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Tag: China

  • Microsoft Is Warning That Russia and China Are Increasingly Using AI to Mount Cyberattacks on the U.S.

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    Russia, China, Iran and North Korea have sharply increased their use of artificial intelligence to deceive people online and mount cyberattacks against the United States, according to new research from Microsoft.

    This July, the company identified more than 200 instances of foreign adversaries using AI to create fake content online, more than double the number from July 2024 and more than ten times the number seen in 2023.

    The findings, published Thursday in Microsoft’s annual digital threats report, show how foreign adversaries are adopting new and innovative tactics in their efforts to weaponize the internet as a tool for espionage and deception.

    AI’s potential said to be exploited by U.S. foes

    America’s adversaries, as well as criminal gangs and hacking companies, have exploited AI’s potential, using it to automate and improve cyberattacks, to spread inflammatory disinformation and to penetrate sensitive systems. AI can translate poorly worded phishing emails into fluent English, for example, as well as generate digital clones of senior government officials.

    Government cyber operations often aim to obtain classified information, undermine supply chains, disrupt critical public services or spread disinformation. Cyber criminals on the other hand work for profit by stealing corporate secrets or using ransomware to extort payments from their victims. These gangs are responsible for the wide majority of cyberattacks in the world and in some cases have built partnerships with countries like Russia.

    Increasingly, these attackers are using AI to target governments, businesses and critical systems like hospitals and transportation networks, according to Amy Hogan-Burney, Microsoft’s vice president for customer security and trust, who oversaw the report. Many U.S. companies and organizations, meanwhile, are getting by with outdated cyber defenses, even as Americans expand their networks with new digital connections.

    Companies, governments, organizations and individuals must take the threat seriously if they are to protect themselves amid escalating digital threats, she said.

    “We see this as a pivotal moment where innovation is going so fast,” Hogan-Burney said. “This is the year when you absolutely must invest in your cybersecurity basics,”

    The U.S. is the top target for cyberattacks, with criminals and foreign adversaries targeting companies, governments and organizations in the U.S. more than any other country. Israel and Ukraine were the second and third most popular targets, showing how military conflicts involving those two nations have spilled over into the digital realm.

    Russia, China and Iran have denied that they use cyber operations for espionage, disruption and disinformation. China, for instance, says the U.S. is trying to “ smear ” Beijing while conducting its own cyberattacks.

    In a statement emailed to The Associated Press on Thursday, Iran’s mission to the United Nations said Iran rejects allegations that it is responsible for cyberattacks on the U.S. while reserving the right to defend itself.

    “The Islamic Republic of Iran does not initiate any form of offensive cyber operation against any state,” the mission wrote in the statement. “However, as a victim of cyber operations, it will respond to any such threat in a manner proportionate to its nature and scale.”

    North Korea has pioneered a scheme in which it uses AI personas to create American identities allowing them to apply for remote tech jobs. North Korea’s authoritarian government pockets the salaries, while the hackers use their access to steal secrets or install malware.

    It’s the kind of digital threat that will face more American organizations in the years to come as sophisticated AI programs make it easier for bad actors to deceive, according to Nicole Jiang, CEO of Fable, a San Francisco-based security company that uses AI to sniff out fake employees. AI is not only a tool for hackers, but also a critical defense against digital attackers, Jiang said.

    “Cyber is a cat-and-mouse game,” she said. “Access, data, information, money: That’s what they’re after.”

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  • ‘China spy fiasco’ and ‘Ban’ on Israeli fans a ‘national disgrace’

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    'China spy fiasco' and 'Ban' on Israeli fans a 'national disgrace'

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  • Extended interview: Iowa gubernatorial candidate Rob Sand on soybean farmers and more

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    The Trump administration is working on doubling the United States’ financial aid to Argentina to approximately $40 billion. That’s angering some Iowa farmers as China buys soybeans from the South American country instead of the U.S. due to the president’s trade war. Iowa State Auditor Rob Sand, also a Democratic gubernatorial candidate, joins “The Takeout” to discuss.

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  • Opinion | Allies United Against China on Rare Earths

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    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday he plans to coordinate with allies to counter China’s weaponization of rare-earth minerals. It’s the right move, though he might find it easier to rally the world if President Trump weren’t also hitting our allies with unprovoked unilateral tariffs.

