US–China agree to implement the implementation of the already-agreed consensus

ANALYSIS |

After two days of back-and-forth in London, the U.S.–China trade circus wrapped with what can only be described as a diplomatic tautology: a late-night announcement that both sides have “agreed in principle on a framework to implement the Geneva consensus”—a consensus that was, ironically, already agreed upon weeks ago.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and China’s Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang delivered the news just shy of midnight London time, sounding more like they were reading a corporate mission statement than breaking any new geopolitical ground. Lutnick’s punchline? “Once the presidents approve it, we will then seek to implement it.”

So what did 48 hours of talks actually produce? Apparently, a reaffirmation to eventually do what they had already said they would do. If markets were expecting substance, they got process instead.

The rare earth angle—long assumed to be a sticking point—was teased but not exactly clarified. Lutnick’s promise that “the topic of rare earth minerals and magnets… will be resolved in this framework” read more like a line from a strategy deck than a concrete deliverable. Does that mean China is about to restart shipments? Or that talks will continue indefinitely while the U.S. keeps tariffs warm and licensing opaque?

His follow-up wasn’t much clearer: “When they approve the licenses, then you should expect that our export implementation will come down as well.” Translation: the U.S. might unwind some restrictions once China acts—but until then, we wait. Again.

And then came the kicker: “We had to get the negativity out.” Which, if you’re keeping score, means the outcome of these talks was an agreement to stay positive while committing to maybe do what was already agreed in principle weeks ago. If this were a hedge fund pitch, you’d walk out halfway through slide three.

Greer, the US Trade Representative, offered little more clarity—no next meetings scheduled, but “we can talk whenever.” Great. A hotline to nowhere.

Bottom line: this was less a breakthrough and more a placeholder. The framework to implement the framework is in place. The real market signal? Hope fatigue could be setting in. If the next headline doesn’t come with something tangible, such as cargo ships loaded with rare earths or an actual rollback of tariffs, expect risk assets to start demanding more photo opportunities.

Until then, this rally relies on faith. The punchbowl is still spiked with stimulus, but the trade deal room is beginning to smell like déjà vu.

SPI Asset Management provides forex, commodities, and global indices analysis, in a timely and accurate fashion on major economic trends, technical analysis, and worldwide events that impact different asset classes and investors.

Our publications are for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell securities.

Opinions are the authors — not necessarily SPI Asset Management its officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. Losses can exceed investments.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

Gold leaps toward $3,450 as Israel launches attacks on Iran

Gold leaps toward $3,450 as Israel launches attacks on Iran

Gold price rises to over five-month highs, nearing $3,450 in the Asian trading hours on Friday. Israel confirmed strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, fuelling a broad wave of risk aversion while driving the safe-haven Gold price through the roof. Rising Fed rate cut bets also underpin the non-yielding Gold. 

AUD/USD remains heavy below 0.6500 amid intense risk aversion on Israel-Iran confict

AUD/USD remains heavy below 0.6500 amid intense risk aversion on Israel-Iran confict

AUD/USD is off the low but remains heavy below 0.6500 in Friday's risk-off Asian affair. Trump's fresh tariff news and escalating Israel-Iran geopolitical tensions weigh on investors' sentiment and the risk-sensitive Aussie. Broad US Dollar rebound also adds to the pair's downside. 

USD/JPY erases losses to retake 143.50 as USD gains on risk aversion

USD/JPY erases losses to retake 143.50 as USD gains on risk aversion

USD/JPY retakes 143.00 in Asian trading on Friday, reversing an early dip to 142.80. The global risk sentiment takes a hit amid an escalation of geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, which fuels the haven demand for the US Dollar, offsetting the Japanese Yen's safe-haven status, allowing the pair's swift recovery. 

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple dips as Israel-Iran conflicts escalate

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple dips as Israel-Iran conflicts escalate

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple prices have dipped as escalating geopolitical tension between Israel and Iran has triggered a risk-off sentiment in the cryptocurrency markets. The top three cryptocurrencies by market capitalization are extending their losses heading into the weekend, with the price action suggesting further correction.

US tariffs here to stay, trade deals ‘largely symbolic’

US tariffs here to stay, trade deals ‘largely symbolic’

Despite legal challenges to IEEPA tariffs, US trade policy remains firm. Tariffs on steel and aluminium have doubled, and new sectoral tariffs are expected. Trade deals may emerge, but most will be symbolic. Effective tariff rates will stay high throughout 2025.

The Best brokers to trade EUR/USD

The Best brokers to trade EUR/USD

SPONSORED Discover the top brokers for trading EUR/USD in 2025. Our list features brokers with competitive spreads, fast execution, and powerful platforms. Whether you're a beginner or an expert, find the right partner to navigate the dynamic Forex market.

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures

Best Brokers of 2025