5 flashpoints that could make or break the Trump-Xi summit

5 flashpoints that could make or break the Trump-Xi summit
Devesh Kumar
14 May 2026, 13:11 PM

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Invezz
U.S. soybeans & Boeing-linked industrials

Buy: Invesco DB Agriculture Fund (DBA) and Boeing (BA). Rationale: the article flags agriculture and aviation as the easiest, most likely headline wins—China is expected to announce purchases tied to Boeing aircraft and energy, and to clarify/restore soybean commitments. These deals tend to show up quickly in guidance, orders, and near-term sentiment.

Key Risk: China fails to announce credible, enforceable purchase volumes (soybeans/aircraft), turning the summit into “delay not resolve.”

Rare-earths & critical minerals leverage

Buy: MP Materials (MP) and Lynas Rare Earths (LYSCF). Rationale: the technology-vs-rare-earths bargaining chip is central, with U.S. pressure on rare earths and China using export controls as leverage. Even modest progress or renewed tension typically boosts demand for non-China supply and raises the value of secured production.

Key Risk: A clear détente on critical minerals leads to reduced urgency for stockpiling and new supply, compressing rare-earth pricing power.

  • Trump has begun his first China visit in nearly nine years with talks in Beijing.
  • Trade, Boeing deals and soybean purchases are among the easiest early wins.
  • Semiconductors, rare earths and Taiwan remain the summit’s toughest issues.

Trump’s two-day summit with Xi Jinping is now underway in Beijing, marking his first visit to China in nearly nine years.

More than a dozen top U.S. executives have joined him, highlighting how closely markets are watching the trip for both business outcomes and diplomatic signals.

Early expectations remain modest as the talks are more likely to deliver limited agreements on trade and investment than a sweeping reset.

The investors are focused on one key question: Does this summit genuinely ease tensions, or simply delay the next round of friction?

Five issues that may define the summit

1. Trade is the easiest win, and the most likely headline.

Agriculture and aviation are back on the table, with the White House pushing for larger Chinese purchases of U.S. soybeans and other farm goods. China is expected to announce purchases tied to Boeing aircraft and energy.

China may need to clarify how it will meet a prior commitment to buy 25 million metric tons of soybeans annually through 2028, even as its reliance on US beans has fallen sharply in recent years.

A Boeing order of up to 500 737 MAX jets, plus about 100 widebody aircraft in separate talks, would be the kind of deal that gives both leaders something to sell at home.

2. The real bargaining chip is technology versus rare earths.

Beijing wants relief from US restrictions on advanced semiconductor exports and has also objected to proposed rules limiting access to critical chipmaking equipment.

Washington is pressing China on rare earths and other critical minerals that have already strained aerospace and semiconductor supply chains.

The shortages of yttrium and scandium have worsened for US aerospace and chip makers, while Beijing has used export controls as leverage before and has expanded its economic pressure toolkit during the truce.

3. The Iran war and the Strait of Hormuz have turned this into a commodity-market summit.

US officials want China to help press Iran over the waterway, and the State Department has said senior US and Chinese officials agree no country should be allowed to exact shipping tolls in the Strait of Hormuz.

Trump and Xi are expected to discuss the conflict in Beijing, with China’s energy security under strain as the war has disrupted crude flows and complicated Beijing’s own diplomatic balancing act.

Any movement here would have immediate implications for oil, inflation expectations and risk assets.

4. Taiwan remains the summit’s biggest landmine.

Trump has said he will discuss arms sales to Taiwan, and he also plans to raise the case of jailed Hong Kong publisher Jimmy Lai.

Beijing has been signaling that Taiwan sits at the center of the talks and is pushing Washington to adjust its wording on Taiwan independence.

5. Jimmy Lai is the human-rights wild card that could trigger the most public friction.

Lai’s case is not likely to produce a deal, but it could produce a clash. Trump’s decision to raise it reflects both domestic politics and a willingness to use human-rights pressure as negotiating leverage.

China sees the issue as interference in internal affairs, which makes it one of the least soluble items on the agenda and one of the easiest to turn into a public spat if the summit sours.