    Mr. Bessent earlier in the week accused Beijing of pointing “a bazooka at the supply chains and the industrial base of the entire free world,” by threatening global export controls on products that contain even minuscule amounts of Chinese rare earths. He’s right. China has a stranglehold on these minerals, and it’s a serious problem.

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    The Editorial Board

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  • Opinion | Russia’s Weakness Is Trump’s Opportunity

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    Having just commemorated two years since Oct. 7, 2023, we’re now approaching another grim anniversary—Feb. 24, four years since Russia invaded Ukraine. For all of President Trump’s shortcomings, he deserves credit for recognizing that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was vulnerable after having overreached by bombing Qatar. The president leveraged Bibi’s weakness to force a cease-fire. Russia is in a similarly vulnerable position after the failure of its third offensive against Ukraine, yet Mr. Trump has failed to exploit this weakness. This raises the question: Why is Mr. Trump reluctant to take advantage of Vladimir Putin’s helplessness?

    In February, Mr. Trump berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky: “You don’t have the cards.” Yet from nearly every angle and measure, it’s Russia whose hand is weak. Mr. Putin is more vulnerable today than at any point in his three decades on the global stage. Either Mr. Trump’s sixth sense for using leverage is failing him, or some strange fondness for the Russian president’s strongman persona is preventing him from appreciating the strategic opportunity that lies before him.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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  • How ByteDance Made China’s Most Popular AI Chatbot

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    When Chinese AI startup DeepSeek became a global sensation in January, it not only shocked Silicon Valley but also startled ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company. The Chinese tech giant had already launched Doubao, its own flagship AI assistant app with tens of millions of users. But when DeepSeek became the best-known Chinese AI company overnight, no one was talking about Doubao anymore.

    Now, ByteDance has gotten its revenge. By August, Doubao regained the throne as the most popular AI app in China with over 157 million monthly active users, according to QuestMobile, a Chinese data intelligence provider. DeepSeek, with 143 million monthly active users, slipped to second place. The same month, venture capital firm a16z also ranked Doubao as the fourth-most-popular generative AI app globally, just behind the likes of ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini.

    Doubao, which launched in 2023, was deliberately designed to be personable. Unlike most popular AI chatbots, Doubao’s app icon features a human-looking avatar—a female cartoon character with a short bob that greets people when they open the app for the first time. The name Doubao literally translates to “steamed bun with bean paste,” mimicking “the nickname a user would give to an intimate friend,” ByteDance vice president Alex Zhu said in a public speech in 2024.

    Compared to Western AI apps, “there’s a warmer, more welcoming feel,” says Dermot McGrath, a Shanghai-based investor and technologist. “ChatGPT, for example, feels like a tool you open to complete a task and then close again. Doubao has more features and a more colorful user interface that keeps you interested longer.”

    The Everything App

    Doubao offers users a little bit of everything—it’s like ChatGPT, Midjourney, Sora, Character.ai, TikTok, Perplexity, Copilot, and more in a single app. It can chat via text, audio, and video; it can generate images, spreadsheets, decks, podcasts, and five-second videos; it allows anyone to customize an AI agent for specific scenarios and host it on Doubao’s platform for others to use. One of the most important things about the app, however, is that it’s deeply integrated with Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, allowing it to both attract users from the video platform and send traffic back to it.

    Somehow, ByteDance’s ambitiously sprawling strategy for Doubao has turned out to be exactly what Chinese users wanted. A little over two years since its launch, Doubao has quietly become the AI app that Chinese people—particularly those who aren’t very AI savvy—are actually using. But it has almost no name recognition in the West.

    “It’s marketed at people who are not the most technologically informed, people who may prefer voice chat and video interaction over text,” says Irene Zhang, a researcher at ChinaTalk, a newsletter about Chinese tech. “Some of the earliest Doubao users I heard of were my friends’ grandmothers and aunties.”

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    Zeyi Yang

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  • Silver Is Having a “Trading Places” Moment in the Shutdown Economy

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    Silver isn’t only seeing a revival as a fashion trend; it’s also seeing a resurgence with investors. Like the cost of gold, silver prices have been soaring of late, hitting a record $50.13 a troy ounce earlier this week as investors continue to seek out safe-haven assets.

