Analysis

China Confirms Talks on Trump Visit as US-China Trade Truce Extension Looms in 2026

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As Xi Jinping and Donald Trump reaffirm personal diplomacy, a one-year extension of the US-China trade truce sets the stage for a high-stakes Beijing summit in April — and reshapes the global economic order.

KEY FACTS AT A GLANCE
Phone Call DateFebruary 4, 2026 — Xi Jinping & Donald Trump
April SummitFirst week of April, Beijing (Trump China visit 2026)
Truce DurationUp to 1-year extension expected at April summit
US Tariff StatusHeightened reciprocal tariffs suspended until Nov. 10, 2026
China Tariff Status24% retaliatory tariff suspended; 10% base rate retained
Peak EscalationUS peak at ~145%; China peak at ~125% (pre-truce)
Critical MineralsChina suspends rare earth export controls for 1 year
Soybean Pledge25 MMT/year committed by China for 2026–2028
Project Vault$12 billion US critical minerals reserve announced

A Diplomatic Thaw at 9 a.m. Washington Time

The phone rang in Washington at 9 a.m. on February 4, 2026. On the other end was Xi Jinping, the most powerful Chinese leader in a generation, and waiting to answer was Donald Trump, the most transactional American president in modern history. What followed, according to Trump’s own account, was a conversation that was “long and thorough” — and excellent.” The understatement of the year in geopolitics was already under way.

Within hours, the architecture of global commerce in 2026 began to clarify. Sources close to both governments confirmed what markets had been pricing in for weeks: when Trump arrives in Beijing in early April — reaffirming an invitation Xi personally extended on the call — the two leaders are expected to formally extend the US-China trade truce by up to a full year, according to exclusive reporting from the South China Morning Post. For a bilateral relationship that spent much of 2025 in a white-hot tariff inferno — with US duties on Chinese goods touching a peak of 145% and Beijing’s retaliatory levies approaching 125% — the pendulum has swung with remarkable speed.

What the Trade Truce Extension Means for Global Markets

To understand why financial markets from Shanghai to Wall Street are watching the April summit with near-feverish attention, it helps to rewind to October 30, 2025, when Trump and Xi shook hands in Busan, South Korea, and set in motion the most consequential bilateral trade reset since the original Phase One deal of 2020.

The White House Fact Sheet that followed was sweeping: the US pledged to suspend its heightened reciprocal tariffs until November 10, 2026, while China reversed the 24% retaliatory levy it had imposed earlier in the year, retaining only a 10% base tariff on American imports. Beijing also agreed to purchase at least 25 million metric tons of US soybeans annually through 2028, resume purchases of sorghum and logs, and critically — suspend a sweeping set of export controls on rare earth materials and other strategic minerals. The CNBC deep-dive on the rare earths suspension described it as a significant, albeit temporary, easing of restrictions that had shaken global supply chains.

What the April extension would lock in — if sources are accurate — is not merely a continuation of those terms. It signals a shift in diplomatic logic: from crisis management to structured co-existence.

“The positive tone in both readouts is consistent, boding well for the relationship beyond 2026. — Neo Wang, Lead China Macro Analyst, Evercore ISI”

Trump China Visit 2026: What’s at Stake in Beijing

When Donald Trump touches down in Beijing — the first visit by a sitting US president to the Chinese capital in years — the optics will be as important as the substance. For Xi Jinping, hosting Trump in Zhongnanhai is a carefully choreographed signal to the world: China can shape the terms of the relationship, not merely react to them.

According to Politico Pro reporting, the summit is tentatively set for the first week of April, and could be the first of as many as four leader-level meetings in 2026 — a cadence of high-level diplomacy not seen between the two powers since the pre-pandemic era. Senior officials are working to anchor the summit around “short-term economic wins”: fresh Chinese purchase commitments, further tariff rollback discussions, and potentially new frameworks for technology governance.

