Asia Stocks Surge on US-China Trade Deal Breakthrough
Asian stock markets rallied Monday following a breakthrough in US-China trade negotiations, with tariffs deferred, rare earth export restrictions delayed, and soybean purchases agreed. The progress raises hopes for a deal when Donald Trump and Xi Jinping meet Thursday in South Korea, sending markets higher across Tokyo, Seoul, Hong Kong, and Shanghai. ©Ici Beyrouth

Asian equities surged Monday as investors cheered a breakthrough in US-China trade talks that set the stage for leaders Donald Trump and Xi Jinping to finalize a deal, averting an escalation in the world's biggest trade dispute.

Markets rallied after US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the threat of the US president imposing an additional 100 percent tariff on Chinese goods was "effectively off the table" following weekend negotiations in Malaysia.

"The tariffs will be averted," Bessent told ABC News on Sunday, adding that China agreed to delay rare earth export controls and make "substantial" soybean purchases.

Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng said the two sides reached a "preliminary consensus" on tariffs, export controls, and fentanyl cooperation, describing the talks as "candid, in-depth, and constructive."

The progress paves the way for Trump and Xi to meet Thursday in South Korea on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, their first face-to-face meeting since Trump returned to office.

Tokyo led gains in Asia, with the Nikkei 225 adding more than two percent and closing above the 50,000 mark for the first time, buoyed by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's pro-stimulus stance and a weaker yen that benefits the export sector.

The breakthrough also comes ahead of Trump's visit to Tokyo, with Takaichi having pledged to raise defense spending to two percent of GDP this fiscal year – two years ahead of schedule.

"The Nikkei's breakout isn't a technical fluke – it's the pricing of a national renaissance," said Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management."

Seoul, too, ended more than two percent higher, surpassing the 4,000 mark for the first time, with tech titan Samsung gaining more than three percent and chipmaker SK hynix jumping nearly five percent.

Hong Kong, Shanghai, Taipei, Singapore and Sydney also made gains, though Jakarta and Manila fell.

In Europe, London and Frankfurt opened with gains, while Paris dipped into the red.

The positive sentiment follows a strong finish on Wall Street Friday, after benign US inflation data set the stage for another Federal Reserve interest rate cut.

Trump expressed confidence about reaching a comprehensive agreement with Beijing. "They want to make a deal, and we want to make a deal," he told reporters Sunday in Kuala Lumpur.

"The assumption, of course, remains that that is just a negotiating gambit, with this week's talks leading to a restoration of the 'status quo' and a truce between the two nations," said Michael Brown of Pepperstone.

The Republican president is on a five-day Asia tour that includes stops in Malaysia, Japan and South Korea, with trade deals topping the agenda at every destination.

Futures for US copper surged on the trade deal optimism, bolstering the outlook for global demand.

The breakthrough came after months of escalating tensions, with Trump threatening the massive tariff hike in response to China's October expansion of rare earth export controls – a move Washington called "economic coercion."

Under the framework deal, China would defer its rare earth restrictions "for a year while they reexamine it," Bessent said.

AFP

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