President Trump’s second-term trade strategies haven’t shifted Beijing’s stance, casting doubt on a visit to China by October 31. The May 31 market sits at 79.5% YES, up from 72% a week ago.
Market reaction
The May 31 market at 79.5% YES reflects trader expectations that a visit could fall within that window. The June 30 market is at 86% YES, only slightly higher. The 83-point jump from the April 30 market to the May 31 market suggests traders see a specific catalyst in May.
Why it matters
The combined markets have a face value of $116,697, but actual USDC traded is only $26,646. That gap between notional exposure and real money committed suggests the high YES odds may overstate genuine conviction. The largest recent move was a modest 2-point drop in the June market, pointing to some skepticism.
That skepticism traces to unresolved trade tensions and military movements affecting US-China relations. The EU retaliation market could see higher odds given ongoing tariff disputes with no diplomatic progress. At 1% YES for an April visit, immediate developments are off the table, leaving traders focused on May and June.
What to watch
For traders, buying YES in the May market at 79.5¢ offers a potential 1.19x return if the visit occurs. The risk is whether diplomatic tensions ease by then. Watch for announcements from the White House or Beijing on summit logistics, or unexpected geopolitical developments like an escalation in the Iran conflict. Confirmation of new summit dates would be the clearest catalyst.
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