President Trump said Thursday that he expects major progress on trade and economic issues during his summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, as the two world leaders met face-to-face for the first time in months amid mounting global tensions.
Trump arrived in China this week for a whirlwind diplomatic visit centered heavily on trade negotiations, tariffs, manufacturing and national security concerns between Washington and Beijing. The president said before the talks that he anticipated a productive meeting with Xi and suggested the two sides could reach new agreements aimed at stabilizing economic relations.
“We’re going to have a very good meeting,” Trump told reporters before the summit.
The Beijing trip marks Trump’s first China visit in nearly nine years and comes as both countries attempt to cool tensions after years of tariff disputes and growing geopolitical friction. White House officials said the meetings would focus on trade access, fentanyl trafficking, technology restrictions, and broader economic cooperation.
Xi also struck a notably softer tone during the summit, praising what he described as a “new positioning” in relations between the United States and China while cautioning that disputes involving Taiwan and regional security remain serious flashpoints.
The administration brought several top American business executives to Beijing as part of the delegation, signaling the White House’s push to expand U.S. access to Chinese markets and increase exports of American goods. Agriculture, aerospace and technology issues were expected to dominate private discussions between the two governments.

Trump additionally highlighted his personal relationship with Xi during a state banquet in Beijing, where he invited the Chinese leader to visit the White House later this year.
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Despite the warmer rhetoric, major disagreements remain unresolved.
The Trump administration has continued pressuring Beijing over trade imbalances, intellectual property concerns, and allegations tied to fentanyl exports entering the United States. China, meanwhile, has repeatedly criticized U.S. support for Taiwan and American military activity in the Indo-Pacific region.
The summit also comes as global markets remain rattled by the ongoing Iran conflict and instability surrounding shipping routes in the Middle East, adding further pressure on both countries to avoid a broader economic shock.
While both governments projected optimism ahead of the talks, analysts remain skeptical that Trump’s China visit will produce a sweeping breakthrough. Still, officials on both sides acknowledged the meetings could help ease tensions after months of escalating economic and geopolitical strain.

