Trump’s CEO-filled China visit can decide whether Bitcoin’s $80,000 risk rally survives this week

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Bitcoin is hovering just below $80,000 as President Donald Trump arrives in Beijing for a high-stakes meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, turning the visit into a live test of whether the crypto market’s latest risk rally has enough support to survive a difficult macro week.

The trip comes as traders are already contending with hotter inflation data, rising Treasury yields, and a Bitcoin rally that has leaned heavily on derivatives positioning rather than deep spot demand.

That combination has left the market unusually sensitive to headlines from Beijing, where any shift in trade, technology, or supply-chain policy could quickly feed through global risk assets.

For Bitcoin, the China visit is less about direct digital-asset policy than the broader market signal it sends.

A constructive meeting could ease fears of another round of escalation between the world’s two largest economies and help extend the risk-on bid that pushed BTC back toward $80,000.

Conversely, a breakdown could have the opposite effect, forcing traders to reassess a rally already showing signs of strain.

China visit becomes Bitcoin’s risk-sentiment test

Trump’s arrival in Beijing marks the first visit by a US president to China since 2017 and places trade, technology, and strategic competition at the center of global markets for the week.

The US president’s delegation reflects the economic stakes. Trump is joined by senior officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, as well as business leaders from technology and finance.

NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, and Apple CEO Tim Cook are among the executives whose presence reflects how deeply US-China relations now run through chips, artificial intelligence, electric vehicles, and global manufacturing.

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Those issues matter directly for equity markets and indirectly for crypto. Bitcoin has traded less like an isolated monetary hedge during recent macro shocks and more like a high-beta expression of global liquidity, risk appetite, and investor confidence.

When traders expect looser financial conditions or reduced geopolitical pressure, Bitcoin tends to benefit. When trade tensions rise and yields climb, crypto often loses its speculative cushion.

That makes the tone of the Trump-Xi meeting crucial. Any signal that Washington and Beijing are willing to soften trade barriers, reopen channels on technology restrictions, or negotiate around rare-earth exports could support a broader risk rally.

At the same time, commitments tied to agricultural purchases, energy flows, or aircraft orders would also give markets a reason to price in reduced trade friction.

However, the reverse would be more difficult for Bitcoin. A dispute over Taiwan, export controls, rare-earth minerals, or military positioning could push investors back toward cash, Treasuries, and the dollar.

In that scenario, Bitcoin’s claim as digital gold would again be tested against its recent behavior as a leveraged risk asset.

Inflation leaves little room for disappointment

The Beijing summit is carrying more weight because the US macro backdrop has already narrowed Bitcoin’s margin for error.

This is because the April inflation data showed that price pressures remain too firm for markets to price in a more accommodative Federal Reserve path with confidence.

The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8% from a year earlier, while core inflation, which strips out food and energy, stood at 2.8%. Energy prices rose 17.9% annually, keeping headline inflation well above the Fed’s 2% target.

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Producer prices added to the pressure. The Producer Price Index rose 6% from a year earlier in April, while the 1.4% monthly increase marked the largest gain since March 2022.

US Producer Price Index

The data reinforced concerns that companies are still facing cost pressures that could eventually be passed on to consumers.

The market response was immediate. US Treasury yields pushed higher, with the 10-year yield moving back toward 4.4%, while traders scaled back expectations for near-term Fed relief.

That repricing creates a more restrictive environment for speculative assets because higher yields increase the appeal of safer income-producing instruments.

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