Boeing, Citigroup CEOs set to join Trump on China visit next week

Trump's initial travel plan to China was delayed by about six weeks at the U.S.' request in light of the Iran war.

Boeing, Citigroup CEOs set to join Trump on China visit next week

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg set to join President Trump on China trip next week, source says

President Donald Trump is set to be accompanied by multiple CEOs on his high-stakes visit to China next week, sources told CNBC on Thursday.

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg, whose company is poised to ink a large aircraft order with China, is set to head to that country to join Trump, a source familiar with the plane maker's plans said. Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser has also been invited on the trip and plans to go, according to another person familiar with the matter.

They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss plans that haven't been made public.

Trump is currently set to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on May 14 and 15.

Both Boeing and Citigroup have business interests in China.

Ortberg said on an earnings call late last month that China could soon place an order for a "big number" of Boeing planes, breaking a yearslong drought for the company.

And Fraser, in an interview with Bloomberg News in November, said Citigroup is seeing renewed interest in China from investors. Citi, which doesn't offer consumer banking there, has operated in China since 1902.

Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser leaves following a meeting with members of the Senate Banking Committee at the U.S. Capitol Visitors Center on Dec. 11, 2025 in Washington, DC.

Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

Any new deal Boeing with China is "100% dependent" on U.S.-Chinese relations, including the outcome of the Trump-Xi summit, Ortberg said.

While Boeing has recently resumed deliveries of some aircraft to China in the years following a pause after two crashes of the company's 737 Max 8 jets in 2018 and 2019, it's been almost a decade since Chinese airlines made a big order with Boeing.

Those airlines have, however, purchased from Boeing's main rival, Airbus. China Southern Airlines agreed to buy 137 Airbus A320 aircraft valued at $21.4 billion at list prices, according to a post on the Shanghai Stock Exchange last week.

Airbus orders from China, including the China Southern sale, since 2025 are worth about $55 billion at list prices, the post on the exchange said — final prices weren't disclosed and airlines generally receive discounts for big orders.

China in March was closing in on an agreement to order up to 500 of Boeing's 737 Max jets, Bloomberg reported at the time.

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The order was set to be unveiled during Trump's China trip, which was originally set to take place in late March and early April. But that travel plan was delayed at the U.S.' request in light of the Iran war, which began on Feb. 28, according to Trump.

The war has put new pressures on Trump and Xi's relationship, raising concerns that the China trip could be delayed once again or canceled entirely. China is the world's largest buyer of oil and gas from the Persian Gulf, where energy flows have slowed to a trickle as the Strait of Hormuz remains choked off due to the war.

A massive order from Chinese airlines, while expected, would be a big boost for Boeing, which is in the process of ramping up production of a new narrow-body Max as well as its wide-body 787 Dreamliner jets, after years of safety and manufacturing crises.

China was the first country to ground the 737 Max after the 2019 crash. It lifted its grounding in late 2021, about a year after the U.S. did.