Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "China's"


25 mentions found


Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailChina economic data: Early signs of policy support, says economistQian Wang, principal and chief Asia-Pacific economist of Vanguard, discusses China's economic data for October and what needs to be done for the "growth rebound" to be sustained.
Persons: Qian Wang Organizations: China, Vanguard Locations: Asia, Pacific
Alibaba said net income rose 58% year-on-year to 43.9 billion Chinese yuan ($6.07 billion) in the company's quarter ending Sept. 30, on the back of the performance of its equity investments. This compared with a LSEG outlook of 25.83 billion yuan. Revenue, meanwhile, came in at 236.5 billion yuan, 5% higher year-on-year but below an analyst forecast of 238.9 billion yuan, according to LSEG data. Investors are closely watching the performance of Alibaba's main business units, Taobao and Tmall Group, which reported a 1% annual uptick in revenue to 98.99 billion yuan in the September quarter. The e-commerce giant's overseas online shopping businesses, such as Lazada and Aliexpress, meanwhile posted a 29% year-on-year hike in sales to 31.67 billion yuan.
Persons: Alibaba, Organizations: Tmall, ING Locations: York, London, Beijing
BEIJING — China's retail sales rose more than expected in October, while industrial production and investment data missed forecasts as the real estate drag worsened. Industrial production rose by 5.3% in October from a year ago, missing expectations of 5.6% growth. Investment in real estate for the January to October period fell by 10.3% from a year ago, steeper than the 10.1% drop seen in the January to September period. While infrastructure and manufacturing investments picked up slightly in the year-to-date period as of October, versus that of September. The central bank has cut interest rates and extended existing real estate support.
Organizations: Retail, National Bureau of Statistics, Ministry of Finance Locations: Shanghai, BEIJING
Competition from European, Korean, and Japanese carmakers has vanished since Western sanctions were imposed on Russia. Chinese automakers face increasing tariffs in other regions. Chinese cars are selling at record levels in Russia, according to data from Russian analytics agency Autostat, reported by The Financial Times. AdvertisementIn the first nine months of 2024, Russia imported 849,951 vehicles from China, the FT reported, citing China Passenger Car Association data. The sales boom in Russia comes as Chinese automakers face rising obstacles in other regions.
Persons: carmakers, Ilya Frolov, didn't Organizations: The Financial Times, Chery, Geely, Russia, Lada, China Passenger Car Association, EU Locations: Russia, Moscow, Ukraine, Russian, China, Mexico, Brazil, Southeast Asia, Japan, Germany
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailArgentina showing the biggest momentum among emerging markets: AnalystMalcolm Dorson of Global X talks about the emerging markets that have the biggest runway for growth and the highest opportunities for returns. He also discusses China's push for multilateralism as Donald Trump is poised to return to the White House.
Persons: Malcolm Dorson, Donald Trump Locations: Argentina
That's the view of Caroline Cai, CEO of U.S.-based Pzena Investment Management. "This is really for the first time in the last seven, eight years where we think you're getting paid to expose yourself to China," Cai told "CNBC Squawk Box Asia" this week. The investment firm has ramped up its exposure to Chinese equities in the last two years. "It's not because we have a particularly positive view on longer term Chinese macro, we kind of think things are pretty challenging. "Our view is, if the risk is obvious to everyone, at least you're getting paid to take some exposure," she added.
Persons: Caroline Cai, Cai, we're, Adam Coons, CNBC's Organizations: Pzena Investment Management, CNBC, Winthrop Capital Management, People's Bank of China Locations: China
AdvertisementPresident-elect Donald Trump has long questioned the reality of the climate crisis, describing it as a "scam" and accusing policies to tackle the crisis of destroying US jobs. AdvertisementChina, as part of its "Belt and Road" initiative to grow its global influence, has provided developing countries with renewable energy technologies, including wind farms. AdvertisementThe US lags China as a clean tech economic power. There are also doubts over how much China is willing to take an international leadership role on climate issues. Assuming a leadership role would likely require China to send money to other countries, said Crowther.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Herbert Crowther, we're, Lily McElwee, Xi Jinping, Trump, Daniel Araya, Biden, Joe Biden's, Crowther, Xi Organizations: Service, Eurasia Group, Business, Biden, China Studies, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Trump, Getty, Brookings Institute, International Energy Agency, Reuters Locations: Paris, China, New York, Baku, Azerbaijan, Washington ,, Beijing, United States, Gansu Province, Washington , DC, Brazil
Lunar samples from the Chang'e-6 mission could help explain differences between the near and far side of the moon. Li and his team studied 108 basalt fragments contained in two small samples of the lunar far side soil. Future Chang’e-6 sample researchThe Chang'e-6 probe's return capsule, which contained lunar samples from the moon's far side, is shown on June 25 after landing in China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. Xinhua/ShutterstockThese initial analyses of the lunar soil samples raise questions that will take more time and the study of additional samples to address, Neal said. The space agency declined to comment on the studies but said it is coordinating with US researchers who applied for access to Chang’e-5 lunar samples.
