Audio By Carbonatix
US President Donald Trump says he may cut tariffs on China to help seal a deal for short video app TikTok to be sold by its owner, ByteDance.
Trump also said he is willing to extend a 5 April deadline for a non-Chinese buyer of the platform to be found.
In January, he delayed the implementation of a law passed under the Biden administration to ban TikTok.
The legislation, which was signed into law in 2024, cited national security grounds for the sale or be ban order.
"With respect to TikTok, and China is going to have to play a role in that, possibly in the form of an approval, maybe, and I think they'll do that," Trump told reporters on Wednesday.
"Maybe I'll give them a little reduction in tariffs or something to get it done," he added.
Trump also said he expected at least the outline of a deal to be reached by the 5 April deadline.
The BBC has contacted TikTok and the Chinese embassy in Washington for comment.
The biggest sticking point to finalising a deal to sell the TikTok business, which is worth tens of billions of dollars, has always been securing Beijing's agreement.
Trump has previously tried to use tariffs as leverage in the negotiations.
On his first day back in the White House, on 20 January, the president threatened more import duties on China if it did not approve a TikTok deal.
The hugely popular app is used by around 170 million Americans.
Trump, who called for TikTok to be banned in his first term as president, now has an account on the platform.
He has more than 15 million followers and has said he received billions of views on the app during his presidential election campaign.
Separately, the US increased levies on all imports from China to 20% this month.
That doubled the tariffs Trump imposed on the world's second-largest economy on 4 February.
On 10 February, China responded with its own tariffs, including a 10-15% tax on some US agricultural goods.
Beijing has also targeted various US aviation, defence and tech firms by adding them to an "unreliable entity list" and imposing export controls.
The 10% levy doubled to 20% on 4 March.
China has urged the US to return to dialogue with Beijing as soon as possible.
Latest Stories
-
Nollywood special effects artist, James Akaie dies on set following gas explosion
3 minutes -
27-year-old sentenced to seven years for pouring acid on former student
29 minutes -
Ghana’s US envoy links job creation to ending youth deportations
60 minutes -
Blair and Rubio among names on Gaza ‘Board of Peace’
2 hours -
Minister calls for inter-ministerial force to fix Accra’s rush-hour transit crises
2 hours -
Sarkodie’s Rapperholic UK edition sells out Royal Albert Hall
3 hours -
Academic exodus: Ghanaian PhD students in UK forced to withdraw as Scholarship Secretariat fails to pay fees
3 hours -
Antoine Semenyo’s £65m Manchester City switch sparks discussions in UK Parliament
4 hours -
Transport crises, Prof. Frimpong-Boateng v NPP and LGBTQI issues take centre stage on Joy Prime’s ‘Prime Insight’
4 hours -
Ghana Navy busts major fuel smuggling syndicate along Volta coast
5 hours -
Karaga MP donates 4,000 gallons of fuel to boost livelihoods in New Year outreach
6 hours -
GIPC CEO engages European Parliament delegation on Ghana’s investment reforms
6 hours -
Oppong Nkrumah, 5 others didn’t accept campaign support from Bryan Acheampong – Pius Hadzide backtracks
6 hours -
BoG rejects market speculation, emphasises data-driven policies
7 hours -
BoG targets consolidation, discipline in 2026 policy direction
7 hours