    That broke the previous record, $48.70 per troy ounce, which had stood since January 1980—just ahead of the infamous “Silver Thursday” bust. Billionaire brothers William, Nelson, and Lamar Hunt—the latter of whom founded the Kansas City Chiefs—stockpiled an estimated third of the global silver supply over the course of a decade to hedge against the declining value of the dollar. But when regulators stepped in, prices dropped and they failed to make a margin call, sending a panic through the markets and inspiring part of the plot of Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd’s 1983 comedy, Trading Places.

    The current surge in silver prices—which have rallied more aggressively than even those of gold—is due to “strong and growing demand for silver, combined with a persistent supply deficit,” says Peter Grant, vice president and senior metals strategist at Zaner Metals.

    Mining output has been stagnant, especially with the closures of copper mines in Indonesia and South America, Grant tells Vanity Fair. But demand for silver has continued to increase due to its industrial applications and its relative security as an investment “amid sticky inflation, expectations for further Fed easing, geopolitical, trade, and fiscal uncertainty, and a government shutdown.”

    The skyrocketing interest in gold may also be a factor: “Silver is often seen as a less expensive safe haven,” Grant says.

    Investors in the United States and beyond have been seeking out such safe havens recently—a sign that “investors are preparing” for economic headwinds, as Juan Carlos Artigas, regional CEO (Americas) and global head of research for the World Gold Council, told VF last month.

    That cuts against President Donald Trump’s promise that the US would enter a “golden age” under his watch—and underscores the profound global economic uncertainty he has ushered in with his trade war, which has intensified in the past week amid tensions with China.

    Beijing last week announced further restrictions on rare earth exports. In response, Trump threatened to enact a 100% tariff on Chinese goods. Trump appeared to back off the idea, somewhat, after markets responded with a massive sell-off on Friday: “Don’t worry about China, it will all be fine!” Trump posted Sunday. But his trade representative, Jamieson Greer, said on Tuesday that a 100% tariff in the coming weeks was still on the table: “A lot depends on what the Chinese do,” Greer told CNBC.

    The mixed messages speak to the unpredictability that Trump has injected into the world economy: “The degree of uncertainty is huge,” as London Business School professor Richard Portes put it to The New York Times on Tuesday, “and that has consequences for the global economy.”

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    Eric Lutz

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  • American Bankers Are Making a Mint Helping China Inc. Go Global

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    HONG KONG—Chinese companies are pushing across the globe to conquer new markets, and American financiers are making a mint by helping them. 

    The unlikely U.S.-China collaboration during heightened trade and military tensions between the two superpowers is raising concerns on Capitol Hill about national-security risks. But it is producing frothy markets in Hong Kong, the place where Wall Street and China Inc. meet for mutual profit.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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    Rory Jones

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  • Chikungunya virus: New York confirms first locally acquired case in US since 2019

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    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Health officials in New York confirmed a person tested positive for the mosquito-borne chikungunya virus in what is the first locally acquired case in the United States since 2019. 

    The transmission detected in a Nassau County resident comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warned Americans to be on high alert for the virus following outbreaks in Cuba and China this year. 

    “A communicable disease investigation conducted by Nassau County Department of Health (NCDOH) found that the individual began experiencing symptoms in August. The investigation revealed that the individual had history of travel outside of Nassau County during the period of inoculation, but did not report traveling abroad,” the Nassau County Department of Health said Tuesday. 

    “No Chikungunya Virus has been detected in local mosquito pools to date, and the risk to the general public continues to remain low,” it added. 

    DEADLY MOSQUITO-BORNE VIRUS SPARKS CDC TRAVEL ALERT — COULD IT REACH THE US? 

    The chikungunya virus is “most often spread to people by infected Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes,” according to the Nassau County Department of Health. (iStock)

    The CDC said most people infected with the chikungunya virus develop some symptoms, which usually begin around three to seven days after a bite by an infected mosquito. 

    “The most common symptoms are fever and joint pain. Other symptoms may include headache, muscle pain, joint swelling, or rash. Most people get better within a week; however, some can have severe joint pain for months to years following acute illness,” according to the CDC. 

    “People at risk for more severe disease include newborns infected around the time of birth, older adults (65 years or older), and people with medical conditions such as diabetes or heart disease. Death from chikungunya is rare,” the CDC added. “There is no specific treatment for chikungunya.” 

