Trump’s Upcoming Visit to China: Mapping Out the Market’s Potential Winners

Source Tradingkey

TradineKey - As President Trump prepares for his long‑anticipated visit to China at the end of March, diplomacy is once again taking center stage in global markets. Reuters reported on the 13th that Chinese Premier He Lifeng will meet U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in Paris on March 15–16, a meeting described by both governments as a pre‑summit consultation — a careful sifting of agendas ahead of the main stage in Beijing later this month.

The two negotiators are not meeting for the first time. Their previous discussions, while cordial, yielded little substance. This time the context could not be more pressing. After the U.S. Supreme Court last month struck down parts of Trump’s tariff proposals, Bessent faces mounting pressure to align trade lists with his Chinese counterpart before the leaders’ meeting. For the administration, having a clear set of deliverables on tariffs, trade imbalances, and market access has become critical to ensuring that the visit produces outcomes both governments can claim as progress.

Expectations surrounding the summit reflect this sense of urgency. News from multiple international outlets suggest that Beijing plans to display goodwill through increased purchases of soybeans, corn, energy products, and possibly Boeing aircraft. Washington, for its part, may offer limited relief on high tariffs or technology‑export restrictions. Trump’s central goal, analysts believe, is to extend the current trade truce and prevent another escalation of tariffs. Yet the depth of any deal remains uncertain: the Taiwan issue and other geopolitical tensions continue to cast long shadows over the negotiating table.

Trump has long fixated on rare‑earth supplies, seeing them as a strategic vulnerability for the United States. China’s dominance in this field is unrivaled. The rare‑earth metals are indispensable for electric‑vehicle motors, wind‑turbine generators, defense radar systems, missile guidance, and semiconductor‑equipment manufacturing. Recently, Beijing tightened export standards, expanding its licensing regime to include overseas products containing a certain proportion of Chinese‑origin rare‑earth material. In doing so, China effectively built a traceable, controllable framework over the entire downstream supply chain, leaving the U.S. in a reactive position on key mineral security.

This rare‑earth maneuver mirrors Trump’s own restrictions on advanced technology exports. His administration initially banned Nvidia’s most powerful chips from being shipped to China, later loosening the rule to allow exports of a modified H200 version. If the upcoming talks in Paris and later in Beijing can inch toward even limited coordination between resource controls and high‑tech exports, the result would provide much‑needed breathing room for technology giants strained by the pressure of decoupling.

But just as the world’s two largest economies prepare to reopen dialogue, upheaval in the Middle East has added a volatile new variable. U.S. and Israeli air operations against Iran have continued for two weeks, with reports claiming that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed during one of the strikes. Around the same time, U.S. forces intervened in Venezuela and captured President Nicolás Maduro — two leaders of nations central to China’s oil imports. Together, these moves signal Washington’s willingness to use force against governments aligned with or economically significant to Beijing.

For now, the Iran campaign seems to have tilted psychological advantage toward Washington. Yet it may prove a fleeting edge. A prolonged conflict that rattles energy markets would erode that leverage, as inflation and fiscal pressures at home begin to mount. America’s own allies are already feeling the strain of surging oil prices amid regional instability. The longer the Middle East conflict drags on, the harder it becomes for Washington to sustain both its economic confidence and diplomatic flexibility.

Trump thus faces a dual challenge. On one hand, he must maintain his posture of toughness on Iran; on the other, he needs to reach an understanding with Beijing on safeguarding global energy and shipping stability — to prevent oil prices and inflation from undermining the very economy he aims to defend. For both sides, there may lie common ground in ensuring that the Middle East does not spiral into a crisis capable of destabilizing global trade routes.

Against this intricate geopolitical backdrop, Wall Street has been quietly running its own simulations. Should the economic agreements materialize smoothly, the beneficiaries would likely be companies tied to trade and infrastructure — sectors that serve as tangible symbols of policy success. Boeing, Archer Daniels Midland, and Bunge would stand among the early winners, buoyed by new orders. Energy giants such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron could enjoy the advantages of relatively high but stable crude prices under the assumption of secure shipping channels.

If technology‑export restrictions ease, semiconductor players like Nvidia and AMD would find renewed flexibility in their China‑related businesses. In consumer markets, supply‑chain‑dependent retailers such as Walmart and Amazon would benefit from the containment of import costs. And even if the broader technology rivalry endures, domestic resource developers like MP Materials would likely continue to receive policy tailwinds as Washington seeks to strengthen its own rare‑earth footing.

Below are the U.S. equities that could benefit most directly from progress in the upcoming U.S.–China dialogue:

Integrated Energy: Exxon Mobil (XOM), Chevron (CVX) Oilfield Services and Shipping: Schlumberger (SLB), Halliburton (HAL), Frontline (FRO) Agricultural Trade and Farming: Archer‑Daniels‑Midland (ADM), Bunge (BG), Corteva (CTVA) Major Aerospace Manufacturing: Boeing (BA) Defense and Military Contractors: Lockheed Martin (LMT), Raytheon Technologies (RTX), Northrop Grumman (NOC) Semiconductors and Computing Power: NVIDIA (NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Marvell Technology (MRVL) Power Grid and Infrastructure: Quanta Services (PWR), AECOM (ACM), NextEra Energy (NEE) Mass Consumer and Retail: Walmart (WMT), Target (TGT), Costco (COST), Amazon (AMZN) E‑Commerce and Logistics: Amazon (AMZN), FedEx (FDX), UPS (UPS) Rare Earths and Resource Development: MP Materials (MP), Lynas (LYSDY)

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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