
Markets Brace for Trump-Xi Summit as Yuan Hits 3-Year High Ahead of Beijing Talks
USD/CNY trades at 6.79 as geopolitical tensions and Iran crisis dominate agenda for May 13-15 presidential meeting

The Chinese yuan strengthened to its highest level since February 2023 as President Trump prepares to meet Xi Jinping in Beijing tomorrow. With the Iran ceasefire on 'massive life support' and trade tensions simmering, currency markets are positioning for volatility ahead of the high-stakes summit.
The offshore Chinese yuan steadied around 6.79 per dollar on Tuesday, holding at its strongest level since February 2023, as global markets brace for a high-stakes summit between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping beginning tomorrow in Beijing.
The May 13-15 meeting, postponed from March following the outbreak of the Iran conflict, has shifted from a purely trade-focused agenda to a broader geopolitical negotiation that could reshape currency markets and global risk sentiment in the coming weeks.
Yuan Strength Reflects Strategic Positioning
The USD/CNY pair has shown remarkable resilience ahead of the summit, with the People's Bank of China setting the reference rate at 6.8467 on Monday, signaling controlled appreciation. Goldman Sachs forecasts the yuan could gain as much as 4.5% in the near term, potentially reaching 6.5 per dollar within 12 months, driven by China's record $1.2 trillion trade surplus and robust export data that surged 14.1% year-over-year to a record $359.44 billion.
"The case for a stronger CNY is more fundamental and longer-lasting beyond this week's events," analysts noted in recent research. "China's external surplus is the primary driver, but the summit outcome could accelerate or reverse this trend depending on trade deal progress."
The dollar index ($DXY) rose 0.33% to 98.2764 on Tuesday, gaining modest ground as traders hedged against potential volatility. However, the greenback remains down 2.70% over the past 12 months, reflecting broader concerns about US fiscal policy and geopolitical risk.
Iran Crisis Dominates Summit Agenda
What began as a trade-focused meeting has evolved into a critical geopolitical negotiation after President Trump approved joint strikes with Israel against Iran in February, triggering a conflict that has paralyzed the Strait of Hormuz—a waterway through which half of China's crude oil imports pass.
On Monday, Trump declared the US-Iran ceasefire was "on massive life support" after rejecting Tehran's latest peace proposal as "garbage." The comment sent shockwaves through energy markets, with gold (XAU/USD) falling to $4,713.69 per ounce amid dollar strength and heightened geopolitical uncertainty, while oil prices surged on renewed supply fears.
"There is no country whose national interests are advanced by the perpetuation of this conflict," said Ali Wyne, senior adviser at the International Crisis Group. "China is much better prepared than many US allies in Asia to weather short-term disruptions, but a longer-term closure of Hormuz becomes increasingly problematic."
Beijing has reportedly pressured Iran to return to the negotiating table, with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi meeting Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in Beijing last week. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has publicly stated the administration wants China to "step up" pressure on Tehran to reopen the waterway.
Trade Truce Extension Likely, Major Deal Unlikely
Despite the geopolitical urgency, trade remains a central focus. Last year's trade war saw tariffs soar as high as 145% before the two sides agreed to a truce in October. Analysts widely expect an extension of that truce rather than a breakthrough deal.
"The two sides have wrestled to a draw," said Dali Yang, professor of political science at the University of Chicago. "We'll likely see a broadly worded statement that allows each side to claim it's productive. The likeliest outcome is extending the October truce."
Da Wei, a professor of international relations at Tsinghua University, emphasized that predictability matters more than tariff levels for China. "We want stability and predictability. We don't want to just review it or postpone it for another year or several months—that creates uncertainty for the business environment."
Taiwan Arms Sales Remain Flash Point
Beijing is also pressing for concessions on arms sales to Taiwan. Last year's $11 billion arms package has reportedly been stalled by the State Department ahead of the summit, but China wants it scrapped entirely. Taiwan's legislature approved a $25 billion special defense budget on Friday, covering US weapons purchases but falling short on domestic production—a development Washington views as a "concession to the Chinese Communist Party."
China's foreign minister called Taiwan "the biggest risk in China-US relations" in a recent call with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, urging the US to "open up new space for China-US cooperation" over the island.
Market Implications and Key Levels to Watch
Currency traders are positioning for volatility across multiple pairs:
- USD/CNY: Critical support at 6.79, with Goldman Sachs targeting 6.50 on a positive summit outcome. A breakdown below 6.75 could accelerate yuan appreciation. Resistance at 6.90.
- USD/JPY: Safe-haven flows could push the yen stronger if summit tensions escalate. Watch 140.00 support.
- AUD/USD and NZD/USD: China-sensitive commodity currencies vulnerable to risk-off moves. AUD/USD support at 0.6500.
- EUR/USD: Trading sideways near 1.0900 as European markets await clarity on US-China relations and potential IMF global recession warnings.
- Gold (XAU/USD): Pullback to $4,713 presents potential re-entry for bulls if Iran tensions escalate further. Key support at $4,650, resistance at $4,800.
Traders should monitor headlines closely throughout the summit. Any progress on Iran could trigger a risk-on rally in emerging market currencies and commodity-linked FX, while a breakdown in talks could send the dollar and yen surging as safe havens.
What Traders Should Watch
The summit runs from May 13-15, with the following catalysts likely to drive FX volatility:
- Joint statements or press conferences: Any mention of Iran cooperation, trade deal progress, or Taiwan concessions.
- Yuan fixing: Daily PBOC reference rates will signal Beijing's policy stance.
- Oil prices: Further Strait of Hormuz developments could spike crude, impacting cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation expectations and Fed policy bets.
- Trump-Xi body language: Markets will parse every signal for clues on relationship thawing or further deterioration.
With the ceasefire on life support and the world's two largest economies at a critical juncture, currency markets are unlikely to stay quiet this week. Volatility is almost guaranteed—traders should size positions accordingly and use tight stop losses.

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.