President Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping will look to reach an agreement on Friday that will help keep the video app TikTok in the US and ease tensions between the two major economies that are currently locked in a standoff over trade.

US officials said the agreement, which is at the top of the agenda, is expected to be discussed on Friday morning. China has yet to confirm plans for the call, but according to Reuters, it is expected to lead to a in-person summit between Trump and Xi in November.

Amid complex trade talks with the US, China dropped a months-long antitrust probe into Google (GOOG) amid discussions of a TikTok deal — while also increasing pressure on domestic purchases of Nvidia (NVDA) chips.

“Drop one case but seize the other,” a person familiar with the matter told FT. “China is trying to narrow its retaliatory targets to make them more potent.”

Meanwhile, Trump’s visit to the UK saw some deals and announcements. The UK has shelved plans to talk with the US on removing British steel tariffs, meaning current duties will stay in place, according to a report in Bloomberg.

British drugmaker GSK (GSK) said on Wednesday they will invest $30 billion in US research and development. GSK is the largest pharmaceutical firm to scale up its US footprint as Trump threatens to impose import tariffs on the industry and seeks more domestic manufacturing.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who led the US delegation during talks with Chinese trade officials in Spain this week, said that he is confident a trade deal with China is near.

With reciprocal tariffs set to take effect in November, Bessent told reporters he expects further talks to happen before then.

In the background, the Supreme Court is reviewing a high-stakes legal challenge to President Trump’s tariffs, setting up a resolution as early as this fall.

The high court put the case on track for oral arguments in early November. That puts the case on an unusually quick track to resolution.

The tariffs at stake are the sweeping “reciprocal,” country-specific duties Trump has outlined in various steps this year (which you can see in the graphic below). Those duties range from 10% to 50%. Trump has used a 1977 law known as “IEEPA” — the International Emergency Economic Powers Act — to justify imposing the tariffs.

The appeals court allowed the tariffs to stay in place while the case moves through the legal process.

Read more: What Trump’s tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet

Here are the latest updates as the policy reverberates around the world.

LIVE 1876 updates

Trump sets the stage for his highly anticipated Friday call with Xi Jinping

There are high expectations today for President Trump’s call with China’s President Xi Jinping. Yahoo Finance’s Washington Correspondent, Ben Werschkul delves into what appears to be the most anticipated call of the year.

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

BOJ Governor Ueda: Rate hikes will depend on tariffs

The Bank of Japan kept interest rates steady on Friday but decided to start selling its holdings of risky assets. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda’s said rate hikes will depend on the impact of tariffs.

Reuters reports:

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Jenny McCall

China seeks trade edge, shunning US soy in first since 1990s

For the first time since the 1990s, China hasn’t purchased any US soybeans at the start of the export season. Some say this is a sign that Beijing is using agriculture as leverage in its trade fight with Washington.

Bloomberg News:

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Jenny McCall

Global economy takes Trump shocks in stride, for now: Analysis

Threats to the global economic order have come quick and fast since President Trump took office back in January, however, the reaction from world equity and bond markets has been a “somewhat remarkable shrug.

Reuters reports:

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Jenny McCall

Trump and Xi seek TikTok win to break US-China gridlock

TikTok is expected to be top of the agenda list for Friday morning’s call between President Trump and China’s President Jinping, as both sides seek to help keep the video app stay online in the US and ease tensions between the two sides that are currently locked in a trade standoff.

Reuters reports:

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Agriculture secretary: Tariffs could fund bailout for US farmers

The Trump administration is drawing up plans to use tariff revenue to fund a program to support US farmers, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told the Financial Times.

The plans come as farmers head into harvest time grappling with a drop in export sales and a rise in input costs.

The FT reports:

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China drops Google antitrust probe during US trade talks

China is dropping an antitrust probe into Google (GOOG), as Beijing and Washington step up negotiations over TikTok, Nvidia (NVDA), and trade, per the Financial Times.

The move comes as tensions run high between the US and China, which held three days of talks in Madrid this week.

A Chinese antitrust investigation into Nvidia is moving ahead after authorities said this week that a preliminary probe found it had violated anti-monopoly law. Meanwhile, Beijing has effectively banned China’s big tech companies from ordering Nvidia’s AI chips.

The Financial Times reports:

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Swiss watch exports plunge as US tariffs add to China demand woes

Bloomberg reports:

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Jenny McCall

Bristol Myers to sell 60% stake in China joint venture

US drugmaker Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY) announced on Tuesday that it has signed an agreement to sell 60% ownership in a pharmaceutical joint venture in China.

As tariffs take hold and President Trump seeks more investment from companies into the US, many firms are exiting foreign investments in a bid to lower the impact higher levies may have.

Reuters reports:

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Jenny McCall

FedEx profit to be dragged down by US tariffs on previously exempt parcels

FedEx (FDX) will report a quarterly profit hit from President Trump‘s decision to end tariff-exempt treatment for popular direct-to-consumer shipments, such as small parcels under $800.

Reuters reports:

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Jenny McCall

GSK commits $30B to US as Trump visits UK

Pharmaceutical company GSK (GSK) said on Wednesday that it will invest $30 billion in US research and development, as well as supply chain infrastructure over the next five years, after President Trump arrived in Britain and in a bid ease tariffs.

Reuters reports:

Read more here.

Jenny McCall

Trump, Modi talk in bid to calm tariffs, Russian oil dispute

President Trump and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi have finally spoken in a move that some hope will help ease tensions between the two economies amid a fight over tariffs and New Delhi’s Russian oil purchases.

Bloomberg News reports:

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Jenny McCall

Japan’s exports down in August as automakers grapple with US tariffs

US to consider new national security tariffs on auto parts

Reuters reports:

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Jenny McCall

Bessent confident that US-China trade deal is close

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday that he is confident a trade deal with China is near.

With reciprocal tariffs set to take effect in November, Bessent said during an interview with CNBC that he expects further talks to happen before then.

“We’ll be seeing each other again,” he said during a wide-ranging exchange on Squawk Box. “Each one of those talks has become more and more productive. I think the Chinese now sense that a trade deal is possible.”

Wall Street, Corporate America brace for more tariff turmoil

Reuters reports:

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Jenny McCall

EU delays Russia sanctions proposal to align with G-7 priorities

The European Union said on Tuesday it will delay presenting its new Russia sanctions after President Trump pushed for tougher European measures before the US proceeds with its own.

Bloomberg News reports:

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Jenny McCall

South Korea resists US pressure to finalise ‘Japan-style’ trade deal

Jenny McCall

Swatch to hike prices in US after tariffs, CEO says

Jenny McCall

China finds Nvidia violated antitrust law in chip deal probe as trade talks continue

China ruled on Monday that Nvidia (NVDA) violated anti-monopoly laws with a high-profile deal in 2020, increasing the pressure on Washington during sensitive trade negotiations continue in Madrid.

Nvidia’s stock fell almost 3% before the bell.

Bloomberg News reports:

Read more here.