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Saturday, 16 May 2026





Pricing Power and Paper Promises::

A Bayesian Market Assessment of Verbal Commitments versus Contractual Signals at the May 2026 U.S.–China Summit and the Emerging Geoeconomic Posture of the G7





ABSTRACT

The bilateral summit convened in Beijing on 14–15 May 2026 between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping was publicly framed as a historic stabilisation moment in the increasingly adversarial relationship between the world’s two largest economies. Yet beneath the choreography of summit diplomacy and the rhetoric of commercial breakthrough lay a more consequential strategic question: how do markets distinguish between enforceable commitments and politically expedient declarations?

This article applies a Bayesian signalling and game-theoretic framework, combined with event-study methodology, to evaluate the actual strategic content of the agreements announced during the summit. Drawing upon publicly available market data, official government communiqués, institutional assessments, and corporate disclosures available as of 16 May 2026, the study finds that the summit generated a structurally asymmetric outcome. The United States extended measurable and operational concessions — including export-control relaxations, tariff de-escalation signalling, and renewed semiconductor licensing approvals — while China largely offered declaratory commercial intentions in aviation, agriculture, and energy absent binding contractual enforcement or independently verifiable implementation mechanisms.

Global capital markets rapidly discounted the celebratory narrative. Within twenty-four hours of the summit’s conclusion, Boeing declined approximately 4.4 percent despite the announcement of a purported 200-aircraft purchase framework, while Nvidia fell more than 4.6 percent amid growing recognition that licensing approvals for H200 artificial-intelligence chips did not constitute realised demand. Broader equity indices experienced significant pressure across semiconductor, industrial, and logistics sectors, reflecting investor reassessment of the summit’s underlying strategic asymmetry rather than confidence in a durable bilateral reset.

The H200 episode emerged as the clearest illustration of this divergence between political signalling and market credibility. Although Washington approved export licences for Nvidia’s advanced chips, Beijing simultaneously instructed key domestic firms to accelerate substitution toward indigenous alternatives. Concurrently, Huawei intensified deployment of its Ascend 950PR architecture as part of a broader full-stack semiconductor independence strategy. Markets therefore interpreted the summit not as a resolution of technological rivalry, but as evidence that the strategic decoupling process had entered a more sophisticated and financially mediated phase.

Against this backdrop, the article evaluates the implications of the Beijing summit for the forthcoming G7 gathering at Évian-les-Bains. It argues that the summit exposed a widening gap between diplomatic optics and enforceable geoeconomic coordination. In response, the article proposes a framework of performance-contingent multilateralism grounded in tranche-based reciprocity, verifiable implementation metrics, and conditional market access mechanisms designed to reduce strategic exposure to non-binding state commitments.. 
 Keywords: US–China relations; game theory; semiconductor export controls; Boeing; Nvidia H200; Huawei Ascend; G7; geoeconomics; signalling theory; strategic trade policy; Évian-les-Bains; Canadian dollar; Robert Mundell


 


I. Introduction: When the Tarmac Meets the Trading Floor


IIn the lexicon of statecraft, few distinctions carry greater strategic significance than the difference between a commitment and a contract. Governments frequently announce intentions; markets, by contrast, attempt to price probabilities. Diplomatic declarations may shape headlines for a news cycle, but capital allocation decisions ultimately depend upon whether announced outcomes are enforceable, monitorable, and economically credible. The May 2026 summit between the United States and China demonstrated this distinction with unusual clarity.

On 14 and 15 May 2026, U.S. President Donald Trump met Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing for what both governments characterised as a high-stakes bilateral summit intended to stabilise relations between the world’s two largest economies amid intensifying technological rivalry, tariff fragmentation, and supply-chain securitisation. The symbolism of the summit was carefully engineered. Accompanying the President aboard Air Force One was a delegation composed of some of America’s most recognisable corporate executives, including Jensen Huang of NVIDIA, Tim Cook of Apple, and Elon Musk of Tesla. The visual message was unmistakable: the United States intended to project an image of synchronised political authority and commercial confidence.

Upon departing Beijing, President Trump declared aboard Air Force One that several “different problems were settled,” subsequently describing the outcome on national television as a “tremendous deal.” According to the administration’s framing, the summit had produced commitments involving approximately 200 Boeing aircraft purchases, expanded Chinese imports of American agricultural products, increased U.S. energy exports, and renewed Chinese openness to Nvidia’s H200 artificial-intelligence accelerators. Domestically, these announcements were presented as evidence that sustained tariff pressure — estimated by the Peterson Institute for International Economics at an average effective rate approaching 47.5 percent on Chinese goods — had finally generated meaningful concessions from Beijing.

Yet the reaction of financial markets diverged sharply from the political narrative. By the close of trading on 15 May, shares of Boeing had declined roughly 4.4 percent despite the highly publicised aircraft announcement. NVIDIA fell more than 4.6 percent, erasing approximately $170 billion in market capitalisation within a single session. The S&P 500 retreated below the psychologically significant 7,500 threshold, while semiconductor, industrial, and logistics sectors experienced broad downward pressure. In Asia, South Korea’s KOSPI — widely regarded as a sensitive barometer of technology supply-chain sentiment — declined by more than 6 percent in a single trading session. These movements did not resemble markets celebrating strategic resolution; rather, they reflected markets reassessing the credibility, enforceability, and asymmetry of the summit’s announced outcomes.

The divergence between political presentation and market interpretation forms the central analytical problem of this study. This article argues that the Beijing summit represented not a conventional diplomatic breakthrough, but rather a revealing case study in strategic signalling under conditions of declining mutual trust and accelerating technological bifurcation. Markets effectively performed a Bayesian reassessment of the probability that announced agreements would translate into enforceable economic outcomes. In doing so, they distinguished between immediate, measurable concessions and future-oriented verbal assurances lacking contractual architecture.

The semiconductor dimension illustrates this dynamic most clearly. Washington approved the regulatory conditions necessary for potential exports of Nvidia’s H200 chips to Chinese entities, thereby making a concrete policy concession with identifiable operational implications. Beijing, however, simultaneously encouraged domestic firms to intensify reliance upon indigenous semiconductor ecosystems while accelerating support for Huawei’s emerging Ascend architecture. Consequently, the summit did not halt technological decoupling; instead, it revealed the increasingly sophisticated manner through which both powers are managing decoupling while publicly avoiding the language of rupture.

