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Xi And Trump's Beijing Summit Ended With A 200-Jet Boeing Order And Little Else

Published May 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Xi agreed to buy 200 Boeing jets, far short of the 500 Trump had floated before the summit.
  • Boeing shares fell about 4% in U.S. trading on the smaller order.
  • The summit produced no major trade breakthrough, mostly preserving the truce both sides struck last October.

Trump went to Beijing pitching a 500-jet order from Boeing, and Xi countered with 200, which sent Boeing shares down about 4%.

That gap is the whole summit in one trade.

Big Headlines, Smaller Numbers

The two-day meeting in Beijing wrapped Friday, with the Boeing order standing as the only major deal announced.

Trump said China would also buy U.S. soybeans, oil, and LNG, building on a 25 million-ton annual soybean commitment from the October summit.

What didn't happen mattered more, since there was no tariff rollback, no chip-export deal, and no breakthrough on Taiwan.

Xi actually used the meeting to warn Trump that disagreement over Taiwan could push the two countries toward conflict.

The overall outcome was a trade truce that holds, not a reset that resets anything.

For our daily take on what summits like this mean for your portfolio, check out Market Briefs - it takes about five minutes a day to read, and you get a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

Markets Voted With Their Feet

Boeing was the most direct loser, falling about 4% as the 200-jet print landed as a downgrade rather than a win, since Trump had been floating the 500 number publicly for weeks.

Chinese tech stocks slipped too as investors digested the lack of a chip-export deal, while the yuan barely moved and U.S. stocks closed broadly mixed.

The read-across is that investors had priced in modest stabilization, and the summit delivered modest stabilization - so anyone hoping for more sold.

Where The Truce Stands

The October truce, struck at the leaders' last meeting, paused new tariffs and chip-export rules and was set to expire later this year.

This week's summit effectively rolled that truce forward without locking in new terms, leaving most of the tension in place but managed.

Multiple outside analysts framed the summit as "tactical stabilization, not a reset," which is roughly where investors ended up too.

What To Watch

The bigger question is whether the truce sticks through the next round of tariff deadlines later this year. The Boeing order is real money, but the structural issues - tech, Taiwan, tariffs - all rolled forward unchanged.

For five-minute morning updates on what's actually moving markets, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - and you also get a 45-minute investing course thrown in.

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