US President Donald Trump says he has struck "fantastic trade deals, great for both countries" as he met his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping for a final round of talks in Beijing.
The US president, who was accompanied to China by a high-profile business delegation spanning agriculture, aviation, electric vehicles and artificial intelligence (AI) chips, described ties between the two countries as "the world's most consequential economic relationship".
The summit has so far been defined more by warm rhetoric and symbolism than concrete economic outcomes, with day one featuring elaborate ceremonies and upbeat language but no sweeping trade breakthrough or significant business agreements.
Trump and Xi held more than two hours of closed-door talks on Thursday, which the White House called "highly productive". Trump, speaking at the Great Hall of the People, called it potentially "the biggest summit ever".
Xi said earlier trade talks in South Korea had delivered "progress", but paired that with a stark warning on Taiwan, saying: "If mishandled, the two nations could collide or even come into conflict."
Despite the choreography, there was no major trade deal or structural agreement.
In an interview with Fox News, Trump said China had agreed to order 200 Boeing jets, its first purchase of US-made commercial jets in nearly a decade.
But that is less than many analysts had expected. Boeing shares fell more than 4% after the comments were aired.
The BBC has contacted Boeing for comment.
There are still questions over the trade truce agreed in October, which saw Washington suspend steep tariff increases on Chinese goods while Beijing eased back from restricting rare earth exports.
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, who is with Trump in China, told Bloomberg TV on Friday that it had not yet been decided whether to extend the truce beyond November.
The White House said both leaders agreed to establish a "Board of Trade" – to manage the relationship without having to reopen tariff negotiations.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who has been leading trade talks for Washington, said in a pre-recorded interview with business news channel CNBC that he expected progress on a mechanism to support future investment too.
US officials have cautioned, however, that there is a lot of work to be done before these can be fully operational.
This was a visit where optics mattered as much as outcomes, and one of the most closely watched moments came as Air Force One touched down in Beijing.
Elon Musk stepped off the plane ahead of senior officials including Pete Hegseth, Marco Rubio and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer – on a trip heavily focused on trade.
Musk and Nvidia chief Jensen Huang also stayed close to Trump during the welcome ceremony, symbolising how central electric vehicles, AI and semiconductors have become to the US-China relationship.
Both companies are deeply exposed to China.
Tesla relies heavily on its Shanghai gigafactory and Chinese consumers, while Nvidia sits at the centre of the AI race and US export controls on advanced chips.
Huang's appearance was particularly notable because he was not on the original delegation list, fuelling speculation that AI and chip access featured more prominently in talks than expected.
Trump later told Fox News that "China is going to invest hundreds of billions of dollars with those people", without elaborating further.
Deals on Chinese purchases of farm goods and beef have been firmed up, according to US trade representative Jamieson Greer.
Farmers in the US have been seeking more Chinese access for soybeans, beef, poultry, but no firm details have been announced.
According to the White House, the talks included discussion of expanding Chinese market access for US companies and increasing Chinese investment into US industries.
Xi told US business leaders that China's "doors will open wider" and that American firms would have "broader prospects" in the Chinese market, according to news site Xinhua.
He also called for expanded cooperation in trade, agriculture, healthcare, tourism and law enforcement, describing bilateral ties as "mutually beneficial" and delivering "win-win results".
For US companies, China remains both a major market and a difficult operating environment due to regulation, red tape and geopolitical uncertainty.
One of the clearest shifts emerging from the summit was how directly Beijing is now linking Taiwan to the broader economic relationship with the United States.
Over the past year of trade talks, Taiwan had largely been treated as one of several friction points between the US and China – particularly US collaboration with semiconductor companies, US-Taiwan trade ties, and arms sales to Taipei.
But Chinese messaging from the meeting suggested Taiwan is increasingly being framed as a condition for the US-China trade relationship.
According to Beijing's readout, Xi said the two sides had agreed to a "new positioning" for relations based on "constructive strategic stability", but warned that Taiwan remained the most sensitive issue.
"The Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations," Xi warned during the talks, according to Chinese state media.
"If mishandled, the two nations could collide or even come into conflict," he said.
Technology remains the biggest divide between the US and China.
US export controls on advanced semiconductors and chipmaking equipment – aimed at limiting China's access to frontier AI capabilities – remain in place, with Greer saying they were not a major discussion at the talks.
Beijing continues to push for greater access to advanced technologies, while criticising what it sees as efforts to constrain its industrial development.
Artificial intelligence (AI) was expected to be a big part of conversations but there was no mention of it in readouts from the first day of the summit.
Bessent said that delegations are discussing AI guardrails at the summit, adding that it was "of utmost importance" that the US maintain its lead over China in AI.
"What we don't want to do is stifle innovation. So our responsibility is to come up with the highest performance calculus where we can get the most innovation and the highest level of safety," Bessent said.
Trump also entered the talks hoping for Chinese cooperation on the Iran conflict and oil market stability.
"[Xi would] like to see the Hormuz Strait open, and said 'if I can be of any help whatsoever, I would like to help,'" Trump told Fox News.
The Chinese foreign ministry on Friday released a statement calling for "a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire".
"Shipping lanes should be reopened as soon as possible in response to the calls of the international community," it added.
Oil price volatility and repeated disruptions to supply routes have increased China's import costs and pushed up prices across the world.
Trump has said that China could use its influence to encourage Iran to stabilise flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a key global energy artery.
Chinese readouts indicated the Middle East was discussed, though again, details were limited.
At the state banquet held for Trump in Beijing on Thursday evening, the US president invited Xi to the White House on 24 September.
Further discussions between the two sides are expected ahead of that summit, with the hope that the world's two biggest economies can deliver a major breakthough on trade that proved elusive this time around.
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