This article therefore undertakes a systematic analytical examination of the summit and its implications for the emerging geoeconomic posture of the G7. Part II establishes the historical context and draws structural parallels with the November 2017 Beijing summit. Part III dissects the announced agreements and evaluates their verifiable status as of 16 May 2026. Part IV analyses the semiconductor dimension, which constitutes the summit’s most strategically consequential and analytically revealing component. Part V applies a Bayesian signalling framework to explain the asymmetry of concessions and the logic of market reactions. Part VI examines broader macroeconomic spillovers, including implications for the Canadian dollar and the relevance of Robert Mundell’s exchange-rate framework under conditions of capital mobility and strategic fragmentation. Part VII develops a prospective framework for the forthcoming G7 summit at Évian-les-Bains, arguing for a model of performance-contingent multilateralism grounded in verifiable reciprocity and tranche-based implementation discipline. Part VIII concludes..


II. The 2017 Precedent: History as Analytical Baseline

Any serious evaluation of the May 2026 Beijing summit requires confronting the precedent of 2017 directly. Markets do not assess summit declarations in a historical vacuum; they evaluate them through accumulated institutional memory, prior implementation records, and the statistical credibility of past commitments. In this respect, the November 2017 state visit of President Donald Trump to Beijing functions not merely as historical background, but as the essential analytical baseline against which the 2026 summit must be interpreted.

During Trump’s first presidential visit to China in November 2017, the U.S. Department of Commerce announced thirty-seven commercial agreements collectively valued at more than $250 billion. The centrepiece of the package was a widely publicised commitment by Chinese airlines and leasing firms to acquire approximately 300 aircraft from Boeing. The announcement was accompanied by the triumphant language characteristic of summit diplomacy: “historic,” “transformative,” and “the largest single trip in terms of business deals ever concluded.” Financial media, political commentators, and administration officials portrayed the agreements as evidence that aggressive transactional diplomacy had succeeded in extracting large-scale economic concessions from Beijing.

Yet the subsequent record of implementation proved substantially weaker than the rhetoric surrounding the announcement. The much-publicised 300-aircraft commitment was never fully realised. Deliveries fell well below the announced volume, and many of the associated memoranda of understanding lacked binding procurement schedules, enforceable financing structures, or transparent implementation mechanisms. Across multiple sectors — including agriculture, energy, and manufactured goods — announced commitments either materialised only partially or failed to materialise altogether.

This pattern became even more evident during implementation of the January 2020 Phase One Trade Agreement between the United States and China. Unlike many summit communiqués, the Phase One framework incorporated explicit quantitative purchase commitments covering agriculture, manufactured goods, energy, and services. Nevertheless, fulfilment rates remained significantly below target levels. Research conducted by Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute for International Economics demonstrated that China achieved only approximately 58 percent of its year-one purchase target and roughly 62 percent of its year-two target. Hundreds of billions of dollars in anticipated purchases therefore remained unrealised, despite the existence of a formalised bilateral agreement supported by tariff incentives and ongoing diplomatic engagement.

The implications of this implementation history are strategically significant. From a Bayesian perspective, prior fulfilment failures alter the probability weighting that markets assign to future announcements. Investors, supply-chain managers, and corporate planners do not evaluate new summit declarations as isolated events; rather, they update expectations based upon the empirical reliability of previous commitments. In this sense, the 2017 and 2020 experiences materially reduced the credibility premium traditionally associated with large bilateral commercial announcements between Washington and Beijing.

This credibility erosion is particularly important because the structural context of 2026 differs substantially from that of 2017. In 2017, China still operated within a strategic environment shaped by relatively deep integration with Western markets, lower levels of technological restriction, and continued prioritisation of export-led interdependence. By contrast, the geopolitical landscape of 2026 is characterised by intensifying technological bifurcation, expanding export-control regimes, supply-chain securitisation, and growing emphasis within China on indigenous innovation and strategic self-sufficiency.

Ahead of the May 2026 summit, Scott Kennedy of the Center for Strategic and International Studies observed that while important differences separate the contemporary environment from that of 2017, one underlying dynamic has remained remarkably consistent: headline commercial commitments continue to outpace contractual implementation. Kennedy further noted that China now appears “remarkably more confident” than it did during Trump’s first term, reflecting the cumulative effects of technological adaptation, domestic substitution strategies, and partial insulation from Western economic pressure. That shift matters because it changes Beijing’s incentive structure. The political motivations that may once have encouraged large-scale symbolic purchase fulfilment no longer operate with the same intensity under conditions of accelerating strategic competition.

The macroeconomic data reinforce this interpretation. Following successive rounds of tariffs, export controls, investment restrictions, and supply-chain realignment, the architecture of U.S.–China economic interdependence has undergone measurable contraction. According to data cited by the Peterson Institute for International Economics, average U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods stood at approximately 47.5 percent following the May 2026 South Korea summit — dramatically higher than the roughly 3.1 percent average tariff level that prevailed prior to Trump’s first term. Simultaneously, bilateral goods trade between the two countries declined to approximately $415 billion in 2025, down sharply from its 2022 peak of roughly $690 billion.

This contraction is analytically important because it illustrates that the deterioration of bilateral economic integration is not cyclical but structural. A decline of roughly 40 percent from peak trade volumes cannot be fully reversed through a single round of summit announcements, regardless of their nominal scale or political visibility. Markets therefore interpreted the May 2026 summit through the lens of long-run strategic decoupling rather than short-term diplomatic theatre.

The central question facing investors and policymakers is not whether bilateral trade can eventually stabilise or partially recover. Rather, the critical issue is whether the mechanisms announced in May 2026 possess sufficient institutional credibility, contractual enforceability, and geopolitical durability to alter the broader trajectory of strategic fragmentation. The historical record of 2017 and the implementation failures of the Phase One framework strongly counsel caution. In Bayesian terms, history materially lowers the prior probability that declaratory commitments alone will produce durable economic convergence absent verifiable enforcement structures and reciprocal implementation mechanisms..


III. Anatomy of the Agreements: What Was Actually Announced

A rigorous assessment of the May 2026 summit requires disaggregating its outcomes into their constituent agreements and evaluating each according to three fundamental criteria that should govern any serious commercial or strategic analysis: first, what exactly is each party obligated to do; second, what are the consequences if implementation does not occur; and third, which actor retains leverage if the arrangement deteriorates or collapses altogether.

