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Trump Weighs Massive China Export Ban on Anything Made With U.S. Software

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Briefs Finance
Published Oct 22, 2025
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Summary:
  • Trump administration is considering blocking exports to China of products made with or using U.S. software - from laptops to jet engines
  • The sweeping measure would retaliate against China's rare earth export restrictions and could disrupt global trade
  • Markets dropped on the news with the S&P 500 down 0.8% and Nasdaq falling 1.3% before recovering slightly

The Plan

The Trump administration is weighing a dramatic escalation in the trade war with China.

Sources say officials are considering export restrictions on products made with U.S. software. That's an incredibly broad category.

"Everything imaginable is made with U.S. software," one source told reporters.

The potential targets include: • Laptops • Jet engines • Technology products • Pretty much anything manufactured using American software

This would be retaliation for China's latest round of rare earth export restrictions.

What Trump Said

Trump threatened this on October 10 in a Truth Social post.

He said he would impose: • Additional 100% tariffs on China's U.S.-bound shipments • New export controls on "any and all critical software" • Both measures by November 1

But he didn't provide details on what "critical software" meant. Until now, nobody knew how far this could reach.

The answer appears to be: very far.

How It Would Work

The proposed restrictions would block global shipments to China of items that: • Contain U.S. software • Were produced using U.S. software

This mirrors what the Biden administration did to Russia after its 2022 Ukraine invasion. Those rules restricted exports to Russia of items made globally using U.S. technology or software.

Applying the same framework to China would be massively more disruptive given: • China's size in the global economy • The volume of products flowing to China • American software's role in global manufacturing

The Uncertainty

Important caveat: This may not happen.

Sources said the measure "may not move forward." It's one option on the table, not a final decision.

Some within the U.S. government favor "a gentler approach," according to two sources.

Administration officials might announce the measure to pressure China but stop short of actually implementing it.

Narrower policy proposals are also being discussed.

Market Reaction

Markets didn't like the news.

The S&P 500 briefly dropped 0.8%. The Nasdaq fell 1.3%. Both indices later pared losses.

Investors understand the implications. Blocking software-powered exports to China would: • Disrupt global supply chains • Hurt American tech companies • Risk Chinese retaliation • Potentially cost the U.S. economy

Trump's Track Record

Trump has wavered on China export controls before.

Earlier this year: • He imposed strict curbs on Nvidia and AMD AI chip shipments to China • Then later removed them

In late May: • The U.S. imposed restrictions on chip design software after China held up rare earth shipments • Those restrictions were lifted in early July

This pattern makes it hard to predict what actually happens versus what gets threatened for negotiating leverage.

The China Context

This comes three weeks before Trump's scheduled meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in South Korea.

The timing suggests this could be a negotiating tactic. Threaten dramatic action, then use it as leverage in face-to-face talks.

China recently expanded export controls on rare earth elements. These materials are essential for: • Tech manufacturing • Defense equipment • Electric vehicles • Renewable energy systems

China dominates the rare earth market. That gives them significant leverage.

Trump's Accusations

In his Truth Social post, Trump also accused China of considering "large scale Export Controls on virtually every product" it makes.

He said this would affect all countries starting November 1 and called it "a moral disgrace."

Whether China is actually planning such sweeping controls remains unclear.

The Bottom Line

If implemented, this would be one of the most aggressive trade actions in modern history.

Restricting exports of anything made with U.S. software to China would touch almost every industry: • Consumer electronics • Aerospace • Automotive • Industrial equipment • Medical devices

American software is embedded throughout global manufacturing. From design tools to production systems to quality control - U.S. software is everywhere.

Cutting China off from that would: • Severely disrupt their manufacturing • Force rapid development of Chinese software alternatives • Hurt U.S. software companies losing a massive market • Create global supply chain chaos

For investors, the key questions are:

Will this actually happen? Trump has threatened and then backed off before.

How would China respond? Expect major retaliation if this moves forward.

What's the economic cost? U.S. companies selling software and software-powered products to China would take massive hits.

The fact this is even being considered shows how far the U.S.-China relationship has deteriorated. Using software restrictions this broadly would essentially try to wall off China from a huge chunk of modern technology.

Whether it's serious policy or negotiating theater remains to be seen. Trump's meeting with Xi in three weeks might provide the answer.

For now, markets are nervous. And they should be. This kind of escalation could reshape global trade in ways nobody fully predicts.

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