We’re going to wrap up our live coverage of the G20 summit for the day. Here’s a summary of where things stand:

St Pauli’s technical director Ewald Lienen told The Guardian’s Berlin correspondent Philip Oltermann of his concerns about the escalating situation in the city:

The club, whose supporters have a reputation around the world for their leftwing and countercultural politics, has even offered up its stadium as a shelter for protesters during the G20 summit.

The stadium of Hamburg’s football club FC St Pauli is right in the heart of the district where many of this week’s clashes between protesters and police have taken place.

It’s tempting to think that Trump and Putin are cut from the same cloth.

“We spoke over the phone with you several times,” Putin replied. “But phone conversations are never enough, definitely.” How true. In any long-distance relationship, you need something more physical to make it real. Along with a team of collaborators with curiously close ties throughout a big election and its aftermath.

“We look forward to a lot of very positive things happening for Russia and for the United States and for everybody concerned,” Trump offered. You can only wonder at the scale of conservative outrage if Barack Obama had hoped first for Russian happiness, and second for American success.

As they leaned deeply towards one another in Hamburg, it was all too easy to see and hear the similarities between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin . Trump said it was “an honor” to be with Putin, who gushed that he was “delighted to meet” Trump.

#Putin pool reporter has his own take on the outcome of the long-awaited first meeting with #Trump https://t.co/EhOavY0HTq

There have been no reports that Trump mentioned the Russian takeover of Crimea in his meeting with Putin. On Thursday Trump accused Russia of “destabilizing activities” in Ukraine and elsewhere.

Analysis: Putin likely to count Trump meeting as a win

Guardian Moscow correspondent Shaun Walker writes:

Vladimir Putin is likely to count the format and tone of his long meeting with Donald Trump as a win – even if nothing much of substance was discussed.

Russia’s election hacking was raised during the meeting, but it does not appear to have taken top billing. US secretary of state Rex Tillerson said Trump was “rightly focused on how do we move forward” from the issue, while Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov even claimed Trump had told Putin he accepted the Russian leader’s denials of involvement.

Setting up a working group on non-interference in future elections – as Tillerson said had been agreed – is hardly likely to reassure those in Washington worried about Russia’s actions.

A trustworthy account of exactly how the meeting went down is unlikely to surface: another win for Putin was the makeup of the room. In addition to the two presidents, the only people present were the respective foreign ministers and two translators. This means there is no chance of leaks, as happened when Lavrov visited the White House in May and it later emerged that Trump had shared sensitive intelligence with the Russians.

The personalised format of the meeting excluded those in Trump’s team who are more sceptically minded on Russia, such as national security adviser HR McMaster, and Trump’s senior Russia adviser Fiona Hill, a longstanding Russia expert.

Russian television emphasised the length of the meeting, which ran more than four times over its scheduled half-hour length, as a sign of Russia’s importance. The news of a US-Russia agreement on a ceasefire in southwestern Syria, announced as the meeting was ongoing, is an example of the kind of top-table diplomacy Putin would like to do with Trump.

Putin looked impassive, but he would have been smiling inside. As journalists were hurried out of the room, Putin appeared to gesture to Trump and ask if these journalists were the ones who had insulted Trump, laughing at his own joke.

Presumably Putin had been briefed that a disdain for supposed “fake news” would be a promising area of potential common ground with the US president.

Updated at 12.08 EST