China, Trump and tariff
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The U.S. and China have raised new tariffs and export controls on each other, but they may just be a negotiating tactic.
Apple is reportedly about to launch the iPhone Air in China after about a one-month delay, here are the full details.
Beijing is stacking up its bargaining chips ahead of expected U.S.-China talks when Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping visit South Korea's Gyeongju, announcing new export controls to tighten its grip over high-tech manufacturing supply chains.
Stocks in the United States recovered from their worst decline in months, after President Trump softened his tariff threat on China. Earlier, markets in Asia dropped.
President Donald Trump said Friday he would impose a 100% tariff on China “over and above any Tariff they are currently paying” effective November 1 – massively escalating his trade war amid a heated dispute over export controls on rare earths.
Trump on Friday unveiled additional levies of 100% on China's U.S.-bound exports, reviving the trade war between the two economic heavyweights, after Beijing put several new rare earth elements under export controls and imposed additional scrutiny on semiconductor users.
The vast Global Digital Trade Expo in Hangzhou stood as a rebuke to U.S. efforts to hem in China’s technology. But the real competition is internal, and profits are hard to find.
A few weeks later than expected, the iPhone Air is finally set to make its debut in China, with preorders for the ultra-thin device opening on October 17.
It’s no secret what kind of season Brooklyn is going to have, what kind of tank the Nets are going to trudge through.
The head of MI5 warns that Chinese spying in the UK is taking place on “an epic scale” – yet the government can’t bring itself to describe China as a threat. What the hell is going on? Sir Ken McCallum,