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Finally, and most importantly, for the subject for this week's podcast, he's the Esports World Cup CEO. So if I would have any idea, any understanding on video games, right, I would watch that too. There's always a clear qualifying way to go to the Esports World Cup, right? I mean, in stadiums, security is being paid by the state for big competition, like a World Cup, right? Arjun KharpalAnd Ralf are you likely to keep the Esports World Cup in Saudi if you renew this next year?
Persons: Ralf Reichert, CNBC's, Tom Chitty, Reichert, Paris, Ralf Reichart, you've, it's, Arjun Kharpal Ralf, I've, I'd, There's, Arjun Kharpal, we're, haven't, Ralf Reichart It's, what's, Tom Chitty Ralf, What's, I'm, esports, we've, We've, Ralf, Ralf Reichart I'd, that's, Arjun, Tom, we'll Organizations: Sports League Gaming, MLS, Premier League, esports, Saudi Locations: esports, Riyadh, Saudi, German, Gothenburg, Sweden, Bangladesh, China, East, Africa, Saudi Arabia
Florist Kaiva Kaimins may have been born in Australia, but Dalston is home. Kaimins lives and works in the East London enclave, where she set up her floral studio, My Lady Garden, in 2020. Oeno Maris, a fishmonger with a wine bar in the back that hosts regular sashimi nights. Dan's wine shop, a laid-back bar that specializes in natural wines. Watch the video above for an insider's look at how to enjoy your downtime in Dalston.
Persons: Kaimins, Papo's, Oeno Maris Organizations: CNBC Travel, Broadway Locations: Australia, Dalston, East London, York
At the end of [the] 1980s, Japanese companies accounted for like 51% of the global semiconductor market. So by doing this ... one thing undercut Japanese semiconductor chip makers' competitiveness in the global market. Another thing [is] that [it] forced open [the] Japanese semiconductor market to foreign players, and this creates opportunity for the U.S., South Korea and Taiwan. And Japanese companies are trying to both develop their own capacity but also attract phone companies to establish fabs there. So by collaborating with international companies, Japanese companies can leverage their existing technology and manufacturing techniques to expand their global share as well.
Persons: Tom Chitty, Fei Xue, Tom Chitty Well, Arjun, Kharpal Fei, Reagan, Arjun Kharpal, Fei, it's, TSMC, Fei Xue Yes, Rapidus, Arjun Kharpal Fei, they're, there's, ASML, you've, He'd, Tom Chitty Fei, Arjun Arjun Kharpal, Tom, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: TSMC, Rapidus Corporation, Samsung, Economist Intelligence Unit, Economist Intelligence, The Economist, Economist, East, International Relations, U.S, U.S ., Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, IBM, Apple, EV, Japan, Nvidia, Micron, Sony, Nintendo, Canon, South, Samsung Electronics, Tokyo, Screen Holdings Locations: Japan, Taiwan, U.S, Netherlands, Tokyo, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, East Asia, Fei Xue Japan, South Korea, Japan's, Kyushu, Kumamoto Prefecture, TSMC, That's, China, Kumamoto
The International Olympic Committee will hand out more than 300 medals over the course of the Paris Games, but it won't hand out any cash. Without them, there would be no Olympics," Bloom told CNBC Sport. This makes cashing in on Olympic success more complicated than you would expect. "But then, like many athletes know, injuries aren't just a physical thing. Find out more about how Olympic athletes cash in on their dream by watching the video above.
Persons: Ben Bloom, Bloom, Desiree Henry, aren't, Henry Organizations: Olympic, Paris Games, Games, CNBC Sport, Sport, Britain, Business, Elite Locations: Hong Kong, Singapore, Great Britain, Sweden, Norway, Paris
Along with its S24 series of smartphones, foldable devices, smartwatches and now the Galaxy Ring, Samsung is hoping to lock users into its world of products held together with its suite of artificial intelligence features, known as Galaxy AI. Arjun KharpalOne of the things Samsung said was look, the ring is one product, but we've got the watch, we've got the smartphone. I think that's the right approach for Samsung, I don't think they have unrealistic expectations for volumes on this. And you'd feel like if there was some sort of Apple ring, it would do pretty good volumes. Do you think Samsung is seriously looking at ways to monetize this via subscriptions or other kinds of service business model?
