US-Chinamoneyhand
© Supply Chain 23/7
US President Donald Trump has promised to extend the temporary truce in the trade war with China, claiming that talks between the sides were so "productive" that he might even meet his counterpart Xi Jinping in person soon.

Trump hinted that an agreement might be concluded during a face-to-face meeting with Xi at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, but gave no concrete time frames, saying that "additional progress" was needed.



Beijing and Washington are struggling to come to an agreement before the March 1 deadline that marks the end of a 90-day truce the leaders agreed-to when they met in Argentina late last year.

The US has repeatedly accused China of stealing trade secrets and of 'unfairly' subsidizing its economy, while Beijing slammed US measures as protectionist.

As part of the standoff Washington imposed tariffs on $250 billion on Chinese imports. Beijing retaliated with levies on $110 billion on US goods. Trump has threatened to extend the tariffs to an additional $267 billion on Chinese goods, unless a trade deal is reached. The White House also plans to hike tariffs on $200 billion-worth of Chinese imports from 10 percent to 25 percent.