Persons: NASA’s, Russia’s Luna, Clive Neal, China’s Chang’e, ” Neal, , Richard W, Carlson, ” Carlson, Qiu, Li, Neal, Bill Nelson, CNSA Organizations: CNN, NASA, Arizona State University, University of Notre Dame, Chang’e, Carnegie Institution, Planets Laboratory, State Key Laboratory, Chinese Academy of Sciences ’, of Geology, Geophysics, Mongolia Autonomous, Xinhua, China National Space Administration, Apollo, FBI, ” NASA Locations: China, Washington , DC, Xinhua, Mongolia, Mongolia Autonomous Region
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailChina's 6 trillion yuan aid to property market is helpful to 'a certain extent': EconomistHao Hong of GROW Investment Group says China's total local government debt is likely much higher than official figures. He says investors who are attracted to Chinese high-yield dollar bonds are betting on 'very substantial' policy measures by the government.
Persons: Hao Hong
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Breaking from Wall Street, Asia-Pacific stocks mostly rose on Friday. On a quarterly basis, GDP rose 0.2%, in line with estimates from a Reuters poll, but that's lower than the second quarter's 0.5% increase. China retail sales pick back upChina's retail sales in October rose 4.8% year on year, reported the National Bureau of Statistics.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Powell Organizations: US Federal Reserve, Music, Fair, CNBC, Trump, Nikkei, CSI, U.S . Federal, National Bureau of Statistics, Nvidia, Citi Locations: Dallas , Texas, Street, Asia, Pacific, China
After a campaign featuring promises to slash landmark climate legislation, and a first term record that included pulling the U.S. out of the Paris climate agreement, President-elect Donald Trump's win casts a shadow of doubt over the world of global climate policy. As an isolationist, Trump-led American foreign policy cedes global leadership on the issue, an increasingly willing China can assume the spot instead. Ceding global climate leadership to China "would be a mistake"China is looking to "play a more proactive role internationally on climate change," said Joanna Lewis, an associate professor at Georgetown University and expert in international climate policy. But "it would be a mistake for the United States to completely cede not just [its] leadership role on climate change. But the development of low carbon technologies, that's really the area that has been particularly competitive between China and the United States," said Lewis.
Persons: Donald Trump, Xi Jinping, Donald Trump's, Trump, Joanna Lewis, Lewis, Joe Biden Organizations: European Union, Republicans, United Nations, BMO Capital Markets, Georgetown University Locations: Osaka, Japan, Paris, China, United States
A Norwegian fisherman caught a US submarine in his nets this week. The US Navy has sent several vessels into nearby waters in recent months amid tensions with Russia. AdvertisementA Norwegian fisherman made a surprising catch on Monday in the form of a US submarine. In June, the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine USS Tennessee and the cruiser USS Normandy were deployed to the Norwegian Sea in response to Russian maneuvers, defense news site Army Recognition reported. AdvertisementIn September, US lawmakers expressed concerns about delays and soaring costs in building new vessels, including Virginia-class submarines, particularly in light of China's recent naval expansions.
Persons: , Harald Engen, Engen, Pierson Hawkins, Hawkins, Harry S, Wales, Jason Dunham, USS Stout, Ken Calvert Organizations: US Navy, Service, NRK, Norwegian Coast Guard, Barents Observer, Fleet, Forces, Truman Carrier Strike, British, USS, US Naval Forces Locations: Norwegian, Russia, Malangen, Norway's, Virginia, Tromsø, Norway, Ohio, Tennessee, Normandy, Barents, US Naval Forces Europe, Africa
"We are seeing [deflation] to some extent," said Stephen Brown, deputy chief North America economist at Capital Economics. Energy prices and electronicsGasoline prices are also "way down," Zandi said. Consumers "could get more relief there because global oil prices are soft," Zandi said. Food prices are also generally underpinned by their own unique supply-and-demand dynamics, economists said. Lower energy prices can also take pressure off food prices, as it costs less to transport and distribute food to grocery store shelves.