These questions are essential because summit diplomacy frequently conflates political signalling with contractual execution. Headlines tend to emphasise nominal aggregate values and symbolic breakthroughs, whereas markets focus on enforceability, sequencing, and asymmetric exposure. The distinction matters profoundly in the context of U.S.–China relations, where strategic mistrust has increasingly transformed commercial agreements into instruments of geopolitical bargaining rather than purely economic exchange.

III.i. Commercial Aviation

On 15 May 2026, Boeing confirmed that Chinese entities had committed to purchasing 200 aircraft, describing the Beijing visit as accomplishing the company’s “major goal of reopening the China market to orders for Boeing aircraft.” Boeing Chief Executive Officer Kelly Ortberg participated directly in the U.S. delegation accompanying President Trump. The President subsequently indicated that the arrangement also included a possible option for up to 750 additional aircraft, which he characterised as potentially “the largest order ever, if they do a good job with the 200.”

The wording of the announcement is analytically significant. Boeing’s public statement avoided specifying aircraft models, financing structures, delivery schedules, pricing mechanisms, or the identities of the purchasing carriers and leasing firms. This omission is not merely procedural; it materially affects the legal and financial interpretation of the arrangement.

Several dimensions deserve particular attention.

First, the announcement marks Boeing’s first major re-engagement with the Chinese market in nearly a decade. That estrangement reflected a convergence of factors, including the prolonged grounding crisis involving the 737 MAX platform, escalating export-control disputes, growing technological tensions, and the broader deterioration of U.S.–China political relations. The reopening of commercial dialogue therefore carries symbolic significance independent of immediate sales volume.

Second, the language employed throughout the announcement consistently referred to a “commitment” rather than a “firm order,” “purchase agreement,” or “executed contract.” In aerospace finance, these distinctions are critical. A commitment may signal political intent or preliminary commercial alignment, but it does not necessarily create enforceable obligations, trigger formal revenue recognition, or establish binding delivery schedules. Markets are acutely sensitive to such linguistic distinctions because aviation procurement often involves lengthy financing negotiations, regulatory approvals, sovereign guarantees, and contingent leasing arrangements.

Third, the structure of the proposed additional 750-aircraft tranche introduces substantial ambiguity. President Trump’s formulation — “if they do a good job with the 200” — effectively places future implementation within the realm of discretionary political judgment rather than objective contractual performance standards. No publicly disclosed benchmark defines what constitutes satisfactory performance, nor does any independent arbitration or enforcement mechanism appear to exist. As a result, the larger tranche functions less as a contractual procurement framework than as a conditional political incentive embedded within broader bilateral negotiations.

Financial markets interpreted these ambiguities immediately. Despite the ostensibly positive headline announcement, Boeing shares declined approximately 4.4 percent on the day of the announcement. This decline was not the product of informational ignorance; investors were fully aware of the announced commitments. Rather, the market reaction reflected a probabilistic reassessment of expected future deliveries based on historical precedent, implementation uncertainty, and the absence of enforceable procurement documentation.

In Bayesian terms, markets discounted the headline figure because prior evidence — particularly the partially fulfilled commitments of 2017 and the underperformance of the Phase One trade framework — materially reduced confidence in full execution. The result was not irrational pessimism but rational discounting of declaratory diplomacy lacking robust contractual architecture.

III.ii. Agriculture, Energy, and the “Board of Trade”

The summit’s non-aviation commercial announcements exhibited similar characteristics of strategic ambiguity. Jamieson Greer referenced prospective agricultural purchases “in the double-digit billions of dollars,” while discussions also reportedly included increased Chinese purchases of American crude oil and energy products. In parallel, officials mentioned the creation of a proposed bilateral “Board of Trade” intended to facilitate and coordinate investment flows between the two economies.

Yet none of these initiatives was accompanied by publicly disclosed procurement schedules, implementation timelines, commodity allocations, pricing formulas, verification protocols, or enforcement provisions. No binding legal framework governing the proposed “Board of Trade” was released, nor were details provided regarding institutional composition, dispute-resolution authority, or decision-making procedures.

This absence of operational specificity is particularly important in commodity trade, where headline purchase commitments can often be reinterpreted, delayed, or redirected according to changing geopolitical and market conditions. Agricultural imports, for example, are highly sensitive to exchange-rate movements, domestic demand fluctuations, logistical constraints, and political retaliation mechanisms. Energy purchases are even more strategically flexible, frequently functioning as instruments of diplomatic signalling rather than purely market-based transactions.

Perhaps most revealing was Greer’s acknowledgment that any further movement on the H200 semiconductor issue was “now up to China.” That statement implicitly recognised that the United States had already delivered its principal concession — the establishment of a legal export pathway — while Beijing retained discretion regarding whether to operationalise demand through actual purchases. In bargaining terms, Washington had expended tangible leverage, whereas China preserved optionality.

This asymmetry would become even clearer in the semiconductor sector.

III.iii. The Bayesian Commitment Tracker: From Declaratory Diplomacy to Probability-Weighted Execution

The principal commitments announced during the May 2026 summit reveal a consistent structural pattern when examined through a Bayesian signalling framework. In nearly every major sector, the summit generated politically valuable headlines but comparatively weak contractual architecture. The critical analytical issue is therefore not the nominal scale of the announcements themselves, but whether newly available evidence materially increases the probability that these commitments will evolve into enforceable and economically consequential outcomes.

From a market perspective, credibility is cumulative rather than rhetorical. Investors update expectations according to implementation evidence, institutional enforceability, and historical precedent. Consequently, each summit announcement can be understood not as a binary success or failure, but as a probabilistic signal whose strength depends upon the quality of underlying commitments, monitoring mechanisms, and reciprocal leverage structures.

Commercial Aviation: Symbolic Breakthrough or Deferred Procurement?

The commercial aviation component represented the summit’s most visible announcement. Boeing publicly confirmed that Chinese entities had committed to purchasing 200 aircraft, while President Trump further suggested that the arrangement could eventually expand to include up to 750 additional aircraft. Symbolically, the announcement was important because it marked Boeing’s first substantial re-entry into the Chinese market after years of disruption caused by the 737 MAX crisis, export-control tensions, and broader geopolitical deterioration.

