Previous plans for Mr. Xi and President Trump to conclude a deal on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit at the end of next week in Chile were thrown into disarray when the Chilean government canceled the meeting last week because of street protests in the capital, Santiago. Mr. Trump has suggested that a signing could be held in Iowa instead.
Mr. Xi did not mention on Tuesday when, where or even whether an agreement might be signed.
China is also trying to finalize by January the regulations for a new legal code governing foreign investment. The National People’s Congress, China’s rubber-stamp legislature, approved the new legal code last March, but it was little more than a framework, with some critical issues addressed by only a single sentence and the details left to be resolved in the regulations.
Carlo Diego D’Andrea, the chairman of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, said on Monday that draft regulations released last month offered some improvements. But by preserving a separate legal code for foreign investors, he said, the new arrangement ensures that they will not be treated completely equally to domestic investors.
At the same time, China continues to impose many rules that deeply frustrate foreign investors, he said.
“You have hundreds of regulations and indirect barriers that make your life miserable doing business here,” Mr. D’Andrea said.
The import expo is designed to promote an image of China as a big customer for foreign exporters and as a proponent of free trade. More than 3,000 companies from around the world have sent delegates or opened exhibit booths at Shanghai’s immense convention center, which has five times the exhibition area of the Javits Center in New York City.