Xi made the remarks during a speech Monday at the opening of the inaugural China International Import Expo in Shanghai, an event designed to demonstrate the country's importance as a destination for foreign goods.
Despite the prominence of the event for China, no senior US government officials attended, further underscoring the strained relationship between the two countries.
Although he never mentioned Trump or the United States by name during his speech, Xi said there was no room for protectionism in international trade.
"Today, with the deepening of economic globalization, 'law of the jungle' and 'winner-takes-all' are a dead end," he said.
"A global economy is an irreversible trend and won't change because of one person," the Chinese leader told delegates. "Every country should against protectionism and build an open economy."
Xi's presence was intended to show the importance Beijing is placing on the trade fair, which was attended by more than 3,600 companies from over 150 countries, according to state-run broadcaster CGTN.
Xi and Trump are expected to meet one-on-one at a G20 summit in Argentina in late November to address the trade tensions. The two leaders spoke for the first time in months on Thursday in a phone call that Trump described as "long and very good."
The call raised hopes among investors that the two governments could be moving toward a ceasefire in the trade war after months of escalation.
But there remain many unanswered questions about how Beijing can appease US complaints over unfair trade practices and technology theft, which other major economies like the European Union have also raised.
Speaking to CNBC on Friday, top White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said the two countries were "not on the cusp of a deal."
Xi's comments came during the final stretch of the campaign for the US midterm elections, in which Trump's Republican Party could lose control of the House of Representatives to the Democrats.
Experts say China shouldn't expect a significant change in trade policy if the Democrats do make inroads in Congress, where the Republicans currently control both the House and the Senate.
"I don't think Beijing understands just how popular in DC a tougher line on China is," Issac Stone Fish, senior fellow at the Asia Society, told CNN.
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