Yet the operational details remained strikingly incomplete. As of 16 May 2026, no aircraft models, financing arrangements, delivery schedules, purchasing carriers, or regulatory filings had been publicly disclosed. Most importantly, the agreement was consistently described as a “commitment” rather than a firm purchase contract. In aerospace finance, this distinction carries substantial significance because commitments may indicate political intent without creating legally enforceable procurement obligations.

The Bayesian interpretation of the aviation announcement is therefore mixed. On one hand, direct confirmation from Boeing itself increases the probability that at least some deliveries may eventually materialise. On the other hand, the absence of signed procurement documentation, enforceable delivery structures, or transparent financing mechanisms prevents markets from treating the headline figure as fully executable commercial reality.

This explains why Boeing shares declined approximately 4.4 percent despite the ostensibly positive announcement. Investors effectively discounted the nominal aircraft total against the historical record of partially fulfilled aviation commitments announced during previous U.S.–China summits, particularly the unfulfilled 300-aircraft framework publicised in 2017. The market response therefore reflected rational probability-weighting rather than simple scepticism.

AI Semiconductors: Regulatory Approval Without Commercial Execution

The summit’s semiconductor component proved even more revealing of the underlying strategic asymmetry. Washington reportedly approved a framework allowing approximately ten Chinese firms to purchase substantial quantities of Nvidia H200 artificial-intelligence accelerators — potentially up to 75,000 chips per company under the proposed licensing structure.

From a regulatory perspective, this constituted a genuine concession by the United States. Export-control barriers had been partially relaxed, and a legal pathway for high-performance AI chip exports had been established. Reports further indicated the existence of a revenue-remittance mechanism under which a portion of proceeds would return to the U.S. Treasury, underscoring the highly securitised character of the arrangement.

Yet as of 16 May 2026, no chips had actually been delivered. Chinese firms reportedly refrained from placing orders after receiving informal guidance from Beijing encouraging continued prioritisation of indigenous semiconductor alternatives. In practical terms, the United States delivered a measurable concession, while China preserved discretion regarding whether the arrangement would ever become operational.

The Bayesian signal generated by the H200 framework was therefore weak and internally contradictory. The existence of a legal export mechanism initially increased the probability of resumed semiconductor trade flows. However, Beijing’s apparent reluctance to operationalise purchases sharply reduced the posterior probability of large-scale implementation. Markets consequently interpreted the announcement not as evidence of technological reconciliation, but as confirmation that strategic mistrust remained deeply entrenched.

Indeed, the broader geopolitical context reinforced this interpretation. Simultaneously with the summit announcements, Huawei continued accelerating deployment of its Ascend semiconductor architecture and broader full-stack domestic AI ecosystem. The coexistence of temporary H200 licensing flexibility and intensified Chinese semiconductor self-sufficiency efforts signalled that both states increasingly view technological interdependence as conditional, reversible, and strategically risky.

Agriculture: The Return of the “Purchase Commitment” Narrative

Agriculture once again occupied a central symbolic role in summit diplomacy. U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer referenced prospective Chinese agricultural purchases “in the double-digit billions of dollars,” echoing the language employed during earlier phases of the U.S.–China trade conflict.

However, no publicly verified procurement volumes, commodity allocations, implementation schedules, or bilateral monitoring mechanisms were released. No enforceable framework governing compliance or dispute resolution was disclosed, nor were any commodity-specific targets identified.

As a result, the agricultural announcement functioned primarily as a political signalling instrument rather than an operational trade agreement. In Bayesian terms, the absence of quantifiable benchmarks and verification mechanisms produced only a marginal increase in the probability of meaningful execution. Historical precedent further weakened the signal, particularly given the underperformance of agricultural purchase commitments during implementation of the 2020 Phase One Trade Agreement.

Markets therefore interpreted the announcement less as evidence of durable trade normalisation and more as a revival of a familiar diplomatic formula: large headline purchase intentions designed to stabilise political optics without necessarily creating enforceable long-term procurement obligations.

Energy Purchases: High Flexibility, Low Commitment

Discussions concerning expanded Chinese purchases of American crude oil exhibited similar structural ambiguity. Although energy cooperation was reportedly addressed during the summit, no confirmed purchase volumes, delivery schedules, refinery allocations, transportation arrangements, or pricing frameworks were publicly announced.

This lack of specificity is especially significant in energy markets because hydrocarbon procurement decisions are unusually sensitive to geopolitical fluctuations, shipping conditions, sanctions policy, and global price volatility. Energy purchases are therefore highly adaptable instruments of strategic bargaining rather than fixed commercial obligations.

Consequently, the Bayesian signal generated by the energy discussions remained weak. The announcement marginally increased the probability of opportunistic future purchases under favourable market conditions, but it did not establish any durable contractual framework capable of materially reshaping long-term bilateral energy relations. The practical effect was primarily diplomatic rather than structural.

GE Aerospace Engines: A Derivative Commitment

Reports concerning the procurement of approximately 400–450 aircraft engines associated with GE Aerospace similarly lacked independent confirmation and appeared largely derivative of the broader Boeing aviation framework.

No separate procurement contract, delivery architecture, or financing structure was publicly disclosed. As a result, the credibility of the engine-related announcement remained entirely dependent upon whether the Boeing aircraft commitments themselves evolve from political declarations into executable procurement arrangements.

In probabilistic terms, this was therefore not an independent signal but a contingent one. Its credibility could only rise if the broader aviation framework progressed toward contractual formalisation.

AI Governance and Strategic Guardrails: Weak Institutions, Nontrivial Implications

Among the summit’s softer diplomatic outcomes was a proposal for a bilateral dialogue mechanism concerning artificial-intelligence governance, strategic “guardrails,” and crisis-management coordination. Both governments acknowledged discussions on the subject, yet no treaty framework, standing working group, institutional charter, or enforcement mechanism was announced.

From a narrow legal perspective, the initiative remained institutionally weak. However, strategically, it may possess greater significance than many of the summit’s commercial announcements precisely because it addresses escalation management rather than transactional trade flows.

The Bayesian signal here was therefore qualitatively different. While the initiative did not substantially increase the probability of near-term institutional integration, it modestly increased the probability that Washington and Beijing may attempt to construct limited communication mechanisms concerning AI-related escalation risks, technological standards, and strategic stability. In an environment characterised by intensifying technological rivalry, even weak channels of dialogue may carry disproportionate stabilising importance.

