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China Appeals for Calm, Readies Plans to Counter Trump’s Tariffs

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(Bloomberg) -- China warned against panic in the face of Donald Trump’s tariff hikes, saying it has plenty of policy room to defend the economy but without ruling out negotiations with the US.

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“The sky won’t fall even though the US abuse of tariffs will cause some impact on us,” the official People’s Daily said in a front-page editorial on Monday. “We must turn pressure into motivation.”

China is honing a domestic message of resilience after retaliating against Trump’s sweeping tariff announcements last week by imposing levies on US goods. With no compromise in sight, the unsigned article in the Communist Party’s mouthpiece publication laid out plans to counter the economic fallout by supporting domestic demand with stimulus measures such as lower interest rates.

The dimming prospect of a deal between the world’s two biggest economies has prompted a selloff in financial markets and raised speculation among investors that China may resort to aggressively devaluing the yuan against the dollar.

Global banks like Morgan Stanley have voiced worries over the damage that punishing US tariffs and a further escalation in trade tensions could inflict on the Chinese economy. Just weeks earlier, Beijing announced an ambitious growth target of around 5% for this year.

The Hang Sang China Enterprises Index, which tracks Chinese shares listed in Hong Kong, plunged nearly 14% on Monday, the worst day since the Asian financial crisis. The yield on China’s 10-year government bonds dropped 8 basis points to 1.63%.

The onshore yuan weakened almost 0.5% even after the People’s Bank of China set the Chinese currency’s daily reference rate at a level that was much stronger than expected.

“In contrast to our prior expectation that China’s response may be measured, preserving space for negotiation, China has taken a more confrontational stance,” Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. economists led by Tommy Xie said in a note on Monday.

What Bloomberg Economics Says...

“China’s retaliation is likely to result in further tariffs hikes from the US, which Beijing has probably anticipated and will have prepared the next raft of counter-measures. A full blown trade war between the major economies is set to add more downside pressure on global growth.”