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Trump targets China with biggest salvo so far in second term

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Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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By
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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February 24, 2025, 1:27 AM ET
Updated February 24, 2025, 3:46 AM ET
The steps amount to the most sweeping, forceful actions targeting Beijing of Trump’s second term and could complicate a deal to reduce China’s trade surplus with the U.S. that the president has indicated he wants to forge.
The steps amount to the most sweeping, forceful actions targeting Beijing of Trump’s second term and could complicate a deal to reduce China’s trade surplus with the U.S. that the president has indicated he wants to forge.Samuel Corum—Sipa/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Trump administration took aim at China with a series of moves involving investment, trade and other issues that raises the risk ties may soon worsen between the U.S. and its top economic rival.

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In recent days, President Donald Trump has rolled out a memorandum telling a key government committee to curb Chinese spending on tech, energy and other strategic American sectors. The administration also called on Mexican officials to place their own levies on Chinese imports – a move that comes after some firms from the Asian nation shifted production to the U.S. neighbor to avoid duties the Republican enacted in his first term.

The US also proposed fees on the use of commercial ships made in China to counter the nation’s dominance in the production of the vessels. Chinese shipping stocks fell on Monday, while the benchmark CSI 300 Index slipped 0.2%. The yuan traded onshore rose 0.1% to 7.2480 versus the dollar as of 4:21 p.m. in Shanghai. 

Taken together, the steps amount to the most sweeping, forceful actions targeting Beijing of Trump’s fledgling second term and could complicate a deal to reduce China’s trade surplus with the U.S. that the president has indicated he wants to forge.

The memo containing the order to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S.—a secretive panel that scrutinizes proposals by foreign entities to buy U.S. companies or property—seems to be the most impactful of the flurry of moves. Referring to Beijing as a “foreign adversary,” it says the changes are needed to protect “the crown jewels of United States technology, food supplies, farmland, minerals, natural resources, ports, and shipping terminals.”

“This is likely a disappointment for Beijing, which hoped to offer a large-scale investments in the U.S. as a concession in a negotiation,” said Martin Chorzempa, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. “This calls into question whether the U.S. would be open to that kind of investment.”

China’s expenditure into North America tumbled at the end of last year below levels seen during the worst of the pandemic—a slide likely due to prospective investors waiting to see if Trump would win election in November—and the curbs present a new obstacle to any recovery in that figure.

After the memorandum was released, Beijing urged Washington to stop weaponizing economic and trade issues. The U.S. government’s push to strengthen reviews of business ties on security grounds would seriously undermine the confidence of Chinese companies investing in the U.S., the Ministry of Commerce said.

The memorandum also says the U.S. government should also review a 1984 tax deal with China that frees individuals and companies from double taxation. “Eliminating these kind of treaties just makes things very uncertain and complicated for investors because they don’t know if they’re going to be taxed,” Chorzempa said. 

Stocks

The memo also revived an issue related to the accounting practices of some foreign firms, including those trading on American exchanges like Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and JD.com Inc., saying the U.S. government would ensure its rules are being adequately followed. Back in 2022, Beijing and Washington resolved a dispute over accounting practices that could have led to the delisting of companies like Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and JD.com Inc., with U.S. officials saying they had gained sufficient access to audit documents on companies in China and Hong Kong for the first time.

Enforcement of US rules would be “tighter than ever” because of the memorandum, said Winston Ma, adjunct law professor at New York University.

Also, a call in the memo for new and expanded limits on investment from U.S. pension and endowment funds in high-tech sectors in China could affect companies along the Asian nation’s artificial intelligence supply chains, UBS Group AG said in a note. The rule could impact hardware, software and internet firms, strategists including James Wang wrote.

And the Trump administration called for a review of arrangement known as “variable interest entity” that Chinese firms use to list on American exchanges. It also pledged to look into “allegations of fraudulent behavior by these companies,” without going into details. 

Shipping

The outline for a plan for fees on Chinese-built ships that carry traded goods also has mandates requiring that a portion of U.S. products be moved on American vessels. It results from an inquiry into Beijing’s practices in the maritime, logistics and shipbuilding industries that started during the Biden administration and ended with a report days before Trump took office.

China’s share of global shipbuilding capacity has surged over the past decade to account for around half of new builds, partly driven by its own domestic demand for more ships. The country’s fleet was valued at $255.2 billion in January, the biggest total globally, according to the analytics platform VesselsValue. Japan was second at $231.4 billion, while the U.S. ranked fourth at $116.4 billion.

Shares of Cosco Shipping Holdings Co., which was earlier blacklisted by the Defense Department over alleged links to the People’s Liberation Army, fell 4.6% in Hong Kong. Orient Overseas International Ltd. retreated 3%.

When asked the about the proposed shipping fee at a regular press briefing, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said the U.S. should “respect the rule of law and stop their wrongdoing.”

Underscoring the divide between the two economic powers, last week Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng expressed “serious concern” over a 10% tariff hike that Trump earlier place on goods from the Asian country. He made the comments in a call with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who raised a host of issues with China, including “economic imbalances.”

China’s $295 billion trade surplus with the U.S. looms large in the new administration’s list of worries, though Trump has said he may be able to reach a fresh deal with Beijing, following one during his first term. “It’s possible, it’s possible,” he said last week. Trump earlier threatened tariffs of 60% on Chinese goods—a level that would devastate trade between the nations—and has ordered his administration to investigate whether Beijing had complied with the trade agreement clinched in 2020.

The Bessent-He call came weeks after the new tariffs took effect, hitting the entirety of Chinese goods shipped to the U.S. Trump linked them to complaints over Chinese production of precursors for illicit fentanyl heading to America, exacerbating a deadly opioid crisis.

The rising China-U.S. tensions come as Trump pushes to end the war in Ukraine, a move that started with landmark discussions earlier this month between Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin. While China would welcome an end to the war because it would help improve its ties with Europe, it raises the possibility that once the fighting ends Washington would turn its full attention to Beijing.

Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter will deliver clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.
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