Caixin
Caixin Global – Latest China News & Headlines

Home >

TRENDING
TCL Tech to Buy Back Panel Unit Stake for $1.3 Billion
Optical Interconnect Maker Lightelligence Files for Hong Kong IPO
U.S. Chipmaker Onsemi Doubles Down on China With New Shanghai Headquarters
LATEST
TCL Tech to Buy Back Panel Unit Stake for $1.3 Billion
CAS Space Seeks IPO as China’s Reusable Rocket Race Heats Up
U.S. Chipmaker Onsemi Doubles Down on China With New Shanghai Headquarters
Optical Interconnect Maker Lightelligence Files for Hong Kong IPO
CAS Space Launches Reusable Rocket in China’s Satellite Push
DeepSeek Goes Out for 10 Hours Amid China’s AI Demand Surge
OpenClaw Craze Is Driving Next Phase of AI Development, Insiders Say
China, South Korea Robotics Firms Explore Embodied AI Cooperation
Analysis: Meta’s Manus Deal Faces Scrutiny in China Over Tech Exports, Antitrust Concerns
Chinese GPU Maker MetaX Doubles Revenue Amid Push for Domestic Chips
Kuaishou Ramps Up AI Commercialization as Kling Revenue Hits $150 Million
Alibaba Launches AI Agent for Small Businesses With International Ambitions
China Telecom to Boost AI Spending Amid Capex Cut and Slowing Growth
Siemens Unveils 26 China-Made Products in Industrial AI Push
Alibaba’s Qwen Launches AI Ride-Hailing Feature to Rival Didi
AI Agents to Reshape Global White-Collar Economy, Alibaba Chairman Says
China Opens First National Testing Center for Flying Cars
Tencent Folds AI Lab Into Hunyuan Team in Major AI Overhaul
Unitree Robotics Files for $608 Million STAR Market IPO
Xiaomi Unveils Trio of Large AI Models in $8.7 Billion Bet

By Han Wei / Jan 08, 2019 01:58 AM / Economy

Photo: VCG

Photo: VCG

The United States and China are likely to reach a good settlement over immediate trade issues, said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, as the two countries open talks on settling a damaging trade war.

“I think there’s a very good chance that we will get a reasonable settlement that China can live with, that we can live with and that addresses all of the key issues,” Ross said Monday in an interview with the American cable TV network CNBC.

But he said agreement on structural trade issues would be harder to reach.

China and U.S. officials started negotiations Monday in the first face-to-face meetings since Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping agreed in early December on a 90-day truce. Key issues to be discussed include U.S. demands over trade imbalances, market access, and protection of intellectual property.

Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Jeffrey Gerrish is leading a U.S. working team for two days of meetings in Beijing. Ross said the talks are at an “appropriate level” and the U.S. delegation is large because of the number of issues to be addressed.

China’s foreign ministry said Monday that both sides are expressing a will to work together to push forward a consensus.

Share this article
Open WeChat and scan the QR code