Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng are set to meet for another round of US-China talks. Both sides are searching for a way forward on a TikTok ban and a November tariff deadline.
The meeting in Madrid will cover “trade issues of mutual interest,” including the fate of TikTok in the US, as well as national security issues like money laundering networks, according to the Treasury Department.
The Chinese Ministry of Commerce also confirmed the meeting, adding that talks will occur Sept. 14-17 and that both “U.S. unilateral tariff measures” and TikTok would be on the agenda.
The talks come as deadlines on both the tariff and TikTok fronts have already been delayed multiple times — but may come to a head soon.
On tariffs, President Trump granted another 90-day tariff delay last month, once again pushing off a potential return to triple-digit duties between the world’s two largest economies until November.
Meanwhile, the TikTok deadline — when a US law says TikTok’s China-based parent company, ByteDance, needs to sell the app or see it banned in the US — is set to expire on Sept. 17, even as Trump has already said he is likely to extend it.
Bessent will be in Europe on Sept. 12-18, with stops in both Spain and the United Kingdom.
The hope from markets around these talks is likely to hinge on any signs of easing around these two specific issues, with few expectations, as Capital Economics noted in an analysis this week, of any “US-China grand bargain” in the coming months.
The analysis adds that the larger trends in evidence are in the direction of a global economy that is in the process of coalescing into two blocs — one orbiting around the US and another around China.
Read more: The latest news and updates on Trump’s tariffs
The current tariff deadline of Nov. 10 is when triple-digit tariffs — briefly in place at the beginning of Trump’s term — could return.
Current duties between the two nations are 30% on Chinese imports and 10% on American goods. Sector-specific tariffs on goods like steel and some medical supplies are currently pushing the effective tariff rate between the two countries higher.
The latest deadline also comes amid a new focus from Trump on pressuring China for its ongoing purchases of Russian oil.
The White House has already imposed 25% tariffs on some goods from India because of its oil purchases. A new pressure campaign was unveiled on Friday to push G7 nations to consider tariffs as high as 100% on both India and China over the issue.
Trump himself on Friday said during a Fox News appearance that his patience with Russian President Vladimir Putin is “running out fast” over the war in Ukraine, and that he is looking at additional moves “hitting very hard on with sanctions to banks and having to do with oil and tariffs also.”
Trump’s only mention of China during that nearly hour-long appearance, according to a transcript, was when he praised Chinese President Xi Jinping’s government for its “quick trials.”
Next week’s talks will be the latest in a series of high-profile formal meetings between the two trade teams. Previous meetings have included gatherings in Geneva in May, London in June, and Stockholm in July.
Much of the focus also remains on a potential face-to-face meeting between Trump and Xi this fall.
Their teams have both floated the concept, with much of the focus currently centered around an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit set for the end of October in South Korea.
The TikTok deadline grew out of a US law passed last year that mandates TikTok be sold over privacy and national security concerns associated with its current Chinese ownership.
US lawmakers have repeatedly charged that TikTok poses an urgent national security threat because the Chinese government could compel parent company ByteDance to share its data on the app’s estimated 170 million monthly US users.
The law says TikTok must be banned from US networks and app stores if the company is not sold, but Trump has delayed the deadline multiple times since taking office.
Trump’s latest delay came with a 90-day extension that took effect on June 19, leading to the new deadline of Sept. 17.
The president has repeatedly teased a potential deal — including saying in August that “we have American buyers” — but without a concrete deal yet in the offing and the president teasing another delay “until the complexity of things work out.”
Ben Werschkul is a Washington correspondent for Yahoo Finance.
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