Japanese executives absent from China’s key annual summit amid tensions

No Japanese business executives will attend the China Development Forum (CDF) in Beijing this week amid ongoing diplomatic friction with China, according to an internal list seen by the South China Morning Post. Nearly 80 top executives from foreign firms, mainly from the US, are set to join the two-day event. Some Middle East CEOs cancelled due to the Iran war disrupting travel.

As diplomatic friction between China and Japan continues, no Japanese business executives will attend a key forum of multinational companies in Beijing this coming week, according to an internal list seen by the South China Morning Post. Nearly 80 top executives from major foreign corporations, with those from the US making up the largest group, will attend the China Development Forum (CDF) from Sunday to Monday. Key figures set to attend include Apple’s Tim Cook, Volkswagen’s Oliver Blume and Samsung Electronics’ Lee Jae-yong. Other major corporations sending representatives this year include TotalEnergies, Mercedes-Benz, Maersk, SK Hynix, Siemens, Broadcom, Cargill and AstraZeneca. Meanwhile, some foreign CEOs – including a few from the Middle East – who had been invited and scheduled to attend the annual event cancelled their trips, as the Iran war interrupted international travel and their operations at home, according to multiple sources.

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Zhao Leji speaking at Boao Forum for Asia, vowing further opening-up amid international delegates.
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Zhao Leji, chairman of China's National People's Congress Standing Committee, reaffirmed commitments to high-standard opening-up and domestic demand in a keynote speech Thursday at the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2026 plenary. The event in Boao, Hainan province, themed "Shaping a Shared Future: New Dynamics, New Opportunities, New Cooperation," drew over 1,600 representatives from more than 60 countries and regions.

The prime ministers of Singapore and South Korea will attend this month's Boao Forum for Asia, joining a growing list of world leaders visiting China this year. The annual conference is scheduled for March 24 to 27 in Boao, Hainan province. South Korea's prime minister follows his president's recent four-day visit in January amid reviving bilateral ties.

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Conflict in the Middle East and global turbulence following US-Israeli strikes against Iran have prompted foreign investors to seek certainty in China. Speakers at the China Development Forum highlighted this trend.

Several anonymous sources say Chinese government departments are researching potential demands from the US leader and formulating possible concessions for a Trump-Xi summit. China has not formally announced Trump's visit, but its foreign ministry stated the two countries have been in communication about the trip.

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US President Donald Trump has confirmed a delay to his planned trip to Beijing to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, due to the escalating US-Israel war with Iran. The visit, originally scheduled for March 31 to April 2, has been postponed by five or six weeks. Trump stated that China is fine with the delay and relations remain strong.

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