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US, Mexico may reach Nafta deal as soon as Monday

The US and Mexico are close to resolving bilateral differences on Nafta and may wrap up as soon as Monday, said three people familiar with the progress, clearing the way for Canada to possibly return to talks to update the three-nation trade pact.

The nations achieved significant breakthroughs in the past several days on the critical issues of automobiles and energy, according to the people, who asked not to be named discussing private talks.

President Donald Trump said Saturday on Twitter that the US could have a “big Trade Agreement” with its southern neighbor soon. The terms of any deal struck by US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer would need Trump’s final approval.

Talks were continuing Sunday at the USTR’s offices in Washington. Arriving at the meeting, Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo was upbeat.

“The story of these types of things is always defined in the final minute, and I would say that we’re practically into the final hours of this negotiation,” Guajardo told reporters.

“We’ll see clearly how things advance today. It’s going to be a long day. We have twelve hours, and midnight also counts. We’ll do everything possible to try to land a deal,” he said.

Asked about a potential deal on Monday, he said “That’s why we’re here; to make our best effort. We need at minimum a week to work with Canada as well. We’ll try to finish as soon as possible.”

It remains unclear how US and Mexican negotiators would make public the completion of work on their bilateral issues, given that Guajardo has signaled that the nation won’t make an announcement on Nafta until Canada also signs on to a new deal.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Sunday morning that the administration has “no announcements or anything finalised at this time.”

Five weeks

The administrations of Trump and Enrique Pena Nieto have been working for five weeks to resolve their bilateral issues so Canada can rejoin the talks to update the decades-old trade pact. The US and Mexico are pushing for an agreement this month that would give the countries time to sign the pact before Mexico’s President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador takes office in December.

A Canadian official declined to comment and referred back to remarks last week from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who said he was encouraged by optimism coming from the US and Mexico but won’t sign just any deal.

On Saturday, Lopez Obrador’s envoy Jesus Seade told reporters that the nations have resolved concerns that the deal had too many restrictions on how the next government can treat foreign oil companies investing in Mexico.

Guajardo termed Saturday an “important day” for the negotiations heading into the meeting; neither Seade or Guajardo commented when they emerged some hours later.

Factory jobs

The US and Mexico in recent weeks had largely focused on the thorny issue of car manufacturing, as the Trump administration pushes for a deal that would boost factory jobs in America. The US has proposed tightening regional content requirements for car production and having a certain percentage of a car manufactured by higher-paid workers.

While a US proposal to increase tariffs on cars imported from Mexico that don’t meet stricter new content rules was a sticking point as recently as last week, that issue appeared to be resolved by Thursday.

The U.S. agreed to keep the 2.5% tariff currently applied under World Trade Organisation rules if the cars are made at factories that already exist, according to two people familiar with the plans, who asked not to be named discussing private negotiations.

That would leave open the possibility that cars that don’t meet the rules and are built at new plants could face tariffs of 20% to 25%, pending the results of a Section 232 national security investigation that Trump ordered in May, the people said.

While Trump has floated the idea of negotiating bilateral trade accords - finalising one with Mexico before moving on to Canada - both Mexico and Canada have said they want to keep a three-nation deal.

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