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US-China summit: What a more managed and predictable relationship means for markets

The recent US-China summit signalled a transition from binary outcomes to managed competition, reducing tail risks while preserving strategic rivalry. We believe this change in bilateral relations should improve visibility for investors and reinforce the case for selective, sector-driven positioning in Chinese equities, says Victoria Mio, Head of Greater China Equities.

20 May 2026
4 minute read

Key takeaways:

  • The summit signalled a shift toward more managed and predictable US-China relations, defined by selective cooperation.
  • Reduced risk of near-term escalation may stabilise investor sentiment, but structural competition remains.
  • We believe investors should focus on sector-level opportunities where easing geopolitical pressure can improve earnings visibility and valuations.

When it comes to China, reading into symbolism matters

The Trump-Xi meeting in Beijing should not be simply viewed as another geopolitical photo opportunity. In Chinese diplomacy, venue, sequence and symbolism often carry as much meaning as communiqués. During Trump’s previous state visit in 2017, Beijing took him to the Forbidden City, the historic centre of imperial power, governance and state authority. This time, the Temple of Heaven sent a different message. It is not where emperors ruled, but where they sought harmony between heaven, earth and man. In cultural terms, it suggests balance, order and continuity rather than raw power. For Beijing, this may be a subtle way of framing the relationship not as a transactional contest alone, but as a civilisational dialogue between two great powers operating on very different time horizons.

That symbolism matters because both sides enter the summit with incentives to stabilise, but not to fully reset the relationship. China wants trade stability at a time when its domestic economy remains fragile. The US wants continued access to critical inputs, while also preserving leverage on technology controls.

A directionally constructive outcome

The summit produced what can be described as a ‘limited truce’, marked by selective cooperation, modest economic outcomes, and a clearer path for engagement. However, more notably, we believe it has likely reduced the risk of near-term escalation and offered signals on the future structure of US‑China relations.

Selective cooperation within constraints

There were no developments in core structural issues such as export controls, advanced semiconductors, and national security concerns. Meanwhile, tariffs remain structurally high and there was no indication of near-term policy reversal on either side.

But there was targeted, transactional progress, primarily in areas that are commercially meaningful but politically less sensitive, including:1

  • Incremental trade and investment cooperation, including the creation of formal dialogue mechanisms such as Board of Trade and Board of Investment
  • Agriculture, energy, and aerospace procurement, echoing earlier ‘phase one’ commitments
  • Tourism, healthcare, and people-to-people exchanges.

We believe this is deliberate by design as both parties looked to make progress where feasible and wanted to avoid forced resolutions on more contentious issues.

“Constructive strategic stability”

The most important development is the alignment around “constructive strategic stability”, which implies that there will be ongoing competition, structured engagement and managed disagreements. This looks to be a shift away from binary outcomes (cooperation versus decoupling) toward a more controlled, rules-based interaction model.

Competitive interdependence

A key anchor for stability is mutual dependency across critical supply chains, given the US remains reliant on China’s rare earth supplies, while China needs US advanced chips and AI-related technologies. This creates a natural ceiling on escalation as neither side can easily disengage without incurring meaningful economic cost. At the same time, both continue to invest in domestic resilience and technological independence.

Disciplined strategic competition

Despite improved tone and better structure, underlying competition remains intense, particularly in semiconductors and AI ecosystems, where focus is increasingly shifting toward full-stack control (chips, compute, talent, infrastructure).

China continues to prioritise self-sufficiency, while the US continues to deploy export controls and ecosystem restrictions. Geopolitical risks remain in terms of both nation’s policies towards Taiwan, while export control frameworks and security-related restrictions remain firmly in place.

While there has been no de-escalation in strategic rivalry, there could be a move towards more disciplined and predictable competition.

Investment implications for Chinese equities

The Temple of Heaven symbolises the importance of restoring alignment after disorder. For investors, a broader stabilisation in US-China relations would mean the opportunity is not in buying the whole market indiscriminately, but in identifying the sectors where lower geopolitical risk most directly improves earnings visibility, valuation multiples and capital flows. Semiconductors, internet platforms, data centres, healthcare, transportation, batteries, chemicals and selected industrial exporters could be potential beneficiaries.

This summit was unlikely to produce a grand deal. But it does not need to. Markets may only require evidence that both sides prefer managed competition, with incremental progress and negotiations instead of escalation. This would reduce the risk of abrupt policy shocks, improve planning visibility for corporates and investors, and anchor investor expectations. We would expect this to result in more positive sentiment and stronger flows into Chinese equities.

1 Morgan Stanley Research; US/China Summit: Managing the Relationship; 18 May 2026.

Capital flows: The movement of money into and out of markets or asset classes.

Decoupling: The process of reducing economic interdependence between countries, particularly in trade or technology.

Export controls: Government restrictions on the sale of certain technologies or goods to other countries.

Geopolitical risk: The risk to investments arising from political tensions, conflicts, or policy changes between countries.

Rare earths: A group of minerals critical to manufacturing electronics, defence systems, and renewable technologies.

Supply chain: The network involved in producing and delivering goods, from raw materials to end products.

Tariffs: A tax or duty imposed by a government on goods imported from other countries.

Valuation multiple: A financial metric (e.g., price-to-earnings ratio) used to assess how expensive or cheap a stock is.

These are the views of the author at the time of publication and may differ from the views of other individuals/teams at Janus Henderson Investors. References made to individual securities do not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security, investment strategy or market sector, and should not be assumed to be profitable. Janus Henderson Investors, its affiliated advisor, or its employees, may have a position in the securities mentioned.

 

Past performance does not predict future returns. The value of an investment and the income from it can fall as well as rise and you may not get back the amount originally invested.

 

The information in this article does not qualify as an investment recommendation.

 

There is no guarantee that past trends will continue, or forecasts will be realised.

 

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