HONG KONG -- China has dropped an anti-dumping investigation and given long awaited approval for the sale of Toshiba's memory chip business, in gestures suggesting a thaw between Beijing and the U.S. as trade talks resumed in Washington.
The Commerce Ministry said China ended the probe into imported U.S. sorghum because it's not in the public interest. A day earlier, Beijing cleared the way for a group led by U.S. private equity firm Bain Capital to buy Toshiba Corp.'s computer memory chip business.
The moves signaled Beijing's willingness to make a deal with Washington amid talks between senior U.S. and Chinese officials aimed at averting a trade war between the world's two biggest economies, analysts say.
"I think China is willing to make concessions," said Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS. "The Chinese stance has been very clear, that China wants to mute any trade dispute. But of course it doesn't mean China would heed to all the demands the U.S. would place."
A White House official said China had offered to work to cut the trade deficit with the U.S. by $200 billion, while stressing the details remained unclear. But China's Foreign Ministry denied it.
"It's untrue," said spokesman Lu Kang. "The relevant discussion is still underway, and it is constructive."
The Commerce Ministry said it was ending the anti-dumping probe and a parallel anti-subsidy investigation because they would have raised costs for consumers.
The U.S. is China's biggest supplier of sorghum, accounting for more than 90 percent of total imports. China's investigation, launched in February, had come as a warning shot to American farmers, many of whom support the Trump administration and depend heavily on trade. They feared they would lose their largest export market for the crop, which is used primarily for animal feed and liquor.
The Commerce Ministry said, "Anti-dumping and countervailing measures against imported sorghum originating in the United States would affect the cost of living of a majority of consumers and would not be in the public interest," according to a notice posted on its website.
It said it had received many reports the investigation would result in higher costs for the livestock industry, adding many domestic pig farmers were facing hardship because of declining pork prices.
China's U.S. sorghum imports surged from 317,000 metric tons in 2013 to 4.76 million tons last year while prices fell by about a third in the same period.
The ministry said any deposits for the preliminary anti-dumping tariffs of 178.6 percent, which took effect on April 18, would be returned in full.
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