Finance
Chinese tech stocks drop after China cancels US trade negotiations
-
China, on Monday, accused the US of being a trade bully
and attacked the “protectionist” practices of the Trump
administration, hours after a new round of tariffs against went
into effect. -
China canceled trade talks with the US that were
planned for the coming days. - Chinese tech stocks dropped on the news.
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Watch Alibaba, iQiyi, JD.com, Baidu.com, Pinduoduo, Nio trade in real time
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Chinese tech stocks are
sliding after China accused the US of being a trade bully,
and said it won’t heading to the negotiating
table if the Trump administration continues its threat of higher
tariffs.
China published a white paper on Monday that attacked the
“protectionist” and “trade bullyism” practices of the US
administration,
according
to state-run Chinese news service Xinhua.
“It has brazenly preached unilateralism, protectionism and
economic hegemony, making false accusations against many
countries and regions, particularly China, intimidating other
countries through economic measures such as imposing tariffs, and
attempting to impose its own interests on China through extreme
pressure,” the white paper said.
The white paper came hours after US’s new round of tariffs
on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports went into effect on
Monday. China has promised to respond with tariffs on $60
billion worth of US goods.
China canceled trade talks with the US that were
planned for the coming days,
demonstrating its
stance to avoid negotiating under
threat,
according to
The Wall Street Journal, citing sources familiar with the
matter.
As a result, Chinese tech stocks are under
pressure. Here’s the scoreboard:
Here’s a timeline of the US-China trade war so far:
- March 1: President Donald
Trump announces tariffs on all imports of steel
and aluminum, including metals from China. - March
22: Trump announces
plans to impose a 25% tariff on $50
billion worth of Chinese goods. China announces
tariffs in retaliation to the steel and
aluminum duties and promises a response to the latest US
announcement. - April 3: The US trade
representative announces a list of Chinese
goods subject to the tariffs. There is a
mandatory 60-day comment period for industries to ask for
exemptions from the tariffs. - April
4: China rolls out a
list of more than 100 US goods worth
roughly $50 billion that are subject to retaliatory tariffs. - May 21: After a meeting, the
two countries announce the outline of a trade
deal to avoid the tariffs. - May 29: The White House
announces that the tariffs on $50 billion worth of Chinese
goods will move forward, with the
final list of goods released June 15. The move appears to wreck
the nascent trade deal. - June 15: Trump rolls out
the final list of goods subject to
new tariffs. Chinese imports worth $34 billion would be
subject to the new 25% tariff as of July 6, with another $16
billion worth of imports subject to the tariff at a later
date. China
retaliates with an equivalent set of
tariffs. - June
18: Trump threatens a 10%
tariff on another $200 billion worth of
Chinese goods. - July 6: The first tranche
of tariffs on $34 billion worth of
Chinese goods takes
effect; China responds in kind. - July
10: The US releases an initial
list of an additional $200 billion worth
of Chinese goods that could be subject to a 10% tariff. - August 1: Washington more
than doubles
the value of its tariff threats against
Beijing, announcing plans to increase the size of proposed
duties on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods to 25% from 10%. - August
3: China says
it will impose tariffs of various rates
on another $60 billion worth of US goods if Trump moves forward
with his latest threat. - August 7: The US announces
that the second tranche of tariffs, which will hit $16 billion
worth of Chinese goods, will go into effect on August 23. - August
23: The US
imposes tariffs on another $16 billion
worth of Chinese goods, and Beijing responds with tariffs on
$16 billion worth of US goods. - September 7: Trump says the
tranche of tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods is
coming “soon” and threatens
to impose tariffs on another $267 billion
worth of Chinese goods. - September 17: Trump
announces 10% tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods,
saying China has “been unwilling to change its practices.” - September 18: China says it
has “no choice” but to retaliate to the fresh tariffs “to
safeguard its legitimate rights and interests.” It announces
tariffs on $60 billion worth of US goods sent to China. - September 24: Trump’s new round of
tariffs against China on $200 billion worth of imports
went into effect.
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