KEY POINTS
  • A source briefed on the talks had told CNBC that Chinese Vice Premier Liu He will likely cancel the trip he'd planned for the final round of talks that U.S. officials had previously said could yield a deal by Friday.
  • A second source said Trump's decision to more than double the tariff rate on $200 billion of goods was meant to send a message to Liu to not come to the U.S. with more "empty offers."
  • During a Monday news conference, a spokesman for China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said through a translator that the country's team "is preparing to travel to the U.S. for the trade talks." He did not confirm whether Liu would be among that group.

China said Monday its negotiators are still preparing to travel to the U.S. for trade talks this week despite President Donald Trump threatening Beijing with increased tariffs.

That wasn't quite a confirmation that the talks would still go on, but it quieted some concern following multiple reports that the Chinese side was reconsidering its involvement in the negotiations.