    CDC WARNS OF ‘ENHANCED’ VIRUS RISK FOR TRAVELERS AMID OUTBREAK SPREAD BY MOSQUITOES 

    Chikungunya virus outbreak in China

    A sanitation worker sprays insecticide to prevent the spread of the chikungunya virus on Aug. 3, 2025, in Dongguan in the Guangdong Province of China. (VCG via Getty Images)

    The CDC said on its website that, “Locally acquired chikungunya cases have not been reported from U.S. states or territories since 2019.” 

    “An investigation suggests that the individual likely contracted the virus following a bite from an infected mosquito,” the New York State Department of Health said. “While the case is classified as locally acquired based on current information, the precise source of exposure is not known.” 

    “Mosquito bites are more than just a nuisance, they can sometimes spread illnesses that affect both people and animals,” said Nassau County Commissioner of Health Irina Gelman. “While the 2025 mosquito season is essentially over with cooler weather in Nassau County, this case serves as a reminder to take precautions against mosquito bites during the season and when traveling to areas where mosquito-borne illnesses are present.” 

    Worker fighting Chikungunya virus in Foshan

    A staff member carries out disinfection work at a hospital amid an outbreak of chikungunya on July 23, 2025, in Foshan, China.  (VCG via Getty Images)

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    “Our Wadsworth Center has confirmed this test result, which is the first known case of locally acquired Chikungunya in New York State. Given the much colder nighttime temperatures, the current risk in New York is very low,” added State Health Commissioner James McDonald.  

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  • China’s retaliation cements a bitcoin reset

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    This is The Takeaway from today’s Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with:

    Not even Fed Chair Jerome Powell could lift bitcoin out of the red.

    Following historic losses, triggered by escalating trade tensions between the US and China, cryptocurrency investors have tried to regain their footing. But it’s been a rough slog.

    Riding on the winds of a booming stock market and the prevailing sense that more rate cuts will fuel an extended rally, bitcoin recently topped the charts and set itself up for a historically strong October. Even accounting for the sharp losses in recent days, the digital currency is up more than 20% for the year, outpacing the gains of the benchmark S&P 500. But geopolitical tensions highlighted how fragile such asset climbs can be.

    Read more: What is bitcoin, and how does it work?

    After months of an upward spiral with higher peaks, investors now confront a reset of speculative bets.

    The back-and-forth between Washington and Beijing forced a pause across an array of bullish markets, rattled investors, and reminded Wall Street that, far from being a settled matter, tariffs are still in play as a political weapon and a powerful destabilizer. But bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies were hit especially hard.

    Part of the plunge in prices has to do with the excitement surrounding crypto investing, which translates to more aggressive wagers using borrowed money. Some investors who wielded leverage on the chance of winning outsized gains were left dangerously exposed when panic selling took hold. A wave of forced liquidations exacerbated the fall.

    Bitcoin shed as much as 5% Tuesday, but pared back the losses as investors reacted to Powell implying that another rate cut is possible at the Fed’s next meeting in two weeks. Still, the weight of unresolved disputes with China, which worsened just before the closing bell, kept investors from doing much even with a bullish catalyst.

    The market-moving influence of a worsening trade conflict makes it harder to declare the sell-off a turning point for crypto or a peak bitcoin moment. If the dispute over critical minerals restrictions leads to a massive escalation in tariffs come Nov. 1, investors — crypto and otherwise — are in for more pain. And bitcoin and its lesser altcoin peers don’t have the corporate earnings to cushion a deteriorating macroeconomic picture.

    But if trade diplomacy succeeds, then stability could be just around the corner. And the next peak ahead of us.

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  • China reacts to latest Trump trade threat over cooking oil

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    China said that its position on trade wars remains consistent and clear—that they have no winners and are in no one’s interests—as it responded to U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest threat over soybean purchases and cooking oil.

    Lin Jian, spokesperson for the Chinese foreign ministry, gave Beijing’s response at a regular press briefing on Wednesday.

    He said the U.S. and China “should resolve differences through dialogue and consultation based on equality, mutual respect, and mutual benefit,” according to the Chinese state-run Global Times publication.

    Trump on Tuesday accused China in a post on Truth Social of “purposefully not buying our Soybeans, and causing difficulty for our Soybean Farmers, is an Economically Hostile Act.”