Persons: aren't, Tom Chitty, Ben Wood, Meta's Ray, Arjun, Tom Chitty I've, I've, we've, Arjun Kharpal, let's, It's, That's, it's, you've, they've, there's, they're, someone's, I'm, that's, you'll, Ben Wood It's, smartwatch, Arjun Kharpal Apple's, Ben Wood They've, Tim Cook, He's, who'd, Tom Chitty Diamond, somebody's, who've, wasn't, Samsung hasn't, we'll, Ben, they'll, Will, wearables, Kharpal, Arjun Kharpal Tom, Tom, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: Samsung, South, Galaxy, CNBC, CCS Insight, Mobile, Apple, Garmin, Apple Watch, U.S, Vision, Samsung Electronics, Google, MWC Locations: South Korean, Paris, France, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, There's, Finland, London
UK Sport, a government agency responsible for investing money into Olympic and Paralympic sports, was founded just one year later. The money, sourced through the government and the National Lottery, was transformative for the nation's Olympic program. They just can't do that because there isn't enough money," Bloom said. So how do you inspire the next generation of Olympic athletes without huge sums of money? Watch as the athletes, their coaches and parents grapple with the price of a dream by clicking the video above.
Persons: Ben Bloom, Katherine Grainger, Bloom, Emily Hutt, Willem Murray, Freddie Polak Organizations: Atlanta Olympic Games, Olympic, Paralympic, National Lottery, Sport, English Premier League, CNBC, Elite, Watch Locations: Great Britain, Britain
But this was not a Microsoft issue. Tom ChittyWe're going to talk more about who CrowdStrike are, I think, you know, some people would probably never have heard of CrowdStrike. Lots and lots and lots of global businesses rely on CrowdStrike for their security. I had first seen that and thought it was a Microsoft issue, the reason why Windows crashed on my PC. It was a CrowdStrike issue.
Persons: Tom Chitty, We'll, I've, Arjun Kharpal, you've, Tom Chitty We're, let's, Arjun Kharpal CrowdStrike, George Kurtz, Kharpal, CrowdStrike, they're, it's, they've, Tom Chitty Well, what's, Arjun Kharpal We'd, Iyou, It's, who've, there's, Ciaran Martin, Patrick Anderson, Arjun, Tom, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: Microsoft, Industries, CNBC, Netflix, NBC, Sky News, Tom Chitty Airlines, Civil Aviation, CrowdStrike, U.S, Board, U.S . Homeland Security Department, Google, National Cybersecurity Center, Anderson Economic Group, CNN Locations: U.S, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, CNBC's London, London, Europe, China, Russia, Arjun Kharpal China, Moscow, what's, Michigan
Brimming with entrepreneurs and around 1,000 startup companies, it embodies France's exciting tech industry. So if you could rank Europe's tech hubs, what would be your top three? But I'm really excited about Lisbon actually, I know the Mayor of Lisbon pretty well, have been hearing really positive things. I mean things like that could just be completely deprioritized, which is essentially what has been helping us move things forward in France. Under Macron what have been for you the big positives that have come out of his presidency and tech push more broadly.
Persons: Tom Chitty, Roxanne Varza, Bruno Le Maire, Tom Chitty The, you'll, Arjun, I've, Roxanne, Macron, we'd, we've, Tom Chitty Let's, Xavier Niel, he's, Roxanne Varza That's, we're, I'm, Roxanne Varza Paris, Tom Chitty Arjun, Arjun Kharpal, What's, There's, you've, haven't, They're, Roxanne Varza Big, Tom Chitty U.S, Arjun Kharpal It's, who's, that's, there's, they've, we'll, Tom, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: Meta, Google, CNBC, Uber, Accel, Dealroom, Mistral, Viva Tech, Sequoia Capital, Big Tech, Microsoft, French Finance, London Stock Exchange, London . Locations: Paris, France, French, Europe, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, London, Berlin, U.S, Silicon Valley, Palo Alto, Bay, Amsterdam, Lisbon, Old, Shoreditch, London . Tel Aviv
But it will remain a big, big trend. How has if at all, Brexit, affected the U.K. tech scene? Arjun KharpalAre there other challenges at the moment, as you see them to the U.K. tech landscape? I'm gonna go with the amount of VC funding in U.K. tech startups for 2025. Sanjot MalhiI would say that is the amount of funding in U.K. AI startups.
