It was the handshake that markets had been waiting for. At a high-stakes summit in South Korea, U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping ended months of escalating trade pressure with a deal to ease tariffs.
The announcement came after both leaders described their meeting as “productive” and “forward-looking.”
Trump said the new tariff rate on Chinese imports would drop to 47% from 57%, marking a sharp policy shift. The move hints at a wider thaw in one of the most tense trade periods between Washington and Beijing.
The tariff rollback follows a year of fast-changing trade measures between the two powers.
Earlier in 2025, Trump imposed a 10% tariff on Chinese goods, citing the flow of fentanyl into the United States. By March, another 10% was added.
In April, the White House rolled out a sweeping “Liberation Day” tariff package, raising the total import rate on Chinese goods to 54%.
According to reports, those measures briefly pushed tariffs as high as 145% on some Chinese goods before a temporary May truce brought them back to 10%. That calm was short-lived, with fresh levies targeting Chinese metals, timber, and energy exports.
Trump’s decision to lower the overall rate to 47% marks the first real sign of de-escalation since then.
During a joint press briefing, Trump described the meeting as “12 out of 10,” telling reporters that both sides agreed to cut the fentanyl tariff to 10%. He added that discussions will begin soon over export limits on Nvidia chips and rare earth supplies.
The tariff relief could have ripple effects across global markets, including crypto and commodities.
Traders watching the news expect renewed investor appetite for risk assets if trade flows stabilize. Analysts said lower tariffs could ease inflation concerns and open new liquidity for digital assets.
China’s President Xi said he plans to visit the United States, while Trump will travel to China in April 2026. The renewed dialogue signals both sides are open to formalizing a new trade deal.
For investors, this could mark the beginning of a shift in global trade sentiment after years of uncertainty.
While markets have yet to fully price in the impact, early signals suggest optimism. U.S. equities and Asian futures rose slightly after the announcement. The crypto market saw a mild uptick as traders speculated that easing trade tensions could support broader economic stability.
Observers expect further details from the White House in the coming weeks on how the tariff reductions will be structured. For now, the tone has shifted from confrontation to cooperation.
The Trump–Xi meeting may not have closed the chapter on the trade war, but it may have opened a new one, this time with dialogue instead of escalation.
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