Key Takeaways
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- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent signaled a pause on U.S. import duties could be extended beyond 90 days if China halts strict new rare-earth export controls.
- Next truce deadline is November; both sides are stockpiling leverage ahead of a likely Xi–Trump meeting at APEC in South Korea.
- U.S. preparing a coordinated allied response to China’s proposed rare-earth rules; equities firmed on Bessent’s remarks.
- Trump reiterated threat of a 100% additional tariff by Nov. 1 and downplayed any need to negotiate based on stock-market moves.
- Rare-earth names rallied; policy path hinges on whether Beijing implements its “trace-content” export approvals.
What happened?
Bessent opened the door to a longer tariff pause in exchange for China backing off expansive rare-earth export controls that would require approvals for products containing even trace amounts of China-origin rare earths. The comments came as the current 90-day truce approaches a November deadline and follow weeks of renewed tit-for-tat: broadened U.S. tech curbs and proposed port fees for Chinese ships, with China responding via rare-earth and critical-materials measures. While Bessent pushed allied coordination with Europe, Australia, Canada, India, and Asian democracies, President Trump separately reiterated the readiness to impose a 100% tariff by Nov. 1 and suggested meeting Xi remains “a go,” pending developments.
Why it matters
Extending the truce would reduce near-term tariff shock risk and ease supply-chain anxiety, particularly for sectors dependent on magnets and rare-earth inputs (EVs, wind, electronics, defense). Conversely, implementation of China’s trace-content rule would be highly disruptive and administratively burdensome, risking broad trade friction. Markets are trading the negotiation tape: Bessent’s flexibility supports a risk-on bias, but Trump’s tariff posture sustains tail risks. Rare-earth producers outside China (e.g., MP Materials, USA Rare Earth) and critical-metals supply chains could benefit from de-risking and reshoring momentum regardless of the immediate truce outcome.
What’s next?
Into the early-November tariff and mid-November truce deadlines, watch for: concrete Chinese guidance on rare-earth approvals; U.S. notices on 100% tariffs and any carve-outs; allied joint statements during IMF/World Bank week; and scheduling signals for the Xi–Trump meeting. A longer roll of the truce paired with a Chinese pause on export controls would likely trigger relief across China-exposed cyclicals and manufacturing. Failure leading to tariffs plus rare-earth implementation would favor defensives, a stronger USD, and relative outperformance of ex-China rare-earth and magnet supply chains.