How China Has Expanded Its Economic Toolkit During Its Trade Truce With the US

BEIJING, April 27 (Reuters) – China has used its trade ⁠truce ⁠with the United States to broaden its ⁠legal leverage, supply chain and critical technology controls, and expand its toolkit of retaliatory economic ​measures ahead of a summit between the nations next month.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump signed an agreement in Busan, South ‌Korea, in October to de-escalate the trade ‌war. The fragile truce is set to expire in November 2026.

Here are the new countermeasures that Beijing has unveiled since signing ⁠the truce:

April 15, ⁠2026 – Chinese officials held initial talks with providers of equipment to make solar panels ​as they consider limiting exports of the most advanced technology to the United States. China is estimated to make more than 80% of the world’s solar panel components.

April 13 – China’s State Council issued new regulations authorising countermeasures against foreign states for “unlawful extraterritorial jurisdiction”.

State media Xinhua reported that the ​decree could be used against countries imposing secondary sanctions, or the extraterritorial spillover of export controls caused by a country’s ⁠enforcement ⁠of rules like de minimis thresholds.

April ⁠7 – China’s State Council ​issued new regulations on industrial and supply chain security, granting powers to authorities to investigate and take actions against ​foreign countries, companies, or international organizations ⁠that “adopt discriminatory measures” undermining China’s industrial and supply chains.

February 24 – China’s commerce ministry, in an escalation of a dispute with Tokyo, prohibited the export of dual-use items to 20 Japanese entities that it says supply Japan’s military, including vital rare earths used in cars, consumer electronics and weapons.

January 14 – Chinese authorities told domestic companies to stop using cybersecurity software made by more than a dozen firms from ⁠the U.S. and Israel due to national security concerns.

January 9 – China began restricting exports of “heavy” rare earths and ⁠powerful magnets containing them to Japanese companies.

December 30, 2025 – China requires chipmakers to use at least 50% domestically made equipment for adding new capacity, as Beijing pushes to build a self-sufficient semiconductor supply chain.

November 8 – Beijing’s export controls on some high-end lithium-ion batteries, cathodes and graphite anode material as well as technological know-how take effect.

November 5 – China issued guidance requiring new data centre projects that have received any state funds to only use domestically made artificial intelligence chips.

October 30 – Xi and Trump met in Busan, South Korea, and signed an agreement to de-escalate the trade war. Trump agreed with Xi to trim tariffs on China in exchange for Beijing cracking down on the illicit ⁠fentanyl trade, resuming U.S. soybean purchases and keeping rare earths exports flowing.

October 9 – China dramatically expanded its rare earths export controls ahead of talks between Xi and Trump, adding five new elements – holmium, erbium, thulium, europium and ytterbium – and extra scrutiny for semiconductors.

The world’s largest rare earths producer also added dozens of pieces of refining technology to ​its control list and announced rules that will require compliance from foreign rare earth producers who use ​Chinese materials.

(Reporting by Mei Mei Chu; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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