The agenda, as currently understood, spans a daunting breadth:

  • Tariff rollback progression: Whether the US reciprocal tariff rate, currently at 10%, will be further adjusted — and whether China’s residual 10% levy on US goods will follow.
  • Critical minerals alliance architecture: With 50 nations represented at the February 4 Critical Minerals Ministerial in Washington — co-hosted by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and VP JD Vance — Washington is building a “buyers club” designed to reduce reliance on Beijing’s rare earth dominance. How China responds will shape the summit’s tone.
  • Electric vehicle and industrial policy: European concerns about Chinese EV overcapacity have found an echo in Washington. Any framework for US-China manufacturing trade will need to address these frictions directly.
  • Taiwan: Xi used the February 4 call to once again frame Taiwan as, in the words of Chinese state media, “the most important issue” in bilateral relations, warning the US to handle arms sales to Taipei — a $11.15 billion package approved in December — “with prudence.” The Taiwan question will hover over every handshake in Beijing.
  • Venezuela and Iran: With Venezuelan oil shipments to China dropping to zero in January under a US naval crackdown, and Trump pressing Beijing to isolate Tehran, geopolitical flashpoints threaten to complicate an otherwise commerce-driven agenda.

The Critical Minerals Chessboard: Washington’s “Project Vault”

Perhaps no single issue better illustrates the structural fault lines beneath the diplomatic détente than critical minerals. When China weaponized its near-monopoly on rare earths, gallium, germanium, and antimony during the 2025 tariff war, the effect was immediate and visceral: Ford shuttered its Chicago Explorer plant for a week; Nissan and Suzuki reported production disruptions; European auto suppliers warned of shutdowns. The message was unmistakable — and Washington heard it.

Trump’s response on February 9 was to announce “Project Vault”: a $12 billion emergency stockpiling program designed to pre-purchase and warehouse critical minerals. Simultaneously, the January 15 executive order on critical minerals — analyzed in depth by CSIS — directed the Commerce Department to negotiate supply agreements with allied nations, with the implicit threat of tariffs on countries that fail to cooperate. The US is fully import-dependent on 12 critical minerals and partially dependent on 29 others.

This is the critical paradox of the tariff rollback: even as Washington and Beijing perform the choreography of a trade truce, the structural competition for mineral supply chains, semiconductor ecosystems, and EV manufacturing supremacy is accelerating — not pausing. The truce buys time; it does not buy trust.

Xi Jinping’s Calculated Warmth — and Its Limits

There is something revealing in the contrast between the two leaders’ post-call statements. Trump was effusive: “The relationship with China, and my personal relationship with President Xi, is an extremely good one.” Xi, per Xinhua, was measured and strategic — he “greatly values US-China relations” and is willing to “accomplish more great and significant things” together this year. Experts reading the tea leaves noted the asymmetry immediately.

As Al Jazeera reported, Beijing has paused some critical mineral restrictions since the October truce, but experts caution that China’s dominance over processing capacity — controlling an estimated 40–90% of global processing for lithium, cobalt, and copper, despite producing only about 10% of their raw supply — remains a strategic card held close.

The phrase “win-win” has been a fixture of Chinese diplomatic language since the Deng Xiaoping era. But in 2026, the definition of mutual benefit is being renegotiated in real time — on trade tables, in semiconductor boardrooms, and, soon, in the gilded halls of Zhongnanhai.

“Xi’s emphasis on Taiwan may reflect displeasure with recent US arms sales, but it doesn’t appear this issue will derail the ongoing bilateral truce. — Geopolitical Intelligence Source, cited in Bloomberg”

What US-China Relations 2026 Mean for Businesses and Investors

For the C-suite executives, supply chain strategists, and portfolio managers who spent much of 2025 managing the whiplash of triple-digit tariffs, the emerging landscape offers guarded optimism — with non-trivial tail risks.

The practical implications of a confirmed truce extension fall broadly into four categories:

  • Agricultural and commodity markets: China’s commitment to 25 MMT of US soybeans annually through 2028 provides a structural floor for American agricultural exporters. The soy futures market has already priced in initial optimism, though fulfillment remains a monitoring risk.
  • Technology and semiconductor supply chains: The suspension of China’s rare earth export controls through late 2026 offers breathing room — but not permanence — for US chipmakers, automakers, and defense suppliers who came perilously close to operational shutdowns in mid-2025.
  • Logistics and shipping: The mutual suspension of port fees on vessels and the removal of US companies from China’s “unreliable entities list” have reduced friction for trans-Pacific shipping corridors. The Morrison Foerster legal analysis provides detailed guidance on the compliance implications.
  • EV and clean energy sectors: US concerns about Chinese electric vehicle overcapacity — and Beijing’s dominance in battery manufacturing — remain unresolved. The April summit may yield preliminary frameworks, but a comprehensive EV trade architecture is likely a 2027 project at earliest.

