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What Trump and Xi agreed to in the U.S.-China trade truce


Fmr. Amb. Nicholas Burns on Trump-Xi meeting: An 'uneasy truce' in a long, still-simmering trade war

President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping reached a trade truce during a high-stakes meeting in South Korea on Thursday, de-escalating a dispute over rare earths elements that had threatened to push the world’s two largest economies into a full-blown trade war.

China agreed to pause for one year the sweeping export controls on rare earths announced on Oct. 9 that had touched off the dispute.

Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that the rare earths agreement is a one-year deal that will be “very routinely extended as time goes by.” The president said he plans to visit China in April and Xi will come to the U.S., either Palm Beach, Florida or Washington, D.C., at a later date

“We have a deal,” Trump said. “Now, every year we’ll renegotiate the deal, but I think the deal will go on for a long time, long beyond the year. But all of the rare earth has been settled, and that’s for the world.”

Trump said he cut tariffs effective immediately on China related to fentanyl to 10% from 20%. This reduces the overall rate on Chinese goods to around 47%, the president told reporters. Trump had previously threatened the slap China with 100% tariffs on Nov. 1 over its rare earths controls.

The U.S. will postpone a rule announced on Sept. 29 that blacklisted majority-owned subsidiaries of Chinese companies on an entity list, according to a statement from China’s Ministry of Commerce. The U.S. and China also agreed to suspend fees for one year on ships that dock at each other’s ports.

Did China win?

Beijing had surprised the White House with strict export controls on rare earths ahead of the meeting between Trump and Xi, exploiting its dominance of the global supply chain to gain leverage over Washington.

The U.S. is dependent on China for rare earths, which are used to produce magnets that are key inputs in weapons platforms, semiconductor manufacturing, electric vehicles and other applications.

China successfully used the rare earths export controls and a soybean embargo to force the U.S. to lower tariffs, Wolfe Research strategist Tobin Marcus told clients in a note.

Chinese President Xi Jinping attends a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump (not pictured) alongside Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, Politburo Standing Committee member Cai Qi, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Chinese National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) Chairman Zheng Shanjie, and Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao at Gimhae International Airport, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit, in Busan, South Korea, October 30, 2025.

Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

“Xi was ready for Trump in his second term and has a powerful weapon in rare earths,” Piper Sandler analysts led by Andy Laperriere told clients. “China is getting the better of the US in these recent truce negotiations.”

The truce reached between the U.S. and China is not a comprehensive deal, cautioned Nicholas Burns, former U.S. ambassador to China during the Biden administration.

“Where…



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What Trump and Xi agreed to in the U.S.-China trade truce

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