
Trump shifts US-China strategy on trade to dealmaking
As the U.S. and China move from a battle over economic principles to managing the status quo, who is winning? Write to me at [email protected].
Include your full name and location, and I might publish your response in an upcoming issue (if you’re reading this in your inbox, you can just hit reply).This is an edition of the WSJ China newsletter, a weekly dispatch of exclusive insights on the contest between the U.S. and China, brought to you by the WSJ’s top China correspondent.
If you’re not subscribed, sign up here.China has spent years preparing for the Iran oil crisis.Xi is enforcing his demand for ethnic unity across the country.China’s economy is off to a steady start in 2026 amid lowered expectations.The country has resumed military flights around Taiwan after a sudden 10-day hiatus.An OpenClaw craze in China has buoyed tech stocks and fueled an AI pivot.ByteDance is arranging access to 36,000 Nvidia Blackwell chips, worth over $2.5 billion, through a company in Malaysia, part of an effort to navigate around U.S. export controls.Last week, we asked whether China is still an engine of global growth with the “Iron Rooster” now running the books.
Some shared their thoughts:“By cutting the 2026 growth target, Beijing merely acknowledged that accelerating export growth won’t offset decelerating domestic demand growth. Anti-involution is the only relief producers in other countries can expect from Beijing.” — Tim Condon, Costa Rica“China will continue to be a major supplier to the global economy.
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