Trump concludes summit in China, achieving stability but no progress

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Donald Trump wrapped up a two-day summit with Xi Jinping in Beijing this week, and the best thing both sides could say about it was that nothing got worse. The first face-to-face presidential meeting between the two nations in nearly a decade produced no major new agreements on trade, technology, or security.

What actually happened in Beijing

The summit covered the expected greatest hits of US-China friction: trade, investment, Taiwan, and the ongoing conflict in Iran. China agreed to extend a fragile trade truce originally struck on October 25 of the previous year, which had paused a stringent export-control regime on rare earth elements and related technologies.

On the trade front more broadly, the structural disagreements that have defined the relationship for years remained firmly in place. Industrial policy, market access, technology transfer, and the constellation of tariffs and counter-tariffs that have reshaped global supply chains since Trump’s first term: none of it moved.

Analysts who tracked the proceedings described the summit as symbolic rather than substantive. China’s primary objective, by most accounts, was to achieve stability and consolidate its strategic position. Not to make concessions.

Taiwan: the elephant in every room

Xi Jinping made Taiwan the centerpiece of his private messaging, calling it “the most important issue in China-US relations” and warning that mishandling the situation could jeopardize cooperation on virtually every other front.

US readouts from the summit did not introduce any new language on Taiwan. No formal concessions on Taiwan independence, no shifts in the longstanding “one China” policy framework. The American side essentially held its position, which means Xi’s warning was noted and filed away rather than acted upon.

What this means for markets and investors

The extension of the rare earths trade truce is a temporary patch, not a permanent fix. Export controls on critical technologies remain a live wire. If the truce lapses or either side escalates on the tech containment front, the ripple effects will hit semiconductor supply chains, then equity markets, then risk assets broadly.

Investors should watch for what happens when the trade truce comes up for renewal. That will be the real test of whether Beijing’s stability play was a genuine strategic pivot or just a tactical pause before the next round of escalation.

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