
Trump-Xi Summit Disappoints Markets: Yuan Weakens as Boeing Deal Falls 60% Short of Expectations
Chinese stocks slide and Boeing shares plunge 4% after historic Beijing summit delivers symbolic wins but few concrete breakthroughs on trade, Taiwan, or Iran

The highly anticipated Trump-Xi summit concluded Friday with warm rhetoric but underwhelming results, sending Chinese stocks lower and weakening the yuan. Markets expected 500 Boeing jets; Trump announced only 200, crushing investor hopes for major trade breakthroughs.
The two-day summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping concluded Friday in Beijing with plenty of ceremony but few concrete deliverables, disappointing investors who had anticipated sweeping trade agreements and sending ripples through forex and equity markets.
Market Reaction: Expectations Meet Reality
Chinese financial markets declined sharply as the carefully choreographed meeting failed to produce the anticipated breakthroughs. Boeing (BA) shares tumbled more than 4% during Thursday trading after Trump announced a deal for China to purchase 200 commercial jets — significantly fewer than the 500 aircraft markets had expected and roughly 60% below what sources told Reuters was under discussion.
The Chinese yuan (CNY) retreated against the dollar, with the People's Bank of China setting Friday's midpoint reference rate at 6.8415 per dollar, 439 pips weaker than the Reuters estimate. The subdued market response reflected investor disappointment that the high-stakes summit produced more symbolism than substance.
"Markets hardly reacted to the summit," noted analysts at The Hindu BusinessLine, as traders focused instead on rising U.S. Treasury yields and persistent cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation concerns driving broader dollar strength.
What Was Actually Achieved?
Despite Trump's characterization of "fantastic trade deals, great for both countries," the summit's tangible outcomes remained vague. The Boeing deal, while representing the aerospace giant's first major Chinese order in nearly a decade, fell far short of market expectations. Trump also mentioned "billions of dollars" in soybean purchases, though Beijing provided no confirmation of any agricultural deals.
According to U.S. trade representative Jamieson Greer, discussions touched on expanding Chinese purchases of U.S. agricultural products and increasing market access for American companies operating in China. The White House announced plans to establish a "Board of Trade" to manage the bilateral relationship without reopening tariff negotiations — though officials cautioned significant work remains before these agreements can take effect.
Notably absent from Trump's readout: any mention of "structural reforms," "global economic governance," or the "international trading system" — topics that dominated previous U.S.-China summits. The president also told reporters aboard Air Force One that tariffs were not discussed at all, despite the October trade truce set to expire in November.
Taiwan Emerges as the Red Line
Beijing used the summit to reinforce its position on Taiwan, with Xi warning that mishandling the issue could lead to "clashes and even conflicts" between the world's two largest economies. Chinese state media reported Xi called Taiwan "the most important issue in China-U.S. relations," linking the sensitive territorial dispute directly to the broader economic relationship.
Trump responded cautiously, telling reporters he had not yet decided whether to approve a major U.S. arms sale to Taiwan — a stark contrast to his administration's previous strong support for the self-governed island. The ambiguity left USD/TWD traders on edge and raised questions about the future of U.S. semiconductor collaboration with Taiwan's chipmakers.
Tech Giants in Attendance, AI Guardrails Vague
The summit featured prominent appearances by tech executives including Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Nvidia founder Jensen Huang, fueling speculation that artificial intelligence and semiconductor access played a larger role in discussions than initially thought. However, concrete progress on these fronts remained elusive.
Trump mentioned "possibly working together for guardrails" on AI but offered few details when pressed. U.S. export controls restricting China's access to advanced AI chips — a critical concern for Nvidia's China business — were not a major talking point, according to Greer.
Tesla's heavy reliance on its Shanghai gigafactory and Chinese consumers means Musk's attendance carried strategic weight, though no specific EV deals were announced. Xi told U.S. business leaders that China's "doors will open wider" and American firms would have "broader prospects" in the Chinese market, but provided no timeline or policy specifics.
Iran and Oil: Vague Commitments
Trump entered the summit hoping for Chinese cooperation on the Iran conflict and oil market stabilization. The ongoing blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted global energy supplies, contributing to the inflationary pressures that have strengthened the dollar and forced the Federal Reserve to reconsider rate policy.
Trump told Fox News that Xi expressed willingness to help reopen the Hormuz Strait "if I can be of any help whatsoever." However, China's foreign ministry offered only a generic statement calling for "a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire" and reopening shipping lanes "in response to the calls of the international community."
The lack of concrete commitments on Iran disappointed traders hoping Chinese diplomatic pressure might ease oil volatility and reduce import costs for Asian economies already struggling with depleted forex reserves from defending their currencies.
Forex Market Implications
The summit's underwhelming outcome reinforces several key forex themes currently dominating markets:
- USD/CNY: Yuan weakness likely to persist as trade optimism fades and U.S. rate hike expectations support dollar strength across the board
- EUR/USD: Risk-off sentiment from geopolitical uncertainty continues pressuring the euro, already trading below 1.16 on inflation divergence
- USD/JPY: Approaching the 158 intervention zone as Treasury yields hold above 4.5% and yen weakness intensifies
- Commodity currencies: AUD/USD and NZD/USD facing headwinds from China growth concerns and disappointing summit outcomes
Analysts at The Asia Group consultancy noted the summit "felt like a political reality show at times" but delivered "symbolism, clarity and a roadmap for the months ahead." Both sides have highlighted what they care about most: for Xi, Taiwan; for Trump, deals.
What Comes Next?
Trump invited Xi to the White House in September for a second summit, suggesting both leaders view this meeting as the beginning of a process rather than a definitive resolution. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi confirmed Xi would visit Washington in the autumn.
The fragile trade truce struck in October remains in place — Trump suspended triple-digit tariffs on Chinese goods while Xi backed away from rare earth export restrictions. Whether that truce holds through November, and whether substantive progress materializes before the September summit, will be critical for USD/CNY direction and broader Asian currency stability.
For now, markets are pricing in disappointment. The dollar's strength reflects not Chinese weakness but U.S. exceptionalism driven by persistent inflation and Fed hawkishness. Until concrete trade agreements materialize or geopolitical tensions ease, expect continued dollar dominance and risk-off positioning across emerging market currencies.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.