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Xi Is Visiting North Korea For The First Time In Nearly Seven Years

Published Jun 8, 2026
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Summary:
  • Chinese President Xi Jinping began a two-day trip to North Korea on Monday, his first visit there since 2019.
  • Analysts say North Korea has more leverage now, thanks to deeper military ties with Russia and gains in its nuclear program.
  • It is Xi's first overseas trip of 2026, a sign of how much weight Beijing puts on the relationship.

Xi Jinping just made his first trip outside China this year. The spot he picked says a lot about his plans.

He went to North Korea.

For investors who track Asia, the visit is about one thing. China is fighting to keep its grip on a neighbor.

That neighbor has been drifting toward Russia.

Asia is a huge piece of the world economy. Any shift in power there can move markets.

Why The Timing Matters

This is Xi's first visit to North Korea in nearly seven years. It is also his first overseas trip of all of 2026.

Leaders do not save the first trip of the year for a place that does not matter.

The two last met in Beijing in September. Kim joined a Chinese military parade there, next to Vladimir Putin.

North Korea walks in with more leverage than it had in 2019. Back then, Xi held most of the cards.

That has changed. It now has deeper military ties with Russia, real gains in its nuclear program, and a stronger economy.

Leader Kim Jong Un has sent troops to fight in Russia's war in Ukraine, while building up his nuclear arsenal. That bond with Moscow is exactly what Beijing wants to counter.

Kim has grown his nuclear arms in defiance of UN sanctions. That gives him fresh leverage at the table.

For a daily read on how shifts like this ripple through markets, Market Briefs lands in your inbox every morning, and a free investing masterclass comes with it.

The Bigger Chessboard

China does not like anyone holding more sway over Pyongyang than it does. One analyst said the worry in Beijing is simple.

Russia's pull is rising. China's is slipping.

North Korea wants plenty in return. Analysts say it may push for economic help.

It may even want quiet backing for its nuclear status. Russia is believed to have already offered that in private.

China has long opposed the North's nuclear tests. But its stance now looks less clear.

North Korea seems set on getting an answer during the trip. That alone makes this visit worth watching.

For Beijing, the goals are bigger. It wants North Korea lined up on Taiwan.

It also wants to push back on Japan's more assertive defense stance.

Worth Noting

Some analysts think Xi may be carrying a message from Trump. He has signaled he is open to talking with Kim again.

But North Korea still wants the U.S. to drop one demand first. It will not give up its nuclear weapons before talks.

South Korea says it hopes the visit helps calm the region. A Pyongyang-Washington summit may even be on the table.

The trip is packed with summit talks and ceremony. The two days in Pyongyang will show whose pull is stronger right now, Beijing's or Moscow's.

If you want geopolitics like this tied back to your portfolio each morning, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs, and you also get a 45-minute investing course as a bonus.

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