European and US stock markets climbed Thursday as a tech-fuelled rally rolled on even as the United States and China were locked in talks in Beijing, accompanied by key US business leaders hoping for deals.
US President Donald Trump and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping met for a closely watched summit that covered thorny issues including Taiwan, but yielded few concrete outcomes in its opening phase.
Trump and Xi are set to discuss extending a one-year tariff truce, which the two leaders reached during their last meeting in South Korea in October, though a deal is far from certain.
China’s controls on rare earth and agriculture exports are also expected to be on the menu.
Wall Street’s leading indices pushed higher, with both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite setting new all-time highs on AI bullishness.
“This positive bias is rooted in the positive disposition of many tech stocks,” Briefing.com analyst Patrick O’Hare wrote before the start of trading.
Cisco shares rose more than 15 percent, buoyed by stronger-than-expected quarterly results and forecasts for the current quarter.
Shares in the so-called magnificent seven tech stocks — Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla — climbed two percent Wednesday and rose another 0.7 percent as trading got underway on Thursday.
Accompanying Trump is a US delegation including high-powered business leaders such as Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, Apple’s Tim Cook and Tesla’s Elon Musk.
“China’s doors to the outside world will open wider and wider… American companies will enjoy even brighter prospects in China,” Xi told the business executives, according to Chinese state media.
Analysts said the presence of top executives underscored the deep economic interdependence between the two nations despite years of tensions and talk of decoupling.
Trump praised talks with Xi as “extremely positive and productive” and invited him to visit the White House in September.
European equities finished the day higher, with London advancing 0.5 percent after data showed the UK economy had a solid start to the year, though the Middle East war and political turmoil threatened to cloud the outlook.
Frankfurt won more than one percent and Paris gained 0.9 percent, lifted by tech stocks.
“The UK index has been weighed down by its lack of tech, which is driving a global stock market rally,” said Kathleen Brooks, research director at trading group XTB.
“Politics and a recalibration of interest rate expectations are both failing to dampen the market mood,” Brooks said. “The question now is, how long can it last?”