Persons: Tom Chitty, Arjun, we'll, Arjun Kharpal, I've, Sanjot, He's, It's, Tom Chitty I've, we've, it's, Arjun Kharpal Sanjot, fintech, we're, you've, let's, Tom Chitty We're, Franklin Templeton, they're, Masa, Softbank, that's, Arjun Kharpal Sanjay, Emmanuel, Macron, hasn't, who's, Emmanuel Macron, I'm, Sanjot Malhi, Arjun Kharpal That's, Kharpal, Tom Chitty Sanjot Organizations: HSBC Innovation Banking, CNBC, Northzone, Hague Cricket Club, European Union, Competition, Markets Authority, London Stock Exchange, London, Masa, Viva Tech, Mistral, Nvidia Locations: Europe, Dealroom, France, China, London, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, Netherlands, India, The Hague, Germany, Sweden, North America, Asia, San Francisco, Beijing, Tel Aviv, Bangalore, U.S, British, doesn't, Ukraine, IPOs
Why Apple is betting big on India
  + stars: | 2024-04-22 | by ( Arjun Kharpal | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +26 min
I think one estimate put, at one point, I think China was producing something like 90% of the world's iPhones. So when we talk about, you know, Apple manufacturing elsewhere, it's going take a long time to significantly ramp up iPhone production elsewhere. And you know, opening a physical Apple store often for Apple is a sign of a big deal. But you know, Apple looking at India going, wow, we've only got 7% of market share there, we could grow huge amounts. And of course, as we know, with Apple, the hardware is the, you know, one side of the equation, but also, you know, Apple makes billions of dollars off of its services business, which includes things like its App Store fees, it's Apple Pay, Apple TV, all of those other products and services.
Persons: Tim Cook, Apple, it's, It's, Tom Chitty, we've, Arjun Kharpal, Arjun, they're, let's, hasn't, We've, they've, Apple's, that's, we're, There's, Narendra Modi, Arjun Kharpal It's, Tom Chitty Huawei, Kharpal Huawei, Tim Cook's, I've, haven't, He's, They've, Arjun Kharpal There's, Tom Chitty Oppo, Tom Chitty Xiaomi, Tom Chitty Samsung, You've, They're, Transsion, Tom, Tom Chitty I'm, Kharpal, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: Apple, Bloomberg, CNBC, U.S, Arjun Kharpal It's Samsung, Samsung, China, Apple Watch, Huawei, IDC Locations: India, Foxconn, China, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, Covid, Zhengzhou, Vietnam, Asia, Thailand, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Mumbai, New Delhi, Xiaomi, Europe, U.S, Arjun Kharpal Vietnam, Hanoi , Vietnam, Hanoi, Taiwan, Beijing, America, Africa, The
And that's, that's the whole idea of it. Tom ChittySo if I go and buy bitcoin, the bitcoin I buy is fresh bitcoin that's been mined, not someone who's selling bitcoin is that right? Arjun KharpalThe likelihood is if you buy bitcoin, if we go on an exchange and buy bitcoin, we're selling bitcoin that's in existence already. And so what they say is, well, with the halving, you know, bitcoin will not be devalued. That's that's really what so many of the enthusiasts and proponents love about it.
Persons: Bitcoin, Tom Chitty, Arjun, we'll, Ethereum, Arjun Kharpal Paris, Kharpal, we've, Arjun Kharpal, Tom Chitty 13,777B, that's, what's, they're, bitcoin, there's, That's, It's, you've, Richard Tang, Richard Teng, I'm, he's, Arjun Kharpal That's, Tom, it's, Tom Chitty That's, I've, Arjun Kharpal It's, they've, Binance, Arjun Kharpal Binance, Changpeng Zhao, cryptocurrency, Jan van Eck, Jean, Marie Mognetti, van Eck, Jan Van Eck, Cathy, Gary Gensler, let's, Tom Chitty Let's, Tom Chitty Oh, There's, Tom Chitty Memecoins, Arjun Kharpal They're, we'd, David Hunt, David, Tom Chitty Poor David, Paris, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: CNBC, Eurostar, U.S ., Paris, Department of Justice, U.S, CZ, DOJ, SEC, Mr, Gamestop Locations: beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, Paris, CNBC.com, bitcoin, U.S, Abu Dhabi, Binance, Chicago, Pennsylvania, Elmira , New York, NYC , New York City, Syracuse, Elmira, it's
How India is challenging China as Asia's tech powerhouse
  + stars: | 2024-04-05 | by ( Arjun Kharpal | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +30 min
New Delhi has sought to woo foreign tech companies and has been increasingly successful, with giants like Apple increasing their presence in the country. Tom Chitty: For years China has been Asia's tech powerhouse where the world's electronics and some of the biggest companies on the planet are located. And I think India is in the very early stages, to put it quite bluntly, of trying to do that. Tom Chitty: India have got an election this year as well, which is going to be interesting to see what happens there. You know, India has aligned itself slightly more to the countries that are currently a bit more anti-China, shall we say?
