NEED TO KNOW

  • Consumer inflation hit 3.8% in April; Cleveland Fed projects 4.2% in May.
  • Trump's Boeing announcement fell short of investor expectations, dropping the stock 4%.
  • Gas averages $4.50/gallon nationally, up 44% year-over-year on Hormuz closure.

WASHINGTON (TDR) — President Trump returned from a two-day Beijing summit on Friday with a thin trade ledger and an inflation rate climbing faster than anything announced in China can fix.

The big picture: Great Hall pageantry abroad collided with 3.8% annual inflation and rising bond yields at home.

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  • Inflation is now outpacing wage gains, effectively shrinking worker purchasing power
  • The Cleveland Fed projects inflation could hit 4.2% in May as the Iran war keeps energy prices elevated
  • The 10-year Treasury yield climbed to 4.544% Friday, its highest in nearly a year

Why it matters: Midterms are six months out, and primary voters are absorbing the costs in real time — gas, groceries, utilities, airfare, clothing.

Driving the news: The headline deliverable from Beijing was a Boeing announcement Trump himself walked back within hours.

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  • Trump told Fox News that China agreed to buy 200 Boeing 737s, with a "promise" of up to 750 "if they do a good job"
  • Investors had expected closer to 500 jets; Boeing shares fell nearly 4% Thursday — its steepest single-day drop in six months
  • U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer told Bloomberg China would commit $10 billion in agricultural purchases; China has not confirmed

What they're saying:

Yes, but: Trump himself equivocated on the Boeing number aboard Air Force One, telling reporters: "I sort of, I think it was a commitment. I mean, you know, it was sort of like a statement, but I think it was a commitment."

  • The White House has not released a written readout of the agreements
  • China has not publicly confirmed the soybean, LNG, or aircraft figures
  • Trump's previous announced China deals have repeatedly fallen short of stated terms

Between the lines: The inflation pressure didn't come from China. It came from policy choices Trump made and a war Trump has not ended. Tariffs raised import prices, the immigration crackdown thinned the labor supply, and the Iran war shut Hormuz. A Beijing soybean deal doesn't touch any of those drivers. The trip's real product was a photo op against a backdrop voters can't afford to ignore.

What's next:

Should a president negotiating abroad be judged on the pageantry or on what voters feel at the pump — and does the answer change depending on which party holds the White House?

Sources

This report was compiled using reporting from PBS News, The Boston Globe, CNBC, The Hill, and NPR.

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