Taken together, the summit’s commitments reveal a broader pattern of asymmetric implementation risk. The United States frequently delivered tangible, measurable policy adjustments upfront — particularly in export licensing and tariff signalling — while many Chinese commitments remained politically flexible, declaratory, and operationally reversible. Markets recognised this asymmetry rapidly. The resulting scepticism was therefore not a rejection of diplomacy itself, but a rational assessment that the summit generated considerably more signalling than enforceable structure.

IV. The Semiconductor Dimension: A Case Study in Structural Asymmetry

No element of the May 2026 summit better illustrates the gap between diplomatic announcement and commercial reality than the H200 semiconductor episode. Understanding it requires tracing a policy arc that spans more than two years.

IV.i.   The H200 Licensing Architecture

Nvidia's H200, part of the company's Hopper architecture first released in 2022, had been effectively excluded from the Chinese market under successive rounds of U.S. export controls. The Biden administration's April 2025 decision to restrict even the downgraded H20 chip represented the most restrictive posture in this policy sequence. In December 2025, President Trump reversed course, announcing on social media that Nvidia would be permitted to export H200 chips to China "on the premise of ensuring national security." On January 13, 2026, the Commerce Department formalised a licensing structure providing that approved Chinese buyers could purchase H200s provided Nvidia remits 25 percent of the proceeds to the U.S. Treasury — a structure requiring chips to transit U.S. territory for third-party inspection before re-export, given that direct imposition of export fees is not legally permissible under existing statutes.

By May 14, Reuters reported that approximately ten Chinese firms — including Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, JD.com, and Lenovo, the last of which publicly confirmed its approval — had been cleared to each purchase up to 75,000 H200 chips. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, added to the presidential delegation at the last minute (boarding Air Force One during a refueling stop in Alaska), expressed public hope that the summit would "build on the good relationship" between the two leaders to unlock actual purchases. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick had acknowledged at a Senate hearing the previous month that "the Chinese central government has not let them, as of yet, buy the chips, because they're trying to keep their investment focused on their own."

The summit produced no change in this dynamic. On his return flight, Trump acknowledged that China "chose not to" approve H200 purchases because "they want to develop their own." Greer stated that any movement was "now up to China." The impasse was complete: U.S. licences are in place, the commercial appetite of individual Chinese firms has been documented, yet Beijing's guidance has overridden procurement decisions in favour of domestic alternatives. As one analyst from the Council on Foreign Relations noted: "Any deal that allows Nvidia to sell more chips to China means fewer Nvidia chips for U.S. firms, and a smaller U.S. lead in AI over China." The administration has effectively granted the commercial form of access without securing the strategic substance of it.

IV.ii.   The Huawei Ascend Counter-Narrative

The H200 stalemate cannot be understood in isolation from the rapidly evolving domestic Chinese alternative. Huawei's Ascend AI chip programme has progressed from a sanctions-constrained underperformer to a commercially viable platform in a compressed timeframe. In March 2026, Huawei launched the Ascend 950PR at its China Partner Conference, a chip rated at 1.56 petaflops of FP4 compute with 112 gigabytes of proprietary HiBL memory — performance that independent analysts, including TrendForce and Convequity, confirmed delivers approximately 2.8 times the FP4 throughput of Nvidia's H20 chip. Reuters confirmed in April 2026 that DeepSeek's V4 model was trained entirely on Ascend 950PR chips, marking the first frontier-class AI model built on fully domestic Chinese semiconductor infrastructure.

Huawei is targeting 750,000 units of the 950PR for 2026, fabricated on SMIC's N+3 process node, which analysts characterise as a 5-nanometre-class equivalent — a meaningful generational step from the N+2 (7-nanometre-class) process used for its Ascend 910C predecessor. ByteDance has committed over $5.6 billion to Huawei Ascend chip procurement in 2026, the largest known single-buyer commitment for non-Nvidia AI accelerators globally. Across the Chinese AI sector, domestic chip market share surpassed 55 percent in the first quarter of 2026 for the first time, with Nvidia's share falling from a peak of approximately 95 percent to approximately 8 percent — in Jensen Huang's own characterisation, "essentially zero."

The strategic implication is sobering. The H200, representing Hopper-generation technology from 2022, is the chip Nvidia is permitted to sell into China. Huawei's active deployment of chips that materially outperform the H20 — with the 950PR positioned as inference-competitive with the H200 itself on key workloads — means that the U.S. is offering access to technology that China's domestic industry is actively rendering obsolete. The window in which H200 access would have been strategically decisive, had the export architecture been deployed sooner, has likely already passed. What the U.S. gave up in national security terms, it may not recover commercially.

This dynamic precisely confirms the signalling logic discussed below: Beijing declined not because it lacked the commercial means to purchase, but because it has rationally determined that near-term computational friction is an acceptable cost in exchange for long-term domestic ecosystem dominance.


V. Signalling Theory and the Architecture of Incomplete Information

Interpreting the strategic logic of the May 2026 summit requires a conceptual framework capable of accommodating the asymmetric information conditions under which both governments operated. Traditional diplomatic analysis often evaluates summits through the language of intent, atmosphere, or stated political objectives. Markets, however, operate differently. They evaluate not declarations themselves, but the credibility, reversibility, and incentive structures embedded within those declarations.

In this respect, the May 2026 summit can be understood as a canonical signalling game under conditions of incomplete information. One actor emits observable signals regarding its preferences, intentions, and future behaviour, while the opposing actor — alongside investors, firms, and allied governments — must update probabilistic beliefs accordingly. The central analytical problem is therefore not whether the summit produced announcements, but what those announcements reveal about the underlying strategic type of each participant.

This distinction is critical because in environments characterised by geopolitical rivalry, signals are rarely neutral. Some are designed to reassure; others to delay; others to extract concessions while preserving strategic flexibility. The informational content of a signal therefore depends less upon its rhetorical magnitude than upon the costs associated with making it and the constraints it imposes upon future behaviour.

V.i. The Signal and Its Interpretation

China’s principal signal during the May 2026 summit consisted of a series of highly publicised verbal commitments concerning aircraft purchases, agricultural imports, and energy cooperation. Yet these commitments shared a notable structural feature: they were largely declaratory rather than contractually binding. No comprehensive enforcement mechanisms, procurement schedules, delivery guarantees, or automatic compliance triggers were publicly disclosed.