Persons: Tom Chitty, Arjun Kharpal, It's, Let's, I'm, Arjun, You'll, We're, we've, what's, gunning, Narendra Modi, it's, Tom, Modi, Trump, Apple, COVID, there's, Taiwan's, that's, Karen Tso, China's, Tim Cook, Raghuram Rajan, We've, feasibly, India's, let's, he's, you've, we'll, I've, We'll Organizations: Apple, CNBC, China, India's, Foxconn, Micron, Tata Electronics, Taiwan's Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, Reserve Bank of India, CCP, Samsung, Bain, India, London Locations: China, Tencent, Asia, India, Delhi, Washington, Beijing, American, COVID, U.S, Brazil, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, Taiwan, South Korea, Bangalore, Goa, Kolkata, Mumbai, Europe, Silicon, New York, Germany
They are flying cars, they're flying cars,Tom Chitty: These vehicles aren't necessarily actually cars with wheels, either, because I know that you've done you've got a program coming up soon about eVTOL. And the idea is there's going to be a fleet of these run by an operator. You've alluded to this feature program we've got coming out looking at the future of these, these flying cars, basically in these eVTOLs. And also, we can't finish this episode about flying cars and eVTOLs without talking about Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, the OG. Yeah, no, that's, that's very surprising.
Persons: Tom Chitty, Arjun Kharpal, who's, I've, we've, We've, I'm, they'd, I'd, there's, Arjun, that's, we're, you've, there'll, they're, You've, Kharpal, it's, you'll, They've, Morgan Stanley, someone's, What's, they've, They're, Big Ben, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Chitty Bang Bang, Tom, We'll Organizations: JPMorgan, CNBC, Mar, Airbus, Archer Aviation, Joby, Infrastructure, Boeing, Heathrow Airport, Civil Aviation Administration, U.S . Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Autonomy, London, Transport Locations: Spain, China, Europe, Munich, Germany, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, London, Chinese, Guangzhou, Birmingham, U.S, Manchester, it's, eVTOLs, Battersea, Heathrow
Why a strong U.S. dollar is bad for 'the rest of the world'
  + stars: | 2023-01-09 | by ( Tom Chitty | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
The U.S. dollar is the world's dominant currency and plays a key role in global trade. While that may seem like good news to Americans, it's bad news for much of the world. The rest of the world despises how dominant the dollar is, yet they go to the U.S. dollar, because there really isn't much of an alternative," said Eswar Prasad, an economist at the Brookings Institution and professor and Cornell University. Besides being the go-to currency for international financial transactions, commodities such as oil are also bought and sold in U.S. dollars. Watch the video above to learn about how a strong dollar contributed to an economic and political crisis in Sri Lanka.
It raised questions about whether the many benefits of globalization outweigh the geopolitical problems it has helped create. The latest wave of globalization has seen great resistance. Worker exploitation and a rise in inequality have also been at least partly attributed to globalization. "I think there's been a globalization bubble, and we're trying to correct it." Watch the video above to learn more about why economists think globalization is fragmenting – and what lies ahead.
As the world's leaders gather in Egypt's coastal resort Sharm El Sheikh for COP, the United Nations' annual climate change conference, the subject of climate finance is top of the agenda. The term refers to money that is given or loaned, usually to a developing country, to help reduce the worst effects of climate change and to help them adapt to long-term shifts in the world's climate system. It really leads these countries to be more at the whim of the weather," said Gaia Larsen, a director of climate finance, access and deployment for the research organization World Resources Institute. The topic is set to dominate discussions at COP27 after developed countries failed to reach the $100 billion annual pledge in 2020 to support developing nations in reducing emissions and adapting to climate change. Reparations have become a hugely contentious issue, with developed countries concerned that providing funding could be construed as an admission of legal liability and trigger claims on a major scale.
COP26 had big ambitions — here's why it fell short
  + stars: | 2021-11-19 | by ( Tom Chitty | Sam Meredith | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
"I apologize for the way this process has unfolded, and I am deeply sorry." Speaking after the Glasgow Climate Pact had been agreed by nearly 200 countries, Alok Sharma, the U.K.'s COP26 president, captured the feeling of disappointment held by many inside the conference center. China and India, which are among the world's biggest burners of coal, had amended the language in the pact from a "phase out" of coal to a "phase down." It's a far cry from the crucial 1.5 degrees Celsius rise that would limit the worst effects of the climate emergency, a target dating from the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement. Watch the video above to find out what happened in Glasgow and why COP26 struggled to achieve its aims.
Persons: Alok Sharma, It's, COP26 Locations: Glasgow, China, India, Paris
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