    “We are considering terminating business with China having to do with Cooking Oil, and other elements of Trade, as retribution. As an example, we can easily produce Cooking Oil ourselves, we don’t need to purchase it from China,” Trump said.

    The U.S.-China trade war has reignited after Beijing imposed a new set of restrictions on rare earth exports, which the Trump administration says broke earlier tariff-cutting agreements between the two sides.

    Trump said he would impose a 100 percent tariff on China as a consequence, triggering a sell-off in global markets eyeing the potential economic fallout.

    This is a breaking news story. Updates to follow.

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  • China’s Deflationary Pressures Ease Slightly

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    China’s downward price pressures eased slightly in September, but not quite as much as expected, as Beijing ramps up efforts to curb excess capacity and bolster domestic demand.

    Data showing continued deflationary pressure in China comes as Premier Li Qiang renewed calls to double down on efforts to boost consumption, and crack down on pricing competition among businesses.

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  • China, Betting It Can Win a Trade War, Is Playing Hardball With Trump

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    In its trade standoff with Washington, Beijing thinks it has found America’s Achilles’ heel: President Trump’s fixation on the stock market.

    China’s leader, Xi Jinping, is betting that the U.S. economy can’t absorb a prolonged trade conflict with the world’s second-largest economy, according to people close to Beijing’s decision-making. China is holding a firm line because of its conviction, the people said, that an escalating trade war will tank markets, as it did in April after Trump announced his so-called Liberation Day tariffs, prompting Beijing to hit back.

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    Lingling Wei

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  • China Adds Hanwha Ocean’s Units to Sanctions List

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    Hanwha Ocean’s 042660 -5.76%decrease; red down pointing triangle shares slid Tuesday after Beijing added five of the South Korean shipbuilder’s subsidiaries to a sanctions list over their alleged role in a U.S. probe into the Chinese shipping industry.

    The stock plunged as much as 9% before paring losses. It closed 5.8% lower at 103,100 won, equivalent to $72.28, compared with the benchmark Kospi’s 0.6% fall.

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    Kwanwoo Jun

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  • How China and the U.S. Are Racing to De-Escalate the Trade War

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    President Trump is trying to publicly de-escalate tensions with China to soothe markets while privately keeping up pressure on Beijing—a difficult balancing act that is being closely watched by Wall Street.

    After threatening additional 100% tariffs on Chinese imports starting Nov. 1, Trump in recent days spoke with senior officials, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, about sending a message to the world that the U.S. wants to de-escalate trade tensions with China, according to people familiar with the matter.

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    Brian Schwartz

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  • Markets rebound after Trump appears to soften tone on China tariffs

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    Markets rebound after Trump appears to soften tone on China tariffs – CBS News










































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    The U.S. stock market rebounded on Monday after President Trump appeared to walk back imposing new tariffs on Chinese goods. CBS News senior business and technology correspondent Jo Ling Kent has more.

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  • U.S. stock markets rebound after sharp dip Friday over potential tariff increase on China

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    U.S. stock markets rebound after sharp dip Friday over potential tariff increase on China – CBS News










































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    U.S. stock markets are up Monday after President Trump walked back tariff threats against China that sent stocks sliding Friday afternoon. CBS News MoneyWatch correspondent Kelly O’Grady reports.

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  • The battery balancing act: Europe’s costly catch-up with China

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    Sam Adham (SA), Head of Battery Materials, Economics, and Sustainability at CRU Group, speaks with Jeremy Weltman (JW) about Beijing’s Contemporary Amperex Technology Ltd (CATL) sending more than 2,000 workers to Spain to build a €4bn plant with Stellantis, and what it means for Europe’s EV ambitions.

    SA: Battery manufacturing is an incredibly precise and complex process and Chinese companies want to avoid the leakage of technical know-how. CATL is transplanting its equipment and workers so that it can ramp up the factory quickly – where otherwise training and relying on a majority-local workforce would be too risky. Over time the idea is to phase out those workers and implement heavy automation.

    The industry also needs joint ventures, as in the case of Stellantis and CATL. Both parties want partnerships to share the costs and risks.

    There are some parallels with what happened in the auto industry in China years ago. Back then, the authorities in Beijing made it a rule that any Western car company wanting to set up in China had to form a joint venture with a local partner. The Chinese learnt from them, and slowly over time, they showed them the door. Now, Western car companies are on the decline in China. Europe and the West generally seem to think they can do the same thing in reverse, but with batteries, be open to Chinese entry and somehow benefit from it. But it’s unlikely to happen in the same way.

