Top Takeaways from Trump–Xi Meeting
Top Takeaways from Trump–Xi Meeting
U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met for roughly 100 minutes on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit on Oct. 30 in Busan, South Korea.
“We agreed on many things, with others, even of high importance, being very close to resolved,” Trump said in a social media post after the talks with Xi.
“I had a truly great meeting with President Xi of China.”
Trump has returned to Washington after a week-long trip to Asia, which also included stops in Malaysia and Japan.
Xi will continue his state visit to South Korea—the first in 11 years—and attend the APEC summit in Gyeongju.
Here are the top takeaways:
China to Buy US Soybeans
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Washington and Beijing had finalized a trade framework reached last week following two days of negotiations in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
“The Kuala Lumpur agreement was finished in the middle of the night last night, so I expect we will exchange signatures possibly as soon as next week,” Bessent told Fox News after Trump’s meeting with Xi.
As part of the agreement, he said, China has committed to buying “a minimum of 25 million metric tons” of American soybeans each year for the next three years.
For the current season through January, Beijing agreed to buy 12 million metric tons of soybeans from the United States, according to Bessent.
Trump earlier said that China could begin purchasing “tremendous amounts of the soybeans” and other farm products “immediately.”
Traditionally a top importer of American soybeans, China had not made any purchases from the United States this harvest season, instead turning to Brazil and Argentina to fulfill its quota. Trump has accused the communist regime of seeking to use U.S. farmers as leverage, saying he would use the money the federal government brought in from tariffs to cushion farmers’ losses.
U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced in a social media post on Oct. 29 that China had booked multiple shipments of U.S. soybeans.
“This purchase, coming directly ahead of the Trump–Xi talks, shows that America means business and that we will restore balance, give U.S. producers the opportunities they’ve earned, and send a message that when America leads in agriculture, the world listens,” Rollins said on X.
Rare Earth to Flow
Issues surrounding China’s supply of rare earth minerals—essential for manufacturing a wide range of products from electric vehicles to military jets and submarines—were addressed during the meeting, according to Trump.
“All of the rare earth has been settled, and that’s for the world,” he told reporters aboard Air Force One shortly after the talks with Xi.
Trump said Beijing had agreed to a one-year pause on its plan to impose stringent export controls on rare earths. He mentioned that the agreement could be extended after a year.
“There’s no roadblock at all on rare earth. That will hopefully disappear from our vocabulary for a little while,” he said.
In a later statement, the Chinese Commerce Ministry confirmed the decision to postpone, for one year, the implementation of rare earth export curbs and other related measures announced on Oct. 9. A ministry spokesperson said that Beijing will study and refine specific implementation plans.
In exchange, the United States will delay for one year the enforcement of a new export control regulation unveiled on Sept. 29 that would automatically blacklist subsidiaries of companies that are at least 50 percent owned by a company on the Entity List.
Port Fees Pause
Aside from export control measures, Beijing and Washington will suspend port fees for one year, according to the statement from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce.
The United States began charging port fees on China-built vessels starting from Oct. 14, based on a Section 301 investigation by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, which found that the regime’s trade polices and practices were “unreasonable” and severely damaging to U.S. companies, workers, and the economy.
In a same-day retaliation, the communist regime began charging U.S. ships docking at Chinese ports.
According to the Chinese Commerce Ministry, Beijing will now suspend its countermeasures for a year, while the United States pauses related actions stemming from the Section 301 probes into China’s maritime, logistics, and shipbuilding sectors.
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, speaking to reporters on Air Force One, also mentioned this decision.
“We’re going to postpone that while we negotiate with them about that issue,” Greer said.
He also noted that South Korea, the world’s leading shipbuilder, has committed to investing $150 billion in the U.S. shipbuilding industry.
“We think we have a good path forward,” Greer said.
US to Halve Fentanyl Tariffs
The Trump administration will cut the 20 percent fentanyl-related tariffs to 10 percent, effective immediately. The adjustment brings the total levies on Chinese goods to 47 percent.
The president expressed confidence that Beijing would take “strong action” to stop the flow of precursor chemicals used in fentanyl production.
“I believe [Xi is] gonna work very hard to stop the death that’s coming in,” Trump told reporters while departing from South Korea.
In return, China will “correspondingly adjust its countermeasures” against the United States, the regime’s commerce ministry said in a statement.
