Xi’s Red Line on Trump’s Export Curbs Threatens to Upend Trade Truce
Chinese President Xi Jinping has drawn a clear red line against new US export controls, threatening to reignite a trade war with President Donald Trump just weeks before their planned summit. The escalation began after China imposed global export controls on products containing rare earths, prompting Trump to threaten canceling their first in-person meeting in six years and doubling tariffs on Chinese goods to 100%.
Key Takeaways
- Trump threatens 100% tariffs and meeting cancellation after China’s rare earth controls
 - Effective tariff rates could reach 140%, levels that “shut down trade”
 - Both sides disagree on terms of May truce, with new tariffs scheduled for November
 - Rare earth magnets and technology controls at heart of superpower standoff
 
Economic Stakes and Market Impact
Bloomberg Economics chief Asia economist Chang Shu warned that 100% US tariff hikes would push effective rates on Chinese goods to around 140% – “a level that shuts down trade, not just raises costs.” While current 40% rates remain challenging, tariffs above 100% would sever most trade flows between the world’s largest economies.
Markets reacted sharply, with US stocks suffering their worst sell-off in six months on October 10. Commodities including soybeans, wheat, copper and cotton all fell, though US futures jumped in early Asia trading on October 13 after the Trump administration signaled openness to a deal.
“Wilful threats of high tariffs are not the right way to get along with China,” the Commerce Ministry said on October 12. “China’s position on the trade war is consistent: We do not want it, but we are not afraid of it.”
Fundamental Disagreement on Truce Terms
The confrontation reveals both sides interpret their May truce differently. China understood it as a freeze on new curbs on critical shipments and company restrictions, while the US viewed it as limited tariff reductions in exchange for uninterrupted rare earth magnet flows.
Dr Zhou Mi, senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, stated: “We will not be intimidated by such coercive and unilateral actions of power politics. Our actions have clearly shown this.”
Rare Earths as Strategic Leverage
Export controls on technology and magnets critical to AI and weapons manufacturing form the core of negotiations. After Trump’s 145% tariffs in April, Xi blocked US firms from buying Chinese magnets, causing factory closures and security concerns about rare earth dependence.
Analysts at Hutong Research noted: “Washington’s fear of China is strategic, not economic. A disruption in rare earth flows threatens defence production capacity, a core pillar of US global power projection and, by extension, dollar stability.”
Mr Hu Xijin, former Global Times editor, described recent events as a “turning point” in China-US relations, writing: “China will use its strength to prevent the US from crossing the line.”
TikTok Deal and Political Pressures
The standoff jeopardizes TikTok’s US operations and potential Chinese investment packages, which would likely face US security blocks. According to Beijing-based CF40 think tank, the US may find escalation harder to bear due to political pressures.
“The Trump administration relies on TikTok to woo young voters, and with political pressure from the 2026 mid-term elections it has limited scope for extreme measures,” CF40 wrote. “Inflation and shortages that tariffs are causing in the US will be hard to alleviate in the short term.”
Path to Resolution
Officials may meet this week during China’s Washington visit for international finance meetings, though Beijing could face global pushback since its rare earth curbs affect European and Asian firms too.
Ray Wang, lead semiconductor analyst at The Futurum Group, predicted a negotiated settlement: “The economic, security and supply-chain stakes for both sides are simply too high to sustain the current stand-off indefinitely.”
While Chinese exports have reached new records in many 2025 markets, showing resilience beyond US consumers, massive tariff spikes would pressure an economy already facing weak domestic demand and deflation.


                                    