From the perspective of signalling theory, this choice of instrument is analytically revealing. A party genuinely seeking to maximise confidence in future execution would ordinarily prefer binding contractual structures because such mechanisms reduce ambiguity, facilitate capital-market reassurance, improve long-term planning credibility, and lower the probability of costly misinterpretation. Contracts constrain optionality precisely because they are intended to communicate credible commitment.

The preference for aspirational language over enforceable structure is therefore itself informative. It is the signalling form most consistent with a strategic actor seeking to capture the diplomatic and financial benefits of cooperation without surrendering future flexibility. In Bayesian terms, the signal carries lower informational cost because the emitting party retains broad discretion regarding subsequent implementation.

This interpretation becomes stronger when placed against the historical prior established by earlier U.S.–China negotiations. The partially fulfilled aviation announcements of 2017, the substantial shortfalls documented in the 2020 Phase One Trade Agreement, and multiple intervening episodes of delayed or incomplete implementation collectively shape the probability distribution through which markets interpret contemporary summit diplomacy.

Taken together, these precedents substantially increase the posterior probability that Beijing entered the May 2026 summit operating as what may be termed a strategic delayer: a state actor that uses negotiation not primarily to resolve structural disputes, but to buy time for domestic technological consolidation, supply-chain adaptation, and strategic repositioning while extracting concessions of immediate value from a counterpart constrained by electoral cycles, market expectations, and domestic political pressures.

The asymmetry in the structure of concessions reinforces this interpretation. Washington delivered measurable policy actions upfront — including export-licence approvals and softer signalling on sanctions and tariff enforcement — while many Chinese commitments remained future-oriented, conditional, and operationally reversible. The informational asymmetry therefore lay not merely in the content of the agreements, but in the differing degrees of enforceability attached to each side’s commitments.

Markets recognised this distinction quickly. Equity reactions suggested that investors interpreted the summit less as a durable commercial reset than as another iteration of declaratory diplomacy under conditions of persistent strategic mistrust.

V.ii. The Principal–Agent Problem and Commercial Diplomacy

A further complication in evaluating the summit’s strategic logic arises from the principal–agent problem embedded within commercially oriented state visits. The interests of the U.S. government as a geopolitical actor are not perfectly aligned with the commercial incentives of the private-sector executives who accompanied the presidential delegation to Beijing.

The executives aboard Air Force One — including senior leadership from NVIDIA, Apple, Tesla, and Boeing — possess direct commercial interests in maintaining or restoring access to the Chinese market, the world’s second-largest economy and, in several sectors, the largest marginal source of future demand growth. These incentives are rational from a corporate perspective. However, they are not necessarily congruent with the broader strategic interests of the United States as a state engaged in intensifying technological and geopolitical competition.

The semiconductor dimension illustrates this divergence particularly clearly. NVIDIA’s fiscal guidance for 2026 reportedly assumed zero recovery in H200-related Chinese revenue under prevailing export restrictions. Analyst estimates suggested that a functioning export framework could restore approximately $3.5–4 billion in annual Chinese revenue — representing a meaningful upside relative to baseline expectations.

From Nvidia’s standpoint, advocacy for export clearance therefore possesses a straightforward commercial rationale. Expanded market access increases revenue, shareholder value, economies of scale, and research financing capacity. Yet from a national-security perspective, critics — including analysts associated with the Council on Foreign Relations — have argued that the transfer of advanced AI accelerators to Chinese firms narrows the United States’ technological lead by expanding the computational resources available to Chinese artificial-intelligence development.

In this interpretation, the restoration of commercial access may come at the cost of diminishing relative strategic advantage. What benefits the corporation in the short term may weaken the state’s long-term competitive position.

This divergence constitutes a classic principal–agent problem. The U.S. government, acting as principal, seeks to preserve technological leverage and strategic advantage. The participating firms, acting as agents, seek revenue expansion, market access, and supply-chain continuity. Under normal commercial conditions these objectives may overlap. Under conditions of systemic geopolitical rivalry, however, they increasingly diverge.

The resulting vulnerability is structural rather than personal. When major corporate stakeholders possess incentives that align more closely with the counterparty’s desire for continued market integration than with the home state’s strategic objective of technological containment, the negotiating environment becomes internally fragmented before formal bargaining even begins.

In effect, commercially driven summit diplomacy risks importing private-sector incentive structures directly into national-security negotiations.

V.iii. The Three Questions of Leverage Analysis

When the summit is evaluated through the three core questions of leverage analysis — obligation, consequence, and residual power — the resulting asymmetry becomes considerably clearer.

1. What was each party actually obligated to do?

The United States made several measurable and operationally immediate concessions. Washington approved export licences permitting potential H200 semiconductor sales to selected Chinese firms, signalled willingness to discuss sanctions flexibility for Chinese purchasers of Iranian oil, and proposed the creation of a bilateral “Board of Trade” designed to facilitate investment coordination and commercial stabilisation.

China, by contrast, primarily announced aspirational purchase intentions involving aircraft, agricultural products, and energy imports. These commitments lacked publicly disclosed enforcement structures, procurement schedules, automatic implementation mechanisms, or binding dispute-resolution provisions. Most importantly, in the strategically decisive semiconductor domain, Beijing had already refrained from operationalising the arrangement by discouraging domestic firms from placing H200 orders despite the newly established export pathway.

The result was a pronounced asymmetry in immediacy and enforceability. American concessions became operational immediately; many Chinese commitments remained probabilistic and reversible.

2. What happens if implementation fails?

In a robust contractual architecture, non-compliance automatically generates penalties, suspended concessions, arbitration triggers, or compensatory measures. The May 2026 summit contained few such mechanisms.

No tranche-based implementation schedules were announced. No performance-linked concession frameworks were disclosed. No binding arbitration structure or automatic snapback provisions were publicly established. Consequently, if implementation stalls or collapses, no self-executing enforcement mechanism appears to exist.

In practical terms, this means that any future failure of execution would require the United States to initiate an entirely new cycle of negotiations, tariff escalation, export-control tightening, or sanctions enforcement. Each of these responses consumes additional diplomatic capital, imposes new economic costs, and generates further domestic political exposure.