Rollins later said on X that Beijing will remove “unwarranted” tariffs on U.S. agricultural products, including soybeans, cotton, sorghum, corn, wheat, chicken, dairy, pork, beef, and fruits and vegetables.
The Chinese regime, on March 4, had announced additional levies on these American agricultural imports in response to Washington’s implementation of a 10 percent tariff linked to the regime’s role in fentanyl.
The United States has determined that China is the main supplier of the deadly illicit drug in the United States, and Trump, in an executive order on Feb. 1, imposed initial tariffs on China for its “central role” in the fentanyl crisis.
In the order, Trump said Beijing subsidizes chemical companies that produce fentanyl precursors, supports the drug trafficking network through money laundering schemes and other means, and could have shut down these operations if it wished.
Trump to Visit China Next April
Trump confirmed a visit to China in April 2026.
Xi will visit the United States “sometime after that,” Trump said, saying the Chinese leader could be visiting either Palm Beach, Florida, or Washington.
Trump visited China during his first term in office in November 2017. Following the trip, companies from the two countries signed trade and investment deals worth more than $250 billion, although some had been in the works prior to the visit and many were nonbinding.
The scheduled trip will raise a key question: whether U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was twice sanctioned by Beijing in 2020 for his vocal criticism of China’s human rights record, will be able to accompany Trump, given that the sanctions bar him from traveling to China.
Before Trump’s scheduled trip to China, the Chinese regime’s rubber-stamp legislature, the National People’s Congress, is slated to hold a meeting in March 2026 to review and finalize its 15th Five-Year Plan for economic and social development.
Taiwan
The issue of Taiwan, which Trump had said he would raise, did not come up during his meeting with Xi.
“It never came up. Taiwan never came up. It was not discussed, actually,” he said.
Xi has instructed his military to prepare for a 2027 attack on Taiwan. In August, Trump said Xi had assured him that China would refrain from invading Taiwan during Trump’s presidency.
Before the Trump–Xi meeting, Taiwanese Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung said on Oct. 30 that Taiwan is “confident” in its relations with the United States and that the two sides have “close communication channels,” dismissing speculation that Taiwan’s interests might be compromised by discussions between the two world leaders.
Taipei and Washington are not formal diplomatic allies, but the United States has been the island’s largest arms supplier for its self-defense.
TikTok Deal
Trump did not mention TikTok after he met with Xi. However, after the meeting, the Chinese Commerce Ministry announced that it will “properly resolve issues” related to TikTok, without providing details.
Bessent, speaking in a later interview with Fox News, said the TikTok ownership transfer deal has received Beijing’s approval and that he anticipated that the process could advance in the near future.
“In Kuala Lumpur, we finalized the TikTok agreement in terms of getting Chinese approval,” he told Fox News.
“And I would expect that would go forward in the coming weeks and months, and we'll finally see a resolution to that.”
On Sept. 25, Trump signed an executive order setting the path for a TikTok deal that could shift majority ownership of the app to U.S. investors. Under the order, ByteDance has 120 days to finalize the transaction terms.
Under the deal, ByteDance would hold one of seven board seats and less than 20 percent of stock in TikTok’s U.S. business.
Oracle, which will host TikTok’s U.S. user data on its servers, has been named TikTok U.S.’s security provider. The company will oversee the platform’s code and updates, monitor the content recommendation algorithm, and watch for any signs of malicious influence.
‘American Energy’
In a post on Truth Social after meeting Xi, Trump announced a potential “American energy” deal with China, saying that Secretary of Energy Chris Wright and Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum are working to complete an agreement that would see China make a “very large-scale transaction” of oil and gas from Alaska.
China has largely shunned U.S. crude oil imports and has instead been reselling American liquefied natural gas (LNG) since early this year, as Beijing’s high tariffs have made purchases unviable.
China, the world’s largest importer of LNG, purchased about 5 percent of LNG and 2 percent of crude oil from the United States in 2024, according to Chinese customs data.
The Semiconductor Question
Trump and Xi discussed semiconductors and chips during their meeting, but they didn’t discuss approving the sale of Nvidia’s advanced Blackwell artificial intelligence chips.
“[China is] going to be talking to Nvidia and others about taking chips,” Trump said, but the United States will be acting as a “sort of arbitrator or the referee.”
Asked by a reporter whether his administration would authorize exports of Blackwell chips, Trump replied, “We’re not talking about the Blackwell.”
Trump said he would be speaking with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who has been in South Korea participating in the APEC summit and meeting with global leaders and top Korean executives.
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