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Search resuls for: "China wouldn't"


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A worker stores aluminium ingots at the foundry shop of the Rusal Krasnoyarsk aluminium smelter in Krasnoyarsk, Russia October 3, 2018. China, meanwhile, is emerging as an increasingly important market for Rusal's finished products as Western appetite for Russian metal shrinks. China shipped over a million metric tons of alumina in 2022, of which 843,000 metric tons went to Russia. China's imports of primary aluminium vs Russian-brand metalCHINA IMPORTS MORE RUSSIAN METALWhile Chinese alumina has been flowing to Russia, increasing quantities of Russian aluminium have also been entering China. But the world's largest producer is now operating close to a government-mandated capacity cap of 45 million metric tons.
Persons: Ilya Naymushin, Rusal, China wouldn't, Tomasz Janowski Organizations: REUTERS, Rusal's, GAP, London Metal Exchange, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Krasnoyarsk, Russia, Hebei Wenfeng, Queensland, Australia, China, Ukraine, Russian, mushrooming, CHINA, Volgograd, Novokuznetsk, Siberia, Yunnan
AAPL YTD mountain Apple (AAPL) year-to-date performance Many analysts on Wall Street echoed our sentiments, with Credit Suisse calling the recent market reaction "overblown." Jim forecasted Wednesday that Apple stock will likely go higher over the next three months, as consumers begin to trade in their older Apple devices for the company's new offerings. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. Customers line up to enter an Apple store as iPhone 14 series go on sale on September 16, 2022 in Shanghai, China.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Jim, Jim Cramer's Organizations: Wednesday, Apple, Club, China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Street, Credit Suisse, Huawei, CNBC, Visual China, Getty Locations: China, Shanghai
Xie Feng, the Chinese ambassador to the US, said Washington isn't playing fair in its tech race with China. Restrictions on China are like forcing it to wear outdated swimwear while the US wears Speedos, he said. The tech war between the world's two largest economies has been intensifying. On Wednesday, Xie Feng, the Chinese ambassador to the US, found the most unexpected analogy to the US-China tech competition by comparing American restrictions on China to different types of swimwear. It also wants to slap further export restrictions on AI chips to China, the Wall Street Journal reported on June 27.
Persons: Xie Feng, Washington isn't, Xie, we've, Biden, China's Organizations: Aspen Security, Wall Street, Micron Locations: China, Colorado, Netherlands, Beijing
China has so far not acted in an aggressive manner toward shipping in the South China Sea, but the very potential of action creates a clear threat to the economies of Japan and South Korea. Nowhere is that more evident than in President Xi Jinping's "nine-dash" declaration, through which Beijing claims sovereignty over almost all the South China Sea. And of all the countries with cause to be concerned about that claim, perhaps none have more on the line than Japan and South Korea. For Japan and South Korea, the threat to their supply chains and energy imports is a far more real and present issue. Even in a non-wartime situation, China has taken the position that the South China Sea is a controlled territory rather than open international waters under Chinese guardianship.
Persons: Kevin Klowden, Xi Jinping's Organizations: Milken Institute, weekend's Locations: China, South China, Japan, South Korea, Ukraine, East, East Asia, Beijing, Spratly, United States
Fund managers say they are fielding more queries from clients about the odds of an invasion of Taiwan by China. Russia's invasion of Ukraine early last year has also made investors more wary of war risk, analysts said. Goldman Sachs' Cross-Strait Risk Index, which gauges the intensity of geopolitical risk between Taiwan and mainland China, hit a record high last August after then-U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi's trip to Taiwan. Jordan Stuart, client portfolio manager at Federated Hermes, says he cut China exposure last year while holding onto some small stocks that can "fly under the radar". The Taiwan Strait is a major route for ships transporting goods from East Asia to the United States and Europe.
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