🇺🇸🇨🇳 The global balance between the U.S. and China has changed dramatically since 2017.
Back then, the United States held stronger economic leverage, tariffs were the main pressure tool, and China was viewed as being on the defensive.
Today, the situation looks far more balanced.
Over the past few years, China has demonstrated economic resilience that surprised many analysts. Despite heavy tariff pressure and repeated slowdown predictions, Beijing continued expanding its global trade reach while strengthening key industries tied to the future economy.
Instead of depending mainly on U.S. demand, China shifted focus toward emerging markets and the Global South — helping maintain export growth even during periods of tension.
At the same time, China increased its influence across critical sectors: ⚡ Electric Vehicles (EVs)
⚡ Semiconductors
⚡ Green Energy
⚡ Advanced Manufacturing
⚡ Rare Earth Supply Chains
One of China’s strongest strategic advantages remains its dominance in rare earth minerals — resources essential for AI hardware, smartphones, batteries, defense systems, and next-generation technologies.
That leverage has significantly changed the tone of negotiations.
So when Donald Trump recently spoke about cooperation and a “fantastic future together,” many analysts viewed it as more than simple diplomacy — they saw two global powers negotiating from a much more equal position than in previous years.
China now enters these discussions with greater confidence in both its industrial strategy and long-term economic stability.
And global markets are watching closely because U.S.–China relations will continue influencing: 📈 Global trade flows
📈 Technology leadership
📈 AI competition
📈 Commodity markets
📈 Financial stability worldwide
The global economy is evolving fast — and the assumptions that shaped markets a few years ago no longer fully apply today.
#Trump #china #USChina #AI #EV #XRP #DOGS #Crypto #GlobalMarkets

