@0xVeryBigOrange: Repost: The substantive policies already finalized and soon to be announced from the May 14 US-China talks in Beijing (officially confirmed, not just slogans) fall into two categories: policies directly agreed upon and executable on the same day, detailed implementation rules to be rolled out in the next 1–2 months, and prior consensus items directly extended or upgraded this time. All are hard policies immediately impacting businesses, imports/exports, technology, and travel. I. Trade & Tariffs (most direct, …
Summary
Sino-US Beijing talks reach multiple substantive policies, including extending tariff truce, relaxing chip export controls, restoring visas and flights, impacting enterprises, imports/exports, and technology sectors.
Similar Articles
@CaoChangqing: In the meeting between Trump and Xi Jinping, Trump did not make concessions on the Taiwan issue, and there was no betrayal of Taiwan as left-wing media and yellow-left had previously hyped. This can be seen from the latest Reuters report. The talks primarily focused on trade and economic issues. The U.S. concession was to allow 10 Chinese companies, including Alibaba, ByteDance, Tencent, and JD.com, to purchase Nvidia H200 chips; Lenovo and Foxconn among others…
Trump and Xi Jinping met. The U.S. allowed 10 Chinese companies such as Alibaba, ByteDance, Tencent, and JD.com to purchase Nvidia H200 chips. Taiwan was not mentioned. Musk, Cook, and Huang Renxun (Jensen Huang) gave positive comments on the meeting.
@winchrr: From the reactions following the May meeting between the two leaders, the path is clear. China is going all in on domestic technology, and is fully blocking domestic capital from fueling US tech companies. Domestic consumption has been sidelined—not because it's unwanted, but because strategic resources are scarce during this economic downturn, and steel must be used on the blade. The next 3-5 years will be a phase of full-throttle tech development. Ordinary people should prepare...
Analysis points out that based on the post-meeting moves between the US and China, China has made it clear to go all in on domestic technology and restrict capital flows to US tech companies. Consumption has been temporarily shelved. Over the next 3-5 years, resources will be concentrated on technology. It is recommended that ordinary people save cash to weather the economic downturn.
@seclink: 1. Trump approves Nvidia chip sales to China, but Beijing is not buying - Core: Trump allowed Nvidia to sell high-end chips to China late last year, seemingly a win-win. However, Chinese companies (Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, JD.com) have obtained H200 purchase permits from the US Department of Commerce, but the US Trade Representative has made it clear that chip export controls are not within the scope of US-China negotiations. Nvidia...
Trump approved Nvidia's sale of high-end chips (H200) to China, but Chinese companies (Alibaba, Tencent, etc.) obtained purchase permits while the US Trade Representative explicitly stated that export controls are not part of negotiations. Nvidia has essentially ceded the Chinese AI chip market to Huawei. This marks the substantial impact of US chip embargoes on AI computing supply chains.
@DtDt666: Elon Musk said the meeting went "very smoothly" and that "a lot of good things" are happening. Tim Cook made a peace sign and then gave a thumbs up. Jensen Huang said the "meeting went well" and called it "very impressive."
Multiple tech giant CEOs (Musk, Cook, Huang) gave positive feedback about a meeting, saying it went smoothly and many good things are happening.
@heyshrutimishra: THIS MIGHT BE THE MOST CONSEQUENTIAL BUSINESS MEETING IN HISTORY. The CEOs on Air Force One with Trump are worth over $…
A significant business meeting involving US tech CEOs and Donald Trump on Air Force One is highlighted as potentially historic in the context of US-China relations.