The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing on May 14-15 produced competing U.S. and Chinese readouts that now shape trader assessments of announcements by the May 22 cutoff. Trump highlighted claimed commitments on $17 billion in annual U.S. agricultural purchases through 2028, renewed access for American beef and poultry, Boeing aircraft orders, rare earth supply-chain cooperation, and joint statements on keeping the Strait of Hormuz open plus preventing an Iranian nuclear weapon. Beijing emphasized tariff rollbacks, new bilateral trade and investment councils, and a call for U.S. caution on Taiwan while downplaying specific purchase volumes. These verified outcomes from primary statements, against a backdrop of prior 2025-2026 trade tensions, form the factual record traders evaluate for market resolution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated$1,720,188 Vol.
Tariff Reduction
No
U.S.-China AI Safety Channel
Yes
Detained Americans Release
No
US-China Board of Trade
Yes
Taiwan Arms Sales Halt
Yes
AI Export Restrictions Relief
No
New Sanctions
No
$1,720,188 Vol.
Tariff Reduction
No
U.S.-China AI Safety Channel
Yes
Detained Americans Release
No
US-China Board of Trade
Yes
Taiwan Arms Sales Halt
Yes
AI Export Restrictions Relief
No
New Sanctions
No
A “U.S.-China Board of Trade” refers to a new formal board, body, council, dialogue or equivalent mechanism established between the United States and China for the purpose of managing, coordinating, expanding, or reviewing trade between the two countries.
Only definitive announcements will qualify. Suggestions, negotiations, expressions of openness, or other non-definitive statements will not qualify.
Any qualifying announcement within this market’s time frame will count, regardless of whether or when the Board of Trade is actually established.
The primary resolution source will be official information from Donald Trump and the Trump administration; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: May 12, 2026, 10:42 AM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Outcome proposed: Yes
No dispute
Final outcome: Yes
A “U.S.-China Board of Trade” refers to a new formal board, body, council, dialogue or equivalent mechanism established between the United States and China for the purpose of managing, coordinating, expanding, or reviewing trade between the two countries.
Only definitive announcements will qualify. Suggestions, negotiations, expressions of openness, or other non-definitive statements will not qualify.
Any qualifying announcement within this market’s time frame will count, regardless of whether or when the Board of Trade is actually established.
The primary resolution source will be official information from Donald Trump and the Trump administration; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Outcome proposed: Yes
No dispute
Final outcome: Yes
The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing on May 14-15 produced competing U.S. and Chinese readouts that now shape trader assessments of announcements by the May 22 cutoff. Trump highlighted claimed commitments on $17 billion in annual U.S. agricultural purchases through 2028, renewed access for American beef and poultry, Boeing aircraft orders, rare earth supply-chain cooperation, and joint statements on keeping the Strait of Hormuz open plus preventing an Iranian nuclear weapon. Beijing emphasized tariff rollbacks, new bilateral trade and investment councils, and a call for U.S. caution on Taiwan while downplaying specific purchase volumes. These verified outcomes from primary statements, against a backdrop of prior 2025-2026 trade tensions, form the factual record traders evaluate for market resolution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated


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