    SA: Exactly. The idea is: come in, invest, we’ll even help you with local government funding, as long as you use local labour, pay taxes here, and share your technology over time.

    But the CATL plant in Spain shows that isn’t happening. CATL is bringing almost all of the plant’s operational workforce from China. From the Chinese manufacturing perspective, it has to be that way – certainly initially. If you start changing process flows or factory parameters and operating procedures, you risk lower quality and higher defect rates. You end up needing to build more batteries just to make up for the losses.

    So CATL’s approach is to transplant a Chinese factory into Spain – same people, same equipment, same methods. That’s the only way they can guarantee quality and efficiency.

    SA: The Koreans faced the same challenge early on. LG’s plant in Poland, which supplies Volkswagen and other European carmakers, went through this too. They didn’t share their technology with the local workforce either, for the same reason: maintaining process integrity.

    Eventually, local operations get better integrated, but that takes time. Europe, for now, seems to have accepted that this is how it’s going to be. It’s not ideal, the technology isn’t being shared, but the joint venture partners like Stellantis or Volkswagen will still learn something, and they get a say in the technology direction for the joint venture.

    SA: To understand that, you have to look at what goes into a battery, the raw materials and the chemistry. There are two main lithium-ion chemistries: NMC, which uses nickel, manganese, and cobalt for longer range but higher cost; and LFP, lithium iron phosphate, which is cheaper, more stable, and lasts longer, though traditionally with lower range.

    For years, the industry focus was on raw materials and economies of scale, expanding the gigafactory model. But now, raw materials are relatively cheap compared to where they were. The real cost differences come from technology, cell design, additives, high-performance materials.

    That’s why everyone wants to use LFP: it’s cheaper and easier to scale efficiently. It’s all about yield and vertical integration, being able to control every step from raw materials to finished cells.

    SA: Absolutely. For example if you’re buying lithium at market prices, you’re already at a disadvantage compared to a competitor that owns its own mine. That’s why Chinese firms have such an advantage, they’ve built vertically integrated supply chains.

    The rest of the world is still starting from a higher cost base. Labour and energy costs in Europe are higher, and every new gigafactory faces a ramp-up period of two or three years before efficiencies improve sufficiently. That’s why no one outside China is yet producing batteries as cheaply. It’ll happen eventually, but not soon.

    SA: Very much so. Look at BYD, for example. They’ve made major improvements in both technology and performance. They increased battery cell size to gain more energy per unit of space and eliminated modules and packs altogether, removing non-energy-carrying components. Other manufacturers are now following that approach.

    Most of the innovation nowadays is chemical, not mechanical. It’s really electrochemistry that’s driving efficiency. Even in China, the focus now is shifting from longer range to faster charging, and new advanced materials are enabling that. If you can recharge in 5–10 minutes and go another 250 miles, you don’t need a massive battery. That’s the new race.

    SA: Not really. Whenever you hear about looming raw material shortages or long-term deficits, that’s mostly mining companies trying to talk up the price and attract investors. These materials are speciality chemicals, but they’re also commodities, and they go through cycles, but as markets mature, volatility falls.

    The more important thing is planning for the long term, knowing what supply levels will be needed, and that drives long-term investment in raw materials. Supply isn’t the constraint on EV growth anymore. Government policy is.

    SA: It’s very hard. China dominates every stage: from mining through refining, cathode and anode materials, cell manufacturing, EV assembly, and even recycling.

    And especially so in the ‘midstream’. Take manganese: it’s found in a well-diversified and low-risk group of countries, but 95% of the battery-grade manganese processing happens in China.

    It’s not just about access to materials, it’s the know-how. China is officially restricting the sharing of high-end technologies – like the latest generation LFP cathode materials used for super-fast-charging EVs – and the equipment to make them.

    The West is trying to decentralise that, but with limited success. If anything, China’s market share is still growing at each step, and Chinese companies will keep building overseas plants where necessary.

    Sam Adham will take the stage at the GlobalData Automotive Europe 2025 Conference (15–16 October) to share his insights in a session titled, “How the Battery Supply Chain and Technology are Powering Growth in the EV Market.”

