China Calls Stockholm Trade Talks With U.S. “Constructive”
Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang praised recent in-depth, candid Stockholm talks with the U.S. as constructive, paving the way for smoother global cooperation.
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Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang praised recent in-depth, candid Stockholm talks with the U.S. as constructive, paving the way for smoother global cooperation.
China and the U.S. agreed to extend the suspension of 24% reciprocal tariffs after trade talks in Stockholm, aiming to boost stability for global businesses and supply chains.
The U.S. and EU struck a tariff deal slashing rates to 15%, sparking relief in Germany and concern in Paris over economic fallout.
President Lula urges the US to drop planned 50% tariffs, defends Brazil’s mineral sovereignty and calls for dialogue over unilateral trade measures.
Officials from the Chinese mainland and the U.S. meet in Stockholm this week to hash out tech tariffs, a deal that could reshape costs and strategies for Silicon Valley’s firms.
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson met Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng in Stockholm to commemorate 75 years of Sweden-China ties and chart future collaboration.
Port of Los Angeles cargo jumped ahead of tariffs, then dipped 8% in June—underscoring global trade volatility at the nation’s busiest port.
Xinjiang railway ports hit over 10,000 China-Europe freight train trips this year, accounting for more than half of China’s total and boosting global supply chain stability.
EU-U.S. trade deal brings temporary stability but stirs controversy over its fairness, with 15% tariffs on key sectors and $750B energy purchases plus $600B investments driving the debate.
With 100 days to go, the 8th China International Import Expo in Shanghai sees record participation—over 50 countries and historic exhibitor numbers from Canada, Malaysia, New Zealand and Peru.