US tariff delay draws cautious welcome\, boosts shares

US tariff delay draws cautious welcome, boosts shares

AP  |  Beijing 

China's stock market surged Monday after Donald Trump's decision to postpone a tariff hike on Chinese imports and expressed optimism a fight over Beijing's can be resolved.

The conflict has threatened to disrupt global trade and drag on weakening economic growth.

accuses of stealing or pressuring foreign companies to hand over technology. The wants to roll back plans for government-led creation of global leaders in robotics and other technology. Its trading partners say violate Beijing's free-trade obligations and some American officials worry they might erode U.S. industrial leadership.

The weekend talks made progress on technology transfer, protection of intellectual property rights and non-tariff barriers to market access, according to the official Agency. It cautioned there are "still some differences that need more time to be ironed out." On Twitter, Trump said negotiators also made progress on U.S. agricultural sales to

Neither government gave more details but both expressed optimism.

Trump said he would postpone a March 1 deadline for increasing 10 percent punitive duties on $200 billion of Chinese imports to 25 percent but he set no new date.

Trump said many disputes will take more time to resolve but he hopes to "put these more challenging issues into a longer-term negotiating framework." He said if progress is made, he will meet Chinese at his resort to finalize an agreement.

"If all works well, we're going to have some very big over the next week or two," Trump told American governors at a ball. He added, "we still have a little ways to go." The talks "sent a positive signal to the world" and "laid the foundation for the final agreement," the newspaper said.

"solemnly shows it is willing to adopt a cooperative approach to resolve economic and trade frictions," the newspaper said.

The Shanghai Composite index rose 5.6 percent to an eight-month high. Trump's decision was a "positive signal," said the vice of the U.S.-China Business Council,

The decision "seems to indicate that there's enough forward momentum that they believe they don't need to raise tariffs now," Parker said.

Another ruling party newspaper, the Global Times, said the talks "solved most of the problems of both sides" and negotiators were "already preparing the text of an agreement." However, it cautioned they "still need to continue to make efforts."

A potential stumbling block is Chinese resistance to US pressure for an enforcement mechanism with penalties if fails to carry out its commitments. American officials accuse China of failing to fulfill past promises to change economic regulations.

The world's two biggest economies have raised tariffs on billions of dollars of each other's goods.

Trump and Xi agreed Dec. 1 to postpone more penalties while they negotiate. Increases that already were imposed remained in place, battering companies on both sides.

Other financial markets rose Monday, with London's up 0.4 percent, but gains were smaller. Share prices already had risen in recent weeks on expectations Trump would postpone the tariff hike. Some Chinese were skeptical.

"We won't really fight, right? A trade war, by its nature, is nothing more than a war of words, isn't it?" said Geng Yanhua, an employee of an company.

"Playing up the tariffs issue only won't really hurt us," said Geng. "It will be fine as long as no one wages a war.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, February 25 2019. 16:45 IST