United States and China Agree 90-Day Trade Deal

On Monday 11th May 2025, both China and the United States agreed to de-escalate their trade war with each other by announcing a 90-day pause on tariffs. The United States agreed to cut tariffs on Chinese goods from 145% to 30% and China agreed to cut tariffs on American goods from 125% to 10%. After the agreement was announced in Geneva, the U.S. Treasury Secretary said, “neither side wanted a decoupling and we do want trade, we want more balanced trade, and I think that both sides are committed to achieving that”. In a joint statement it was announced it had been agreed “to establish a mechanism to continue discussions about economic and trade relations. These discussions may be conducted alternately in China and the United States or a third country upon agreement of the Parties”.

A spokesperson for the Chinese Commerce Ministry said of the joint statement, “it is an important step by both sides to resolve differences through equal-footing dialogue and consultation, laying the groundwork and creating conditions for further bridging gaps and deepening cooperation”. This is a surprising outcome and took markets by surprise as before the Chinese had taken a hard-nosed stance demanding that the United States remove ALL tariffs on China before agreeing to come to the negotiating table. However, several analysts have pointed to the fact that this is just a 90-day ceasefire and pointed out this may not be a lasting peace between the two countries.

Global stock markets rallied on news of the China/United States trade agreement, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures rising 2.7% and 3.7% respectively, plus the US Dollar rose 1% against a basket of currencies. Elsewhere, gold retreated by 2.8% as investors negatively impacted safe haven assets and Brent crude oil futures gained 2.8% rising to $65.71pb. In Europe, both France’s CAC 40 and Germany’s DAX both up just under 1%, Europe’s STOXX 60 and STOXX 600 rose 1.9% and 1% respectively and London’s FTSE 100 only rose by circa 0.50%. In Asia, both China and Hong Kong’s benchmark indices rose, with China’s CSI 300 rising 0.6% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index rising 0.8%.

Sadly, there are no guarantees that come 90 days, talks will have progressed further with further positive steps being announced between the two countries. Experts advise that many investors remain wary of the United States due to the flip flop policies of the Trump2 administration, plus President Donald Trump’s continued attacks on the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell. Analysts advise that some institutions are acting like the risks have disappeared. If this is true, they must have been asleep since inauguration day, as many of their peers seem to be adopting a wait and see attitude. Analysts advise that in the past four weeks investors pulled $24.8 billion from U.S. stocks and with huge U.S. conglomerates such as Mattel Inc, United Parcel Service Inc and the Ford Motor Co recently withdrawing earnings guidance due to supply chain and tariff uncertainty being now extremely hard to navigate, there may be more unwanted surprises around the corner.