Monday, May 4

TRUMP DUE TO VISIT BEIJING

The move comes less than two weeks before US President Donald Trump is due to visit Beijing, highlighting China’s willingness to deploy its economic pressure tools despite a trade truce with Washington.

Under the law, introduced in 2021 and most recently revised in April, China can impose countermeasures on companies and individuals, including trade and investment curbs and entry and exit restrictions.

Legal analysts say the law leaves counterparties of sanctioned firms caught between jurisdictions, risking violations of Chinese law if they comply with foreign sanctions, or penalties elsewhere if they do not.

Canada’s Trade Commissioner Service warned companies operating in China last August that they could be squeezed between the US, European Union and Chinese rules because of the legislation.

China’s official People’s Daily said on Sunday the move “uses the power of the rule of law to precisely counter the US’s ‘long-arm jurisdiction'”.

The law allows companies to apply for waivers. A trader at a Hengli counterparty who declined to be named said firms with substantial business overseas should be able to make the case for exemptions to Chinese regulators. 

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