The recent summit between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, held in Beijing on May 14–15, was a critical event as both nations attempted to navigate through mounting economic frictions. A side effect of the diplomatic discussions was an unexpected rise in Bitcoin‘s value, which increased by 2.3 percent, reaching $96,800. According to CryptoAppsy, this marked a significant increase in Bitcoin market activity during these talks.
What’s Affecting the Trade Discussions?
Amid the negotiation efforts to resolve the US-China trade deadlock, focus centered on American restrictions on exporting advanced artificial intelligence chips, like NVIDIA’s H100 processors. Such curbs have severely impacted the global supply chains of the $15 billion AI hardware industry. Meanwhile, the leaders talked about potentially extending a trade deal from the previous October in South Korea, which initially paused tariffs on over $300 billion worth of goods.
Discussions covered issues including arms sales to Taiwan and various agreements involving aircraft, agriculture, energy, and new trade frameworks. Yet, the talks hardly advanced topics like AI, semiconductors, Taiwan, or Iran.
Will China Soften Its Stance on Cryptocurrencies?
Despite hopes that Trump’s visit might lead China to ease its cryptocurrency policies, this year has seen increased restrictions. Regulatory changes now restrict crypto trading, asset tokenization, and yuan-pegged stablecoins. Notably, starting September 30, promotional crypto content will be banned from social media.
Trump was accompanied by business leaders from BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, Visa, Mastercard, Apple, Tesla, Meta, Qualcomm, Micron, and Boeing. As firms like BlackRock and Goldman Sachs pursue Bitcoin ETFs and tokenized financial products, Visa and Mastercard aim to build stablecoin payment platforms. According to Reuters, these companies are exploring business opportunities in China.
Reva Goujon of Rhodium Group commented that most delegates were keen on accessing crucial supplies, though only Boeing and Cargill engaged directly in procurement negotiations.
Despite North America’s leadership in Bitcoin network expansion, Chinese suppliers remain critical to mining equipment supplies. This contrasts with US efforts to lessen this dependency through initiatives like the “Made in America Mining Act,” aiming to bolster domestic Bitcoin mining and create a national reserve.
Noteworthy details from the article include:
- The US accounts for approximately 38% of Bitcoin mining globally, but 97% of equipment originates from China.
- The “Made in America Mining Act” proposes a timeline to transition to US-made hardware, aiming for full compliance by 2030.
- A potential US-Chinese tech détente could decrease equipment costs and enhance supply logistics, though worsening relations might inflate costs and impede investments.
If China regains future semiconductor access, it could potentially alter the profit landscape for North American and European miners. The future of global cryptocurrency markets remains intricately linked to geopolitical dynamics between these two economic giants.



