From the Trump Xi meeting in China to the global race for advanced semiconductors,
North Asia is increasingly at the center of both geopolitics and markets.
So what's driving the region's momentum and can it continue?
Welcome to Exchanges, the weekly show where I find out how we here at Goldman
Sachs are making sense of the most consequential events impacting economies and markets.
I'm Alison Nathan.
My guest today is Tim Mo, Chief Asia-Pacific Regional Equity Strategist
and Co-Head of Macro Research in Asia in Goldman Sachs Research.
We'll be discussing the implications of the Trump G meeting, the semiconductor chip shortage,
and the broader forces shaping markets across North Asia.
Tim, welcome to Exchanges.
Well, thank you so much for having me.
Tim, let's start with last week's much anticipated summit between President Trump and China's President Xi Jinping.
What stood out most to you from those discussions?
I think the key takeaway is that it appears no harm was done.
I know that sounds like a very low bar,
but if you want to classify the various presidential meetings, US presidential meetings with...
Chinese counterparts, there's an accepted scholarly classification structure of six different
levels ranging from most positive and consequential to most negative.
And this was in the middle with not really a lot of major change,