Beijing Suspends Latest Rare Earth Export Curbs, Restores Soybean Licenses
.
Beijing on Friday suspended its latest export curbs on rare earth materials after reaching a year-long trade truce with the United States last week.
The regime is also restoring soybean import licenses for three U.S. companies, lifting an import ban on U.S. logs, and removing tariffs on certain U.S. optical fiber.
The restrictions, most of which were set to take effect on Nov. 8, will be suspended until Nov. 10, 2026.
Separately, China’s customs agency reversed the suspension of soybean import licenses for Minnesota-based farmer-owned cooperative CHS Inc., Washington-based export grain terminal operator EGT, LLC, and Dutch-headquartered Louis Dreyfus Company Merchandising LLC, which operates globally, including in a number of states in the United States. The licenses will be restored from Monday.
China’s import ban on U.S. logs, which has also been in place since March 4, will be lifted on Monday.
The customs agency said it will also remove anti-dumping duties on certain U.S. optical fiber.
The tariffs, ranging from 33.3 percent to 78.2 percent, were imposed on Sept. 4 after a Ministry of Commerce investigation concluded that U.S. exporters skirted anti-dumping measures, Beijing said.
The easing of restrictions is the result of a U.S.–China trade truce reached following talks in Kuala Lumpur and a meeting between Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in South Korea.
Investor sentiment improved after the Trump–Xi meeting, reducing fears that the world’s two largest economies might abandon efforts to resolve their trade disputes.
Following the meeting, Beijing lifted tariffs on some U.S. farm goods it imposed in March and initiated modest purchases of American farm products, including two cargoes of U.S. wheat.
State grain trader COFCO also booked three U.S. soybean cargoes before the leaders met.
However, traders remain cautious, as a 10 percent tariff on all U.S. imports—including agricultural products—remains in effect, limiting expectations for a broader recovery in trade flows.


