Trump’s trip to China wrapped up in just 48 hours, and honestly the outcome is much more low-key than what most people were expecting.$TRUMP

He updated the summit details himself on Truth Social, and the biggest surprise is that tariffs weren’t even mentioned. After all the buildup around trade tensions, both sides basically avoided direct confrontation on the trade war, which is a bit of a surprise to the market.

On Taiwan, things were also kept very open-ended. Trump clearly stated that “no commitments were made,” which leaves a lot of uncertainty and flexibility on both sides going forward.

Another important point is AI chips — despite approval from the U.S., China still hasn’t moved on Nvidia H200 purchases and is instead focusing heavily on building its own domestic tech ecosystem. That aligns with earlier expectations of long-term tech separation.

Energy discussions were also interesting, with talks around easing pressure on Chinese companies importing Iranian oil. If that develops further, it could have a noticeable impact on global oil flows and geopolitical risk pricing.

Trump also hinted that multiple meetings could happen this year — possibly up to four — suggesting U.S.-China relations are shifting into a more frequent diplomatic phase rather than high tension escalation.

Overall, the summit looks less like a confrontation and more like a controlled balancing act across energy, technology, and global trade.$truump

Markets are currently calm, but once official statements drop, we could see volatility return across macro-sensitive assets including $BTC.