President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to create a new ‘Board of Trade to manage future economic disputes|@WhiteHouse|X

President Donald Trump left Beijing after a two-day summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, claiming the two countries had reached “fantastic” trade deals.

However, neither side released detailed agreements, leaving businesses and investors waiting for clarity.

Trump said China agreed to buy 200 Boeing aircraft, with a possible commitment for 750 more planes. Boeing confirmed the order, which could become its first major Chinese deal in nearly 10 years after trade tensions hurt sales in China. 

Trump also promised billions of dollars in Chinese purchases of US soybeans, beef, and poultry, although Beijing has not confirmed those deals.

The summit highlighted technology and trade competition. CEOs from Tesla and Nvidia joined Trump’s delegation as both countries discussed AI, semiconductors, and electric vehicles. 

The two leaders also agreed to create a new “Board of Trade” to manage future economic disputes.

However, tensions over tariffs, Taiwan, and access to advanced technology remain unresolved despite warm diplomatic exchanges and Xi’s planned White House visit later this year.