Persons: Stephen Brown, Mark Zandi, women's outerwear, they've, Zandi, They've, Donald Trump's, they'd, Bacon Organizations: North, Capital Economics, U.S, Moody's, Finance, CPI, Bank of America, U.S . Energy Information Administration, Consumers Locations: U.S, North America, China
Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementPresident-elect Donald Trump is quickly fleshing out his cabinet, giving a sense of what his second administration will look like. Now he's Trump's nominee for defense secretary. AdvertisementTreasury secretary — TBD: Trump's pick for his top economic advisor is being closely watched considering the key role the economy played in the election.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump, JD Vance, Let's, — Matt Gaetz, Kevin McCarthy, Gaetz, he's, he'd, Mike Johnson, He's, State — Marco Rubio, Rubio, Pete Hegseth, Slaven Vlasic, Hegseth, Hegseth's, Scott Bessent, Howard Lutnick, Cantor Fitzgerald, Bessent, Lutnick, Dan DeFrancesco, Grace Lett, Ella Hopkins, Hallam Bullock, Amanda Yen, Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Service, Trump, Republicans, Senate, Department, Justice, State, Fox News, Getty, Defense, Army Locations: Florida, Silicon, China, Taiwan, Ukraine, Russia, Poland, Israel, New York, Chicago, London
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailChina's domestic stimulus policy is 'more important' than tariffs, geopolitics: AllianceBernsteinJohn Lin of AllianceBernstein discusses the Chinese government's stimulus plans and says that he expects more "forceful, impactful" property measures to come "sometime in the future".
Persons: John Lin, AllianceBernstein
In the race against the US for global tech supremacy, China has the upper hand in at least one critical area: rare earths. AdvertisementFor more than a year, Beijing has slowly been tightening its grip on critical minerals and rare earths. Now, there are fears that China could tighten the global rare earths supply chain even more. China's rare earth dominanceChina has long dominated the rare earths market due to supply, low labor costs, and lax environmental standards. In 2022, the US Department of Defense awarded $45 million to MP Materials for rare earth oxide processing, and in 2023, it awarded over $288 million to Lynas USA to set up commercial-scale rare earth oxide production facilities.
Persons: Deng Xiaoping, , Rick Waters, Donald Trump's, Louise Loo, Zongyuan Zoe Liu, Chris Tang, Nick Vyas, USC Marshall's Randall R, Vyas, he's Organizations: European Union, World Trade Organization, US Department of Defense, Materials, US, White, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Oxford Economics, Greater China, Council, Foreign Relations, Soviet, Bloomberg, AMD, USC, Kendrick, Supply Chain Institute, Bureau of Industry, Security Locations: China, US, Beijing, Japan, USA, Eurasia, Washington, Taiwan, Greater, Soviet Union, North Korea, North Vietnam
Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump and Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) react during a campaign event at Dorton Arena, in Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S. November 4, 2024. Jonathan Drake | ReutersPresident-elect Donald Trump's choice of Sen. Marco Rubio as his secretary of State, arguably the world's most important diplomat, could change the dial when it comes to the U.S.' relationship with both its enemies and its allies. You know, adversaries are uniting — in North Korea, Iran, China, Russia — [and] increasingly coordinating," Rubio said. US Senator Marco Rubio speaks during a campaign rally for former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in Doral, Florida, on July 9, 2024. And I think that's what [former President] Donald Trump is trying to say," Rubio said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Marco Rubio, Jonathan Drake, Donald Trump's, Sen, Rubio, Trump, " Rubio, Marco, Trump's, Giorgio Viera, China Rubio, Wei Dongsheng, State Rubio, Mark Wilson, Masoud Pezeshkian, Hassan Nasrallah, Nasrallah, Angela Weiss, Donald Trump —, Ukraine It's, It's, Mike Segar Organizations: Dorton, Reuters, State, Senate Intelligence, Foreign Relations, Trump, White, Allies, CNN, Republican, AFP, Getty, U.S ., Science & Technology, Visual China, Rubio, China, Politico, White House, U.S, NBC, PPL Center, Afp, Russia, NBC News, Republican National Convention Locations: Raleigh , North Carolina, U.S, China, Iran, Ukraine, Russia, North Korea, Doral , Florida, Beijing, Communist China, JIUJIANG, CHINA, Jiujiang, Jiangxi Province, Washington, Israel, New York, Washington , DC, Gaza, Lebanon, Florida, Allentown , Pennsylvania, Tehran, Milwaukee , Wisconsin
