end to the whole thingโ is how one source familiar with the negotiations skeptically described them.
- The grandson of Richard Nixon, Christopher Nixon Cox, is โone of the people involved in the planningโ of the negotiations, the Journal says. Bloomberg reportsย (porous paywall) that Cox, who co-founded a consulting firm in New York focused on international businesses, is โlikely to join the Trump administration as an economic staffer focused on trade with China.โ
Of course, stock markets and their bumps are only partially related to the broader economy. This point seems somewhat lost on the American president, who bragged to Fox News this morningย that Chinaโs โeconomy has gone down very substantially and I have a lot more to do if I want to do it,โ but not lost on Yรฌ Gฤng ๆ็บฒ, the governor of the Peopleโs Bank of China, who told Caixin that China is still on track for its goal of โaround 6.5%โ economic growthย in 2018.
And some important parts of the U.S.-China economic relationship could already be permanently changed as a result of the Trump administrationโs policies. The South China Morning Post has two reports that suggest:
- China may never buy American soybeansย again, at least not in large quantities like they used to: โThe China Feed Industry Association published a proposal on its website at the end of September suggesting the minimum content of soy meal in hog rations be trimmed down. The meal, which is made from soybeans, is a principal source of crude protein in animal feed.โ
- โIf demand for imported soy is somewhat reduced and trade partners diversified in the long run, that would be considered a win by many in Chinaโs governmentโฆ This is something policymakers have been keen to do for a while, but couldnโt under normal trade conditions. Trumpโs escalation gave Chinaโs policymakers an excuse to constrain US soy, forcing the Chinese industry to adjust,โ said Even Rogers Pay, lead agriculture analyst at the consulting firm China Policy.
- โOfficials are exploring the possibilityย of China becoming a member of the CPTPP,โ the trade deal that replaced the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which the Trump administration pulled the U.S. out of.
- โJoining the CPTPP could become a tool to hedge against the US and help China establish a new trade circle in addition to the โBelt and Road Initiativeโ and Shanghai Cooperation Organisation,โ said Wang Huiyao, director of the Centre for China and Globalisation.
More trade war news:
- Currency concerns
IMF chief Lagarde dismisses idea Beijing is manipulating the yuan as Washington turns up the heatย / SCMP
China to get status quo treatment in currency reportย / Politico
โThe Treasury Department unveils its semiannual report on foreign exchange rate practices on Monday, but donโt expect the administration to slap China with currency manipulator status. The report submitted internally to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin did not recommend that Beijing be labeled a currency manipulator and continued to place China on a monitoring list, an administration official familiar with the report told POLITICO.โ - Detailed analysis of cyber espionage in the U.S., Australia, and Germany
Hacking for ca$hย / Australian Strategic Policy Institute - State media reaction to chip-hackingย story and Pence speech
Bloomberg fake report coordinated with US trade warย / Global Times
Zheping Huang on Twitter: โXinhua is going against @VPโs China speech like crazy – at least eight op-eds in one day.โ
Previously inย The China Projectโs trade war coverage:
Trade war, day 97: U.S. Treasury tightens investment oversight, warns against yuan devaluation