The United States and China have agreed to a framework that would restart last month's trade truce following two days of talks in London, negotiators announced Wednesday.

Delegates from the United States and China are set to meet Monday in London after a phone call between the nations' leaders seemingly led to a cooling of tensions related to their…

A new round of talks aimed at resolving trade tensions between the US and China take place in London.

China and U.S. hold trade talks in London to resolve tariff disputes and strengthen economic relations.

Two sides will ‘bring back a report to our respective leaders the talks in the meeting as well as the framework that was reached in Geneva’

The US Commerce Secretary said the deal should result in some restrictions being resolved.

London talks could pave way for focusing on deeper issues, analyst says

The U.S. and China have reached consensus on trade, representatives from both sides said after high-level talks in London.

Two days of talks resulted in a “framework” that is intended to solidify terms of a deal the countries reached in Geneva last month.

After two days of negotiations in London, officials say previous agreement struck in Geneva will be implemented, pending approval of Donald Trump and Xi Jinping

Negotiators say agreement will be presented to US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping for approval.

The United States and China have agreed to a framework that would restart last month's trade truce following two days of talks in London, negotiators announced Wednesday.

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news

“First we had to get sort of the negativity out and now we can go forward,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters after the meetings.

U.S. and Chinese officials said they had agreed on a framework to get their trade truce back on track and remove China's export restrictions on rare earths.

President says supply of Chinese magnets and rare earths will resume

‘Framework’ agreement reached in London is only the start on a long road to normalising economic relations.

Washington and Beijing have said the negotiations have led to consensus, though Chinese officials have shared fewer details.