Amazon representatives met with the House China committee in recent months to discuss lawmaker concerns over the company's partnership with TikTok, CNBC confirmed. A spokesperson for the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party confirmed the meeting, which centered on a shopping deal between Amazon and TikTok announced in August. The agreement allows users of TikTok, owned by China's ByteDance, to link their account with Amazon and make purchases from the site without leaving TikTok. "The Select Committee conveyed to Amazon that it is dangerous and unwise for Amazon to partner with TikTok given the grave national security threat the app poses," the spokesperson said. Representatives from Amazon and TikTok didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
Persons: TikTok, China's ByteDance, didn't, Joe Biden, Jan, Donald Trump, CNBC's, Trump, Jeff Yass, , Jonathan Vanian Organizations: Dublin City Centre, Amazon, House, TikTok, CNBC, Chinese Communist Party, Bloomberg, Republican, Susquehanna International Group, NBC Locations: Dublin, Ireland, House China, U.S, ByteDance, Yass
The "Big Short" investor raised his stakes in Alibaba, Baidu, and JD.com but also hedged the wagers. Burry didn't add any new names to his stock portfolio but exited a couple in the period. AdvertisementMichael Burry doubled down on three of China's biggest technology companies last quarter, boosting his stakes while carefully hedging his bets. The investor of "The Big Short" fame bolstered his Alibaba position by 29% to 200,000 shares worth around $21 million at the end of September, a quarterly portfolio filing revealed on Thursday. The Scion Asset Management boss doubled his JD.com stake to 500,000 shares worth $20 million at quarter end, and purchased put options on the same number of shares.
Persons: Michael Burry, , bearish, Trump, aren't, He's, Burry Organizations: Baidu, Service, Scion Asset Management, Molina Healthcare, Shift4, Hudson Pacific Properties, American Coastal Insurance, GameStop, Nasdaq, Apple, Nvidia Locations: Alibaba, BioAlta, TheRealReal
In April, President Joe Biden signed a law that requires China's ByteDance to sell TikTok by Jan. 19. Although both Republicans and Democrats supported the Biden TikTok ban in April, Trump voiced opposition to the ban during his candidacy. Since his election, Trump hasn't publicly discussed his plans for TikTok, but Trump-Vance transition spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told CNBC that the president-elect "will deliver." "The American people re-elected President Trump by a resounding margin giving him a mandate to implement the promises he made on the campaign trail," Leavitt said in a statement. That month it was also reported that Yass was a part owner of the business that merged with the parent company of Trump's Truth Social.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tim Cook, Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Shou Zi Chew, Joe Biden, Jan, Trump's, Trump, CNBC's, Kamala Harris, We're, Trump hasn't, Vance, Karoline Leavitt, Leavitt, TikTok, Jeff Yass Organizations: U.S, Apple, U.S ., Google, White, Democrats, Biden, Trump, CNBC, Republican, Susquehanna International Group, NBC Locations: Communist China, U.S, Smithton , Pennsylvania, Chew, TikTok, ByteDance, Yass
Rubio is a China hawk, has been sanctioned twice by Beijing, and may even be barred from the country. US President-elect Donald Trump has officially announced Sen. Marco Rubio as his secretary of state pick after days of speculation. AdvertisementRubio and Trump, once rivals, appear aligned on issues related to China and Taiwan. AdvertisementRubio's nomination raises questions about US relations with China, Taiwan, and the broader Indo-Pacific region. They have an army of unpaid lobbyists here in Washington," Rubio said during a 2023 Senate speech.
Persons: Trump, Sen, Marco Rubio, Rubio, Donald Trump, he's, President Trump, Washington didn't, John Raoux, He's, Rubio's, haven't, Joe Raedle, " Rubio Organizations: Beijing, The New York Times, Trump, AP, Heritage Foundation, Chinese Communist Party, The Washington Post Locations: China, Taiwan, Florida, America, Washington, Beijing, Hong Kong, Russia, Iran, North Korea, The, The Florida, Taipei
In this photo illustration, the OpenAI logo is displayed on a mobile phone screen with a photo of Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI. In the document, OpenAI outlines a rosy future for AI, calling it "as foundational a technology as electricity, and promising similarly distributed access and benefits." Now that Donald Trump is President-elect, OpenAI has made clear its plans to work with the new administration on AI policy, and the company's Wednesday presentation outlines its plans. OpenAI's presentation outlines AI economic zones co-created by state and federal governments "to give states incentives to speed up permitting and approvals for AI infrastructure." The blueprints say, "The government can encourage private investors to fund high-cost energy infrastructure projects by committing to purchase energy and other means that lessen credit risk."