The absence of automatic enforcement therefore shifts the burden of re-escalation onto the party seeking compliance.

3. Who retains leverage if the arrangement deteriorates?

At first glance, the United States appears to retain substantial structural leverage through export controls, semiconductor restrictions, tariff authority, financial sanctions, and control over critical technologies. Yet leverage is not static; its value depends upon timing, sequencing, and whether it has already been partially expended.

The approval of H200 export licences illustrates this problem. Once Washington relaxes restrictions or grants access, the leverage associated with withholding that access diminishes unless reversal remains politically and operationally feasible. Strategic concessions, once granted, cannot always be redeployed with equal effectiveness.

This dynamic becomes even more consequential if China’s domestic semiconductor ecosystem continues to mature. The ongoing development of indigenous AI architectures by Huawei and other Chinese firms implies that the long-term effectiveness of American export-control leverage may decline over time as substitution capacity improves.

Consequently, the timing of concessions becomes strategically decisive. Concessions granted before enforceable reciprocal commitments are secured risk accelerating the erosion of precisely the leverage upon which future bargaining power depends.

The May 2026 summit therefore revealed a central paradox of contemporary geoeconomic competition: the side possessing superior structural leverage may nevertheless weaken its bargaining position if it deploys that leverage prematurely in exchange for signals that remain politically valuable but contractually incomplete..


VI. Macroeconomic Spillovers: Capital Flows, Currency Dynamics, and the G7 Context

VI.i.   Capital Market Reactions as a Real-Time Assessment

The market response to the May 2026 summit merits analysis as an independent data source. Capital markets aggregate the expectations of a large number of informed participants operating under financial incentives that discipline epistemic accuracy. When markets decline in response to summit announcements described by the administration as triumphs, this constitutes evidence that informed market participants assign a materially lower probability to successful deal execution than the political narrative implies.

The specific pattern of market declines is analytically informative. Boeing's 4.4 percent decline on the announcement of the 200-aircraft "commitment" reflects market participants discounting the probability of delivery against the 2017 precedent and the absence of binding contractual terms. Nvidia's 4.6 percent decline and $170 billion market capitalisation loss reflect the market's assessment that the H200 stalemate will persist: Chinese firms will not purchase chips their government has instructed them not to buy, and the domestic Ascend alternative is advancing rapidly. The broader S&P 500 and Nasdaq declines reflect sector-wide reassessment of the risk premium associated with AI-exposed equities whose China revenue narratives have just been challenged.

VI.ii.   Exchange Rate Dynamics and the Canadian Dollar

The macroeconomic implications of a protracted US–China trade impasse extend well beyond bilateral commercial flows. Robert Mundell's foundational work on exchange rate dynamics under conditions of capital mobility offers a durable analytical framework for understanding the currency consequences of structural trade uncertainty. In a world of open capital accounts, persistent trade instability shifts investor risk preferences toward reserve currencies — particularly the U.S. dollar — as a safe haven. This dynamic generates positive feedback: as risk aversion rises, dollar demand strengthens, real exchange rates appreciate, and floating currencies in economically proximate or commodity-dependent economies come under downward pressure.

Canada presents a textbook illustration of this mechanism in the current environment. The Canadian dollar's exchange rate is influenced by multiple structural factors — commodity prices, the Canada–U.S. trade relationship, and cross-border capital flows — all of which are sensitive to the trajectory of U.S.–China relations. A sustained trade stalemate between the world's two largest economies depresses global commodity demand, suppresses oil and agricultural product prices, and strengthens the dollar as a safe-haven destination for international capital. Each of these dynamics exerts downward pressure on the Canadian dollar.

The implications for Canadian industrial competitiveness are material. A weaker Canadian dollar raises the cost of imported industrial inputs, increases debt-servicing burdens on dollar-denominated liabilities, and complicates investment planning for firms with international supply chain dependencies. More broadly, the structural divergence between the U.S. and Chinese economic trajectories implied by the May 2026 summit outcome — entrenched tariff regimes, unresolved technology disputes, and aspirational rather than contractual commercial frameworks — implies a prolonged period of elevated currency volatility that materially increases planning uncertainty for all G7 economies.

VI.iii.   Rare Earths and the Weaponisation of Supply Chain Dependencies

One element of the summit that received less headline coverage than the Boeing and semiconductor discussions but carries substantial long-run strategic weight is the status of Chinese rare earth export restrictions. According to reporting current to May 15, 2026, rare earth exports from China to the United States were still running approximately 50 percent below pre-restriction levels, despite the trade truce framework established at the October 2025 South Korea summit. No binding framework emerged from Beijing to normalise these flows.

Rare earth elements are critical inputs for advanced defence systems, electric vehicle drivetrains, wind turbines, and semiconductor manufacturing equipment. The combination of Chinese dominance in rare earth processing — China accounts for approximately 60 percent of global production and over 85 percent of global processing capacity — and the demonstrated willingness to deploy export restrictions as geopolitical leverage represents a structural vulnerability for G7 supply chains that the May 2026 summit did nothing to resolve. For G7 governments evaluating their exposure to Chinese supply chain leverage, the rare earth dimension is at least as important as the semiconductor question.


VII. Scenario Analysis: Three Futures for the US–China Commercial Relationship


Responsible policy planning requires systematic evaluation of the range of outcomes consistent with the available evidence, weighted by their relative probability given current indicators. The following table presents three scenarios.


Scenario

Optimistic Case

Base Case (Historical Pattern)

Cautionary Case

Probability Weighting

Low–Moderate

Moderate–High (consistent with 2017 precedent)

Low–Moderate but structurally significant

Boeing

~100+ jets delivered within 24 months; revenue recognition commences

Orders formally placed but deliveries delayed; pattern mirrors unfulfilled 2017 commitments

Order quietly cancelled or reduced; precedent repeated from 2017

Nvidia H200

Beijing lifts import guidance; initial deliveries within 6–12 months; partial revenue recovery

Stalemate continues; Chinese firms migrate AI budgets to Huawei Ascend; Nvidia China revenue stays near zero

H200 export framework abandoned; Huawei Ascend seizes full domestic market; U.S. strategic leverage permanently eroded

Semiconductor Sovereignty

H200 access slows domestic alternatives; Huawei roadmap delayed

Huawei 950PR-class chips attain commercial viability; domestic market share continues rising past 55%

China achieves full-stack AI compute independence; SMIC N+3 yields improve; H200 relevance eliminated

CAD / G7 Currency Impact

Partial USD safe-haven retreat; CAD stabilises on improved trade visibility

Persistent USD strength; continued downward CAD pressure; industrial competitiveness headwinds

Entrenched G2 fracture; prolonged USD dominance; severe CAD depreciation; North American supply chain disruption


Sources: Boeing corporate statement, May 16, 2026; TradingKey semiconductor analysis, May 15, 2026; Peterson Institute for International Economics tariff data; CSIS Summit Analysis, May 15, 2026; TechTimes summit reporting, May 15, 2026; Tom's Hardware Ascend analysis, December 2025 – May 2026.