    “The battery balancing act: Europe’s costly catch-up with China” was originally created and published by Motor Finance Online, a GlobalData owned brand.

     


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  • Dutch Government Takes Control of Chip Maker From Chinese Parent

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    The Dutch government wrested control of a Netherlands-based semiconductor company from its Chinese owner, a new flare-up in tensions between China and the West over key technologies and materials.

    Officials at the Dutch Economic Affairs Ministry said Sunday that they had assumed the power to block or reverse decisions at Nexperia 600745 -10.00%decrease; red down pointing triangle, which is owned by China’s Wingtech Technology, to keep Europe from losing “technological knowledge and capabilities” necessary for its economic security.

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    Sam Schechner

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  • Trump bet China would face ‘tremendous difficulties’ without U.S. consumers—Beijing just focused on the rest of the world instead | Fortune

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    At the beginning of his tariff standoff with Beijing, President Trump was confident in his strong hand. China’s economy was reliant on U.S. consumers, he said, and so it would have to make some compromises or risk losing them.

    “China has been hit much harder than the USA, not even close,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, the social media site he owns, in April. Later that month, he admitted that while American shoppers may have to cut back on Chinese-produced consumption, the White House’s tariff plan meant the Chinese government was “having tremendous difficulty because their factories are not doing business.”

    Six months later and it seems Beijing has simply circumnavigated the U.S. by focusing on increasing its exports to the rest of the world. The diversification has been so successful that China’s export market is actually tracking significant growth despite the trade war.

    According to data released by the General Administration of Customs, China’s shipments to the U.S. fell 27% in September, the sixth month of double-digit declines to its once most valuable customer. Meanwhile it charted strong growth to areas like the European Union (currently operating under a 15% tariff rate from the White House), leading to export growth to non-U.S. countries of 14.8%.

    The shift away from the U.S. means exports are actually up 8.3% in September compared to a year ago, raking in  $328.6 billion—its highest total for 2025 so far.

    China’s economy is fairing better than expectations outlined back in April, when President Trump first made his tariff plans known. Earlier in the year World Bank speculated China’s economy would grow 4% in 2025, but last week revised this up to 4.8%. Likewise, it upped its expectations for 2026 from 4% to 4.2%.

    Conversely, in June the World Bank cut its expectations for U.S. growth by 0.9 percentage points to 1.4% for 2025.

    This backdrop means Trump’s threat last week to impose 100% tariffs on China may not have held the potency it once did. Having been relatively successful in side-stepping Trump’s tariffs so far, Beijing responded forcefully to the Oval Office’s threat, blasting it as a “double standard.”

    A spokesman for the Ministry of Commerce said: “Frequently threatening high tariffs is not the right approach to engaging with China. China’s position on a tariff war is consistent: we do not want one, but we are not afraid of one.”

    Room for compromise

    Having issued the warning—and with both sides still operating under a pause on reciprocal tariffs until November 10—President Trump did then seek to strike a more reasoned tone, and sent futures climbing as a result.

    “I think we’re going to be fine with China,” Trump told reporters on board Air Force One yesterday afternoon. “I have a great relationship with President Xi, he’s a very tough man, a very smart man, he’s a great leader for their country and I have a great relationship with him.

    “I think we’ll get it set. I know what happened, I really understand what happened, and I’m not even saying he’s wrong. But then we met him with something much tougher than what he did to us.”

    The back-and-forth may simply boil down to showmanship, wrote Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid in a note to clients the morning: “There’s still plenty of time for negotiations, and I suspect the market will begin to price in a reasonable probability of a deal once the initial shock fades.

    “For what its worth, Polymarket has the probabilities of the two Presidents meeting by October 31st at 62% this morning, down from a peak of 88% last week but up from around 35% at the lows on Friday night. So there is a belief emerging that this is mostly negotiating tactics on both sides.”

    UBS’s Paul Donovan also noted the Oval Office’s appetite for negotiation, telling clients this morning: “Both Trump and U.S. Vice President Vance have made conciliatory noises which suggests that there may be some kind of retreat from the original threat.”

    “While the U.S. is obviously not able to publish data at the moment, the trend recently has the two countries’ data showing China selling U.S. more than the U.S. was buying from China,” he added. “That anomaly hints very strongly at rerouting by China to enable U.S. importers to avoid some of the tariffs.”

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    Eleanor Pringle

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