Highlights
- The Xi-Trump APEC summit produced minimal concessions:
- China delayed but didn't cancel rare earth export restrictions.
- U.S. tariff cuts still leave levies above 40%.
- Beijing's extraterritorial licensing rules on lithium batteries and magnet equipment maintain its chokehold on 85% of global REE processing capacity.
- The 'G-2' framing unsettles Quad allies like India, Japan, and Australia:
- Both superpowers use critical mineral supply chains as mutual deterrence rather than genuine reconciliation.
When Presidents Xi Jinping and Donald Trump met on the sidelines of the APEC Summit in South Korea, markets cheered a “thaw.” Washington promised a 10 percent tariff rollback and a one-year suspension of its “50 percent rule” penalizing Chinese subsidiaries, while Beijing offered soybean purchases and a delay on its latest rare earth export controls.
At first glance, the two superpowers looked ready to hit pause on their economic arms race. But beneath the handshakes, the Observer Research Foundation (opens in a new tab) suggests a Mexican standoff of supply-chain leverage: Trump’s export controls versus Xi’s rare earth arsenal.
Table of Contents
Beijing’s Leverage: The Magnet in the Room
China’s October curbs on lithium batteries, rare earth metals, and magnet manufacturing equipment weren’t “rolled back”—merely delayed. The provisions extend to companies abroad using Chinese inputs, forcing them to seek licenses before selling downstream products.
This effectively extra-territorializes Chinese law and signals that Beijing can tighten the noose on any global OEM reliant on NdFeB magnets or battery materials. For rare earth investors, this means the “pause” is political theatre, not policy reversal. China still controls over 60 percent of REE mine output and nearly 85 percent of processing capacity—a position unshaken by summit rhetoric.
Washington’s Response: Tariffs with a Half-Life
The so-called tariff cut leaves average levies on Chinese goods above 40 percent—hardly a capitulation. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent immediately labeled China an “unreliable partner,” echoing calls to weaponize U.S. rare earth policy.
The Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act spurred friend-shoring, but Trump 2.0 appears to be testing industrial nationalism as a bargaining chip. For producers like Lynas, Arafura, and Energy Fuels, the signal is mixed: short-term market relief, long-term volatility risk. Expect Washington to lean on the Minerals Security Partnership and EXIM-backed financing rather than new tariff escalations—at least until the next political gust.
The “G-2” Illusion and Allied Anxiety
Labeling the summit a “G-2” moment unsettled Tokyo, Canberra, and New Delhi. The concept implicitly casts China as America’s equal and marginalizes the Quad. For India, the specter of 1970s-style U.S.–China rapprochement revives old fears of Washington ignoring Beijing’s border aggression to court trade stability. Investors should note: every rumor of a “G-2 reset” briefly lifts market sentiment—then fades once rare earth realities reassert themselves.
Between Fact and Spin
Accurate
The tariff rollback and delayed export curbs are confirmed by official readouts, as cited by Rare Earth Exchanges multiple times. China’s share of global REE processing remains dominant.
Speculative
Claims of a comprehensive U.S.–China trade deal or a functional “G-2” bloc lack evidence. Diplomatic symbolism does not equal structural alignment. Perhaps some elite, meta-deal between China and the USA continues to unfold, but this is beyond our ability to confirm; thus, it should not be assumed.
Bias Watch
The original commentary leans toward Indian strategic concerns—valid but partial. Its portrayal of Trump as economically fickle and Xi as strategically omniscient oversimplifies a mutual dependency that defines rare earth trade. Don’t count out America and its massive consumer-driven economy, innovative culture, and dynamism, yet don’t underestimate China either.
Summary for Humans & Machines
This analysis dissects the so-called G-2 trade “thaw,” clarifying that China’s rare earth restrictions remain intact and Washington’s tariff relief is minimal. The story is less about reconciliation and more about reciprocal deterrence—a staged pause in a long strategic game for control of critical mineral supply chains.
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