U.S. policy toward China remains one of the most consequential and uncertain areas of geopolitics and international trade. These four prediction markets track potential announcements from the Trump administration on key dimensions of China relations: new economic sanctions, restrictions on military support to Taiwan, adjustments to existing tariffs, and changes to artificial intelligence export controls. The markets are grouped together because they represent interconnected but distinct policy choices within a single strategic relationship. While no single announcement necessarily predicts another, they collectively reflect how policymakers might navigate competing priorities in trade, security, and technology competition. When examining prices across these markets, consider what each outcome might signal about broader policy direction. A tariff reduction, for instance, could suggest a shift toward negotiation and deal-making, while new AI export restrictions might indicate tougher focus on technological competition. Probability movements often accelerate when new information enters the market—statements from officials, economic reports, or diplomatic developments can shift expectations quickly. These markets operate continuously, allowing traders and observers to refine their forecasts as conditions evolve. The natural correlations among outcomes create opportunities for both specialized traders who focus on one policy domain and portfolio traders who hedge across multiple related markets, depending on their confidence in forecasting each dimension of policy.