Financial News
Fortune

Australia’s Albanese heads to China as Trump stresses alliance

July 8, 2025
06:50 AM
2 min read
AI Enhanced
tradingfinancialmaterialsindustrialsmarket cyclesseasonal analysisgeopolitical

Key Takeaways

“China’s an important trading partner for Australia, 25% of our exports go to China,” Albanese told reporters.

Article Overview

Quick insights and key information

Reading Time

2 min read

Estimated completion

Category

financial news

Article classification

Published

July 8, 2025

06:50 AM

Source

Fortune

Original publisher

Key Topics
tradingfinancialmaterialsindustrialsmarket cyclesseasonal analysisgeopolitical

·Tariffs and tradeAustralia’s Albanese heads to China as Trump stresses allianceBY James MaygerBY Michael HeathBY BloombergBY James MaygerBY Michael HeathSEE MOREAnthony Albanese, Australia's prime minister, during an address at the National Press in Canberra, Australia, on Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Hilary Wardhaugh—Bloomberg via Getty ImagesAustralian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese plans to travel to China from this weekend, seeking to strengthen ties with his country’s largest trading partner while its top security ally US aims to check Beijing’s presence in Asia

The Australian leader said Tuesday that he will visit Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu, where the country has consular operations, starting from Saturday. “China’s an important trading partner for Australia, 25% of our exports go to China,” he told reporters in Hobart. “What that means is jobs, and one of the things that my government prioritizes is jobs. ” The delegation will include top executives from Macquarie Bank Ltd

And HSBC Holdings PLC’s Australia arm, as well as from Fortescue Ltd. , BlueScope Steel Ltd. , Rio Tinto Ltd

And BHP Group Ltd, according to the Australian Financial Review, citing people it didn’t identify

Xiao Qian, China ambassador to Australia, wrote earlier this week that Beijing is open to expanding the free-trade agreement between the countries to cover artificial intelligence, health care and renewable energy

The visit comes as US President Donald Trump has unleashed a series of punishing tariffs, expected to go into effect Aug. 1 barring any bilateral deals

That pressure, aimed at spurring domestic industry, has isolated allies and trading partners Australia, which has a longstanding security partnership with Washington

Albanese on Tuesday said Australia continues to negotiate with the Trump administration to lower tariffs below the 10% baseline in force at the moment, which Washington has said repeatedly would ly be the floor for all countries

Meanwhile, Albanese’s government has helped thaw relations with Beijing, it’s biggest trading partner and customer for raw materials and wine

Albanese on Tuesday said his government has been able to remove impediments that blocked more than A$20 billion ($13 billion) worth of goods going to China.