The Fracture Risks That Could Derail the April Summit

Optimism, in US-China diplomacy, has a habit of arriving on borrowed time. Three specific fault lines bear watching before Air Force One lands in Beijing.

Taiwan Arms Sales. Washington’s $11.15 billion arms package to Taiwan — medium-range missiles, howitzers, and drones — drew sharp Chinese condemnation. Xi’s decision to raise Taiwan explicitly on a business-oriented phone call was not accidental. Any new military announcement, congressional action, or high-level US official visit to Taipei before April could inject significant instability.

The Critical Minerals Ally Coalition. Trump’s Critical Minerals Ministerial was attended by 50 nations — but as Politico has reported, fracture risks are already evident, with Germany and Finland hesitating over potential Chinese retaliation, and some partners quietly asking whether siding with Washington against Beijing is worth the economic risk.

Venezuela and Iran. The US naval crackdown on Venezuelan oil bound for China, and Trump’s push for Beijing to pressure Tehran, represent two pressure points where geopolitical interests diverge sharply. An escalation in either theater before April could complicate the summit’s economic narrative.

Forward Look: The “Subscription Diplomacy” Model for US-China Relations

What may be most structurally significant about the 2025–2026 US-China arrangement is not any single tariff number, but its architecture: an annual review mechanism that trade experts at China Briefing have called a “subscription diplomacy” model. Rather than a comprehensive trade deal — which would require congressional approval and years of negotiation — both sides are agreeing, year by year, to keep the relationship within manageable bounds.

This is, arguably, the most realistic operating model for the world’s most consequential bilateral relationship in a fragmented global order. It does not resolve the deep structural competition over technology, critical minerals, and regional security. It does not address the long-term question of whether China’s economic model and America’s can sustainably coexist. But it creates the space — the diplomatic oxygen — for businesses, markets, and governments to plan, invest, and adapt.

The April summit in Beijing will be watched not merely as a diplomatic photo opportunity, but as a test of whether two rival superpowers, both convinced of their own rightness and strategic superiority, can construct a working architecture for cohabitation in a multipolar world. The phone call of February 4 suggests, at minimum, that both men believe it is worth trying.

Works Cited

“China Suspends Some Critical Mineral Export Curbs to the US as Trade Truce Takes Hold.” CNBC, 10 Nov. 2025, www.cnbc.com/2025/11/10/china-suspends-some-critical-mineral-export-curbs-to-the-us-as-trade-truce-takes-hold.html.

“China’s Xi Reasserts Taiwan Stance in Call with Trump.” CNBC, 5 Feb. 2026, www.cnbc.com/2026/02/05/chinas-xi-taiwan-trump-trade-talks-iran-russia.html.

“Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Strikes Deal on Economic and Trade Relations with China.” The White House, 13 Nov. 2025, www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2025/11/fact-sheet-president-donald-j-trump-strikes-deal-on-economic-and-trade-relations-with-china/.

“Just How ‘Excellent’ Was Trump and Xi Jinping’s Phone Call, Really?” Al Jazeera, 6 Feb. 2026, www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/2/6/just-how-excellent-was-trump-and-xi-jinpings-phone-call-really.

“New Executive Order Ties US Critical Minerals Security to Global Partnerships.” Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2026, www.csis.org/analysis/new-executive-order-ties-us-critical-minerals-security-global-partnerships.

“Trump Strikes Deal to Restore Rare Earths Access.” Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2025, www.csis.org/analysis/trump-strikes-deal-restore-rare-earths-access.

“Trump, Xi Discuss Taiwan and Trade Ahead of Planned Summit.” Bloomberg, 4 Feb. 2026, www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-02-04/xi-holds-phone-call-with-trump-xinhua-reports.

“Trump-Xi Summit Set for First Week of April.” Politico Pro, 2026, subscriber.politicopro.com/article/2026/02/trump-xi-summit-set-for-first-week-of-april-00771590.

“Trump and Xi Expected to Extend Trade Truce at Beijing Summit.” South China Morning Post, 2026, www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3343240/trump-and-xi-expected-extend-trade-truce-beijing-summit.

“US-China Relations in the Trump 2.0 Era: Implications.” China Briefing, 2026, www.china-briefing.com/news/us-china-relations-in-the-trump-2-0-implications/.

“United States and China Reach Trade Agreement: Export Controls Analysis.” Morrison Foerster, 13 Nov. 2025, www.mofo.com/resources/insights/251113-united-states-and-china-reach-trade-agreement.

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