KEY POINTS
  • Senior trade negotiators for the U.S. and China were expected to sit down in Washington Thursday and Friday, but their talks may be cut down to one day and they are not expected to make much headway.
  • The hope was that the talks would at least result in a postponement of new tariffs, set to take effect next week.
  • Strategists have expected to see a slimmed-down trade deal before year-end, and it is likely to lack a real resolution of some of the thornier issues, such as intellectual property theft and technology transfers.
  • The talks between the two sides are now characterized by an increasing lack of trust, making it more difficult to reach agreement.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) and US President Donald Trump at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on November 9, 2017.

China and the U.S. resume trade talks Thursday in a prickly atmosphere, and strategists say the best outcome could be a postponement of the next round of tariffs but not much else.

Strategists say it's also more likely now that the Trump administration will agree to a trimmed-down trade deal that could lift some tariffs before year-end but pushes off some of the thornier issues, such as intellectual property and technology transfers, for future talks.