Chinese Factories Beat Expectations As U.S. Manufacturing Lagged

 | Sep 05, 2019 04:28PM ET

The trade war between the world’s two largest economies entered its 18th month in September with the U.S. imposing fresh 15 percent tariffs on $125 billion worth of goods imported from China. China retaliated in kind, but a breakthrough could happen sooner rather than later. According to reports, trade representatives from both countries have agreed to hold new talks in early October, and there’s optimism that this could be “the one.”

“China and the U.S. announced new round of trade talks and will work to make substantial progress,” Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of the Global Times, tweeted on Thursday. “Personally I think the U.S., worn out by the trade war, may no longer hope for crushing China’s will. There’s more possibility of a breakthrough between the two sides.”

CNBC writes that Hu has been spot on with past developments in the ongoing trade war. Many Wall Street traders follow him for insight on what could happen next.

One thing Hu is right about—the trade spat is wearing on the U.S. economy, especially manufacturers. The ISM manufacturing purchasing manager’s index (PMI), an important forward-looking gauge of economic activity, has been declining steadily for months now, and in August, it shrank for the first time in three years. The PMI stood at 49.1, down from 51.2 a month earlier, its lowest reading since March 2016.