Markets on Edge as China, US Hold Second Day of Trade Talks

Trump’s Trade Team Scrambles to Secure Bilateral Deals With India, Japan, South Korea and Others
US-China talks
From left: Jamieson Greer, Lutnick, Bessent, Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng and other delegation members on June 9. (Li Ying/Xinhua via AP)

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Talks between the U.S. and China extended later into their second day in London, with financial markets on edge as the world’s largest economies negotiate over key tech and industrial exports and deescalating their trade war.

The teams, led by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, were still holding discussions the evening of June 10 in order to iron out technical details, according to a Treasury official. The session could stretch into the night, the official said.

Members of the Chinese delegation were seen leaving Lancaster House, a Georgian-era mansion near Buckingham Palace serving as the meeting site, for a break just before 5:30 p.m. The two sides are expected to resume talks around 8 p.m., according to a person familiar with the matter.



Negotiators started their meetings around 10:40 a.m.

“We’ve got more to do,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters.

Bond and currency markets are closely monitoring the talks for clues on the potential economic impact. U.S. stocks inched higher on June 10 as investors looked for clues the two sides could further deescalate their trade war.

President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House on June 9 that “we are doing well with China. China’s not easy,” adding that he was “only getting good reports” from that day’s nearly seven-hour session. Bessent said after day one they had a “good meeting.”

The key issue this week is re-establishing terms of an agreement reached in Geneva last month, in which the US understood that China would allow more rare earth shipments to reach American customers. The Trump administration accused Beijing of moving too slowly, which threatened shortages in domestic manufacturing sectors.

In return, the Trump administration is prepared to remove a recent spate of measures targeting chip design software, jet engine parts, chemicals and nuclear materials, people familiar with the matter said. Many of those actions were taken in the past few weeks as tensions flared between the U.S. and China.

‘Win by China’

“A US decision to roll back some portion of the technology controls would very much be viewed as a win by China,” said Dexter Roberts, nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Global China Hub, adding that the possibility of unwinding “any controls” seemed “pretty much unthinkable” until recently.

A month ago, Beijing and Washington agreed to a 90-day truce through mid-August in their crippling tariffs to allow time to resolve many of their trade disagreements — from tariffs to export controls.

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Lancaster House carries historical significance. It has hosted major addresses by UK prime ministers, speeches by central bank governors and parties for Britain’s royal family.

At the same time, Trump’s trade team is scrambling to secure bilateral deals with India, Japan, South Korea and several other countries that are racing to do so before July 9, when the U.S. president’s so-called reciprocal tariffs rise from the current 10% baseline to much higher levels customized for each trading partner.

Meanwhile, Chinese President Xi Jinping on June 10 held his first phone conversation with South Korea’s newly elected President Lee Jae-myung and called for cooperation to safeguard multilateralism and free trade.

“We should strengthen bilateral cooperation and multilateral coordination, jointly safeguard multilateralism and free trade, and ensure the stability and smoothness of global and regional industrial chains and supply chains,” Xi said, according to the CCTV report.