Key Takeaways
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- China and ASEAN signed upgraded free trade pact (CAFTA 3.0) Tuesday, adding green economy and supply-chain connectivity; helps China export solar/batteries/EVs and offset US tariffs.
- Chinese Premier Li blamed “external forces” for “unreasonable high tariffs” and “bullying” without naming US; positioned China as free trade champion.
- Came day after Trump’s deals secured rare-earth access and tariff exemptions for ASEAN (Malaysia: palm oil, cocoa, pharma); ASEAN now sells more to US than China.
- Pact includes joint EV regulatory standards, facilitates green product trade; strategic win for China seeking markets for industrial overcapacity amid Western tariffs.
What Happened?
Chinese Premier Li Qiang and Malaysian PM Anwar Ibrahim signed an upgraded China-ASEAN Free Trade Area agreement (CAFTA 3.0) Tuesday in Kuala Lumpur, expanding the pact to include green economy and supply-chain connectivity. The deal facilitates trade in green products and includes joint development of EV regulatory standards, potentially easing market access for China’s EV sector. Li positioned China as a free trade champion, saying “interference by external forces is rising” and countries face “unreasonable high tariffs” and “political/economic bullying” without naming the US. The move came a day after Trump wrapped up a visit securing rare-earth deals and tariff exemptions for ASEAN exports (Malaysia got exemptions for palm oil, cocoa, pharmaceuticals). ASEAN now sells more goods to the US than to China, making the balancing act crucial.
Why It Matters
The pact underscores intensifying US-China competition for Southeast Asian economic influence. For China, CAFTA 3.0 offers new outlets for massive industrial overcapacity in solar, batteries, and EVs facing US/EU tariffs. Joint EV standards could give Chinese automakers easier access to ASEAN’s 680 million consumers. For ASEAN, the balancing act is delicate: the bloc needs China for inputs/investment but relies on the US for high-value exports and security. Trump’s rare-earth deals reduce US China-dependence while ASEAN’s tariff exemptions provide relief from protectionism. For investors, the pact boosts Chinese EV/green-tech exporters and ASEAN manufacturers integrated into Chinese supply chains, highlighting the bifurcation of global trade into US-aligned and China-aligned networks.
What’s Next
Watch implementation details: tariff timelines, green product definitions, EV regulatory alignment. Monitor Chinese EV/solar/battery exports to ASEAN and whether the pact offsets Western tariffs. Track Trump’s response—potential tariffs on ASEAN countries deepening China ties. Longer term, monitor supply-chain reconfiguration and whether ASEAN can maintain ties with both superpowers or is forced to choose. Favor ASEAN exporters (Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand) and Chinese green-tech plays (BYD, CATL) gaining ASEAN access. Risks: US retaliation, South China Sea tensions, Chinese overcapacity flooding ASEAN markets. Southeast Asia is the key battleground in US-China decoupling.













