After third round of trade talks, the two sides did not announce any breakthroughs or specify the duration of the extension.

Despite expected extension, insiders say trade talks unlikely to yield breakthroughs on specific issues though no escalations anticipated.

Senior , U.S. and Chinese negotiators meet in Stockholm on Monday, aiming to extend a truce keeping sharply higher tariffs at bay.

Top American and Chinese officials are meeting for two days of talks in Stockholm as the Trump administration tries to complete trade deals.

The talks in Sweden to come hours after US President Donald Trump announced a deal with the European Union.

Officials from the world’s two largest economies have entered the venue for their third set of trade negotiations.

Officials from the world’s two largest economies have entered the venue for their third set of trade negotiations.

Delegations from the United States and China will meet Monday in Stockholm, Sweden to keep the current trade truce alive and possibly negotiate a permanent deal.

After third round of trade talks, the two sides did not announce any breakthroughs or specify the duration of the extension.

After third round of trade talks, no breakthroughs or details on the duration of the extension were announced by the Chinese side.

After third round of negotiations, China signals consensus is reached while US team says no agreement until President Trump approves.

This statement was made after the two-day talks in Stockholm headed by US Secretary of Treasury Scott Bessent and Deputy Prime Minister of China He Lifeng

The U.S. and China had agreed to pause most of the sky-high tariffs on each others' goods amid trade negotiations – but that pause is set to expire in August.

Trump will need to approve pause, say US representatives after negotiations end with sides failing to break deadlock on trade terms

Ambas potencias concluyen dos días de conversaciones en Estocolmo sin lograr un acuerdo que fije el marco arancelario entre Washington y Pekín

A fragile trade truce that the US and China reached in May could expire in on 12 August.

The US appears poised to keep its China tariffs at 30 per cent while raising duties on a slew of other countries, helping Chinese exporters.

Long periods of truce at the current tariff levels may not be ideal for the business sector but this buys time to prioritise negotiations.