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Trump Grants China Tariff Reprieve Through November: What This Means for Markets
The tariff standoff between Washington and Beijing just got a fresh lifeline. On Monday evening, President Trump issued an executive order delivering a 90-day extension on U.S. duties against Chinese imports—a move that literally beat the midnight deadline when those levies were primed to snap back to April 2023 levels. If the truce had collapsed, we’d be looking at significantly higher tariffs that would have sent shockwaves through supply chains and equity markets alike.
Background: How We Got Here
The tariff freeze wasn’t conjured overnight. Back in May, negotiators in Geneva managed to lock down the initial pause on duties, marking the first serious sit-down since tensions first flared. Then came the July talks in Stockholm, where both sides signaled they were inching toward an actual deal rather than just kicking the can further down the road.
The Stakes of Letting Tariffs Resume
Here’s the thing: without Trump’s Monday move, tariffs would have reverted to their April 2023 highs—the peak of the trade war. That’s not just a footnote; it’s a critical detail because those rate hikes had sent markets into a frenzy when they were actually in place. Allowing them to snap back would have risked reigniting the full-scale trade clash between the world’s two largest economies, potentially destabilizing everything from commodity prices to tech stocks.
Extended Timeline Buys Breathing Room
With the new 90-day extension now locked in, both Washington and Beijing have until November to actually negotiate a lasting resolution. That’s three months of relative calm—enough time for both sides to either forge a genuine settlement or at least avoid an immediate escalation. The pause bought by Trump’s executive order is less about solving the problem and more about preventing it from exploding mid-negotiation.
For traders and investors watching this closely, the message is clear: the tariff truce holds for now, but November will be the real test.