(Washington/Beijing, 16th, Reuters) After U.S. President Trump concluded his trip to Beijing, Reuters analyzed that the summit's results may be limited. After last year's 145% high tariffs on China and intense trade conflicts, US-China relations have now returned to the familiar economic and strategic stalemate of the past. Trump arrived in Beijing on the evening of the 13th and had several interactions with Chinese President Xi Jinping over the following day and a half. These included a bilateral meeting lasting about 2 hours and 15 minutes on the morning of the 14th, a tour of Beijing's historic Temple of Heaven Park on the afternoon of the 14th, a state banquet hosted by the Chinese side on the evening of the 14th, and a small-group meeting at Zhongnanhai on the morning of the 15th. Reuters pointed out that the commercial achievements of this summit fell far short of Trump's fruitful 2017 visit to China, during which accompanying U.S. companies signed agreements and memorandums of understanding worth a total of $250 billion. This year's summit saw no breakthrough regarding the sale of advanced H200 artificial intelligence (AI) chips from U.S. tech giant Nvidia to China. Although Trump claimed that Boeing had finalized a procurement agreement for 200 aircraft with China, this number was far below the expected 500 and also lower than the 300 aircraft Beijing agreed to purchase during Trump's 2017 visit. Trump led a delegation of U.S. corporate giants, including Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, but apart from enjoying a grand banquet, most gained little. The summit also failed to secure a public commitment from China to help the U.S. end the war in Iran. In contrast, the U.S. side did not publicly mention several long-standing demands, such as asking China to address its overcapacity and its practice of dumping low-priced goods abroad, reflecting a shift in the U.S. tone. Scott Kennedy, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Stu