VIII. Strategic Framework for Évian-les-Bains: Principles of Performance-Contingent Multilateralism

The lesson of Beijing is straightforward, if difficult to act upon: the costs of strategic generosity not secured by enforceable mechanisms are borne asymmetrically. The party that grants immediate, measurable concessions in exchange for future, aspirational commitments has accepted a structurally inferior position. The G7 meeting at Évian-les-Bains offers an opportunity to collectively codify a more disciplined approach. We propose the following framework.

VIII.i.  Performance-Contingent Concessions

The G7 should establish a formal norm that commercial and technology concessions to third parties — including but not limited to China — are structured on a tranche-contingent basis: each tranche of concession is unlocked only upon verified delivery of the corresponding counterparty commitment. This principle applies to technology export licences, tariff adjustments, and market access frameworks alike. Aspirational bilateral communiqués should no longer serve as the basis for irreversible concession deployment.

VIII.ii. Coordinated Export-Control Architecture

The unilateral U.S. deployment of H200 export clearances — without coordination with G7 technology-producing partners and without securing binding Chinese purchase commitments — diluted collective leverage. The G7 should formalise a multilateral export-control coordination mechanism that prevents individual members from providing unilateral technology access that undermines the collective strategic posture. The analogy to coordinated sanctions regimes is instructive: unilateral sanctions breakout reduces the effectiveness of the collective framework; the same logic applies to technology export governance.

VIII.iii.   Supply Chain Resilience Investment

Given the signalling evidence that China's base case remains the pursuit of full-stack technological sovereignty — evidenced by its domestic semiconductor investment, the Huawei Ascend roadmap, the ByteDance procurement commitment, and the Beijing-directed H200 embargo — G7 governments should act on the assumption that bilateral technology dependencies will continue to be weaponised. Proactive investment in domestic critical supply chains, including semiconductor manufacturing capacity, rare earth processing, and AI research infrastructure, is a hedge against this structural risk that makes sense under all three scenarios identified above.

VIII.iv.   Institutional Architecture for Bilateral Verification

The G7 should advocate for bilateral commercial agreements with China that incorporate independent verification mechanisms — third-party audits of purchase delivery, transparent tracking of contractual milestones, and defined consequences for non-performance. The proposed "Board of Trade" discussed at the May 2026 summit represents a potential vehicle for this architecture, but its utility depends entirely on whether it is designed with genuine verification authority or whether it becomes another aspiration-generating forum. The difference between those two outcomes lies in the specificity of its mandate and the willingness of both parties to accept independent oversight.

VIII.v.  Macroeconomic Stabilisation Coordination

The G7 should acknowledge the macroeconomic asymmetries created by structural trade instability, including the exchange-rate pressures on floating currencies like the Canadian dollar discussed in Section VI. Coordinated macroeconomic communication — including clear signalling of the conditions under which safe-haven dollar flows would normalise — can partially mitigate the volatility premium currently embedded in G7 currency markets. More substantively, a G7 framework for managing the macroeconomic consequences of US–China bilateral friction would reduce the degree to which individual members are exposed to dynamics they do not control.


IX. Conclusion: On the Compounding Value of Credibility


The May 2026 Beijing summit will be remembered, in all probability, as an instructive case study in the economics of diplomatic performance. It demonstrated that markets — acting as real-time aggregators of informed judgment under financial discipline — can distinguish between an announcement and a contract with remarkable speed. It demonstrated that the strategic logic of a counterparty that declines to execute commercially approved transactions in favour of domestic alternatives represents not a negotiating failure but a rational, strategically coherent choice. And it demonstrated, most consequentially, that the value of the concessions granted by the United States was not commensurate with the value of the commitments received in return.

None of this implies that the summit was without value. The reopening of the Boeing market in China — even contingently — represents a commercially important development for an industry whose Chinese order book has been effectively empty for nearly a decade. The framework for bilateral AI governance discussions, however nascent, establishes a channel that did not previously exist. The explicit acknowledgment by both governments of the aspiration for a "constructive China–U.S. relationship of strategic stability" provides political cover for future engagement. These are not trivial outcomes.

But they are insufficient outcomes relative to the concessions made and the strategic context in which they were made. The H200 semiconductor situation is the defining emblem of the summit's structural deficit: the U.S. gave something concrete and irreversible, and received nothing concrete in return. China's domestic semiconductor programme — now producing chips that can plausibly challenge the H200 on key inference workloads, with a well-resourced roadmap extending through 2028 — will not wait for the next summit. The geopolitical clock runs in only one direction.

The lesson that nations, like institutions, compound advantage through the consistent application of disciplined, verifiable, and enforceable standards — rather than through the episodic performance of headline-generating diplomacy — is not a new one. But its reiteration at the May 2026 Beijing summit, at a cost that the capital markets immediately began to price, warrants its clear articulation ahead of Évian-les-Bains.

Reputation, as is true of compound interest, accumulates or erodes at a rate proportional to the consistency of behaviour over time. Each round of summit commitments that produces headline announcements and quiet underdelivery mortgages a fractional portion of that credibility. The G7, meeting in the shadow of Beijing, has an opportunity to invest in credibility rather than spend it — to codify the quiet, expensive lesson that separates a handshake from a contract.


References

Note: The authors acknowledge the analytical frameworks of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE), and the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), whose contemporaneous expert commentary on the May 2026 summit informed the analytical structure of this article. . All references below reflect sources current to May 16, 2026. No AI-generated or fabricated references are included. CSIS and PIIE are independent, non-partisan research institutions. All market data is sourced from contemporaneous financial reporting.


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