President Trump will be joined in China this week by 16 chief executives, including Elon Musk and Tim Cook.

The White House distributed a list on Monday of business leaders who are scheduled to be in Beijing with the president. Mr. Trump is slated to depart Washington on Tuesday and hold meetings with Xi Jinping, China’s leader, later in the week.

After the White House sent out its list, Cisco said its chief executive, Chuck Robbins, was unable to attend.

The inclusion of Mr. Musk in the delegation is the latest sign that the world’s richest man has restored his relationship with the president. Mr. Musk served as a top adviser to Mr. Trump and oversaw the administration’s effort to overhaul the federal bureaucracy. He departed the administration last May after a falling out with the president, but the two men have rehabilitated their relationship in recent months.

Jensen Huang, the chief executive of Nvidia, wasn’t invited and won’t be going to China this week, according to a person familiar with Mr. Huang’s plans. His absence comes as Nvidia, the world’s most valuable company, awaits approval from both China and the United States to begin shipping an early model of the company’s A.I. chips, the H200, to China.

U.S. officials have said Mr. Trump wants to discuss the creation of a board of investment and a board of trade with China, and the delegation includes business leaders across a wide range of industries.

The delegation list:

Tim Cook of Apple

Larry Fink of BlackRock

Stephen Schwarzman of Blackstone

Kelly Ortberg of Boeing

Brian Sikes of Cargill

Jane Fraser of Citi

Jim Anderson of Coherent

Larry Culp of GE Aerospace

David Solomon of Goldman Sachs

Jacob Thaysen of Illumina

Michael Miebach of Mastercard

Dina Powell McCormick of Meta

Sanjay Mehrotra of Micron

Cristiano Amon of Qualcomm

Elon Musk of Tesla

Ryan McInerney of Visa

Tripp Mickle contributed reporting from San Francisco.