Persons: Sam Altman, Donald Trump, OpenAI, Trump, Biden's Organizations: CNBC, Washington , D.C, Defense Locations: Washington ,, American
AdvertisementTrump has tapped Pete Hegseth, an Army veteran and Fox News host, to be secretary of defense. US President-elect Donald Trump has tapped Pete Hegseth, a Fox & Friends host and US Army National Guard veteran, to be secretary of defense. Hegseth was considered for Veterans Affairs secretary during Trump's first term and faced pushback from veterans group leaders. All US military combat roles opened to women in 2015. AdvertisementThroughout the war, Hegseth has shifted stances, calling Putin a "war criminal" and criticizing Biden for not getting Ukraine military aid quickly enough.
Persons: Pete Hegseth, Hegseth, Donald Trump, Joe, Trump, Trump's, Brace, Paul Rieckhoff, Adam Smith, Adam Kinzinger, Joe Biden's, Shawn Ryan, he'll, Abreanna Goodrich, we've, Shawn Ryan Show, Genya SAVILOV, AFP Hegseth, He's, Vladimir Putin's, Putin, Biden, Israel Trump's, Doug Mills, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel wasn't, he's, Xiang Organizations: Trump, Army, Fox News, Defense Department, NATO, Fox & Friends, US Army National Guard, Israel, Wall Street, Veterans Affairs, SecDef, Independent Veterans of, Fox, Department of Defense, House Armed Services, Air National Guard, Republican, US National Guard, Pentagon, US Army, Spc, AFP, Kyiv, Warriors, Israeli, Getty, US Locations: Ukraine, America, Independent Veterans of America, Iraq, Afghanistan, Jerusalem, Russia, Soviet Union, Israel, Gaza, Iran, Washington, China, Xinhua, Asia, Pacific, Taiwan
The West shouldn't assume that China is lagging behind the U.S. and Europe on tech developments, Microsoft's president and vice-chairman warned. U.S-China tensions in the past few years have centered on the battle between the two nations for tech supremacy, culminating in a slew of export controls on critical technologies. Speaking at the Web Summit tech conference in Lisbon, Portugal, on Tuesday, Microsoft's Brad Smith told CNBC that "in many ways," China is close to or is even catching up on technology. "I think one of the dangers, frankly, is that people who don't go to China too often assume that they're behind," he told CNBC's Karen Tso. "But when you go there, you're impressed by how much they're doing."
Persons: China's, Microsoft's Brad Smith, CNBC's Karen Tso Organizations: China's Huawei, Summit, CNBC, U.S Locations: China, Europe, Lisbon, Portugal
China, perhaps more than most countries, will be bracing for fractious relations ahead with the United States. “It makes sense for Chinese officials to use these big events to try and shape some of the international narratives right now,” said Li Mingjiang, an associate professor of international relations at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University. “Since there’s not much time before January 2025.”Cargo containers and cranes at Yantian port in southern China's Shenzhen earlier this year. The Chinese leader warned that the two countries “will both benefit from cooperation and lose from confrontation,” according to China’s Foreign Ministry. “Beijing does worry about Trump’s wrath and what he could do to damage China’s interest on a bilateral level,” she said.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Xi Jinping, Trump, Joe Biden, Xi, Biden, Shigeru Ishiba, Anthony Albanese, Narendra Modi, , Li Mingjiang, there’s, Jade Gao, Mike Waltz, Marco Rubio, He’s, , Liu Dongshu, Modi, Li Qiang, Leon Neal, ’ ”, Yun Sun, Vladimir Putin, Liu Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, APEC, Japanese, Australian, Indian, Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University, , , Getty, Trump, CNN, Foreign Ministry, NATO, US, City University of Hong, Stimson, World Health Organization, Initiative Locations: China, Hong Kong, South America, Europe, East, United States, Beijing, Asia, Pacific, Peru, Brazil, American, China's Shenzhen, AFP, Lima . Beijing, Russia, City University of Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Lima, Rio de Janeiro, Washington, South, Taiwan, Ukraine, Paris, America, , Sun, “ Beijing
Total: 25