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Trump's sudden visit to China, the most nervous party might not be the United States, but Wall Street
This time, Trump's visit to China appears to be a diplomatic trip on the surface, but in reality, it's more like a "global market stress test." In recent years, China-U.S. relations have been like a roller coaster, with tariffs today, sanctions tomorrow, and cooperation the day after, causing capital markets to almost become "emotion management experts."
Many netizens think the White House is the most anxious, but in fact, the ones who might be unable to sleep are probably Wall Street. Because what capital fears most is not competition, but uncertainty. One word from Trump causes chips to fall; another causes renewable energy stocks to rise; a third makes gold soar directly.
Interestingly, the more tough Trump is, the more the market expects him to visit China. Because everyone understands a truth: the real "table-flipping" usually doesn't buy plane tickets in advance.
The biggest highlight of this visit to China is not just the content of the talks, but what signals are being sent. If both sides start to resume commercial communication, the global supply chain could be reshuffled; if they continue to test each other, cross-border companies will have to start "overnight PPT revisions."
Netizens joked: "Trump is like a boss suddenly inspecting the company, everyone is pretending to work seriously."
But a more realistic problem is: neither China nor the U.S. can do without each other. Quarrel as they might, business still needs to be done. The world economy is now like a car stuck on an overpass, whoever hits the brakes first will cause a rear-end collision behind.