ReportWire

Tag: Shanghai

  • Ronnie O’Sullivan to make debut at 2026 World Seniors Snooker Championship while still targeting eighth world championship win

    [ad_1]

    Ronnie O’Sullivan will be competing in the 2026 Seniors Snooker Championship and the World Snooker Championship within just weeks of each other; the 50-year-old won his first world title 25 years ago and looks to add another accolade to his name

    Last Updated: 23/02/26 3:44pm

    Ronnie O’Sullivan will be going for his eighth world title and first Seniors world title this spring

    After a record-equalling seven world titles, Ronnie O’Sullivan will be making his debut on the senior world stage in May at the 2026 World Seniors Snooker Championship.

    However, the 50-year-old is still expected to play in the main World Championship, which finishes just two days before the seniors starts, with both events taking place at the Crucible.

    Ronnie O'Sullivan tried to defend his first Masters title against Steven Hendry in 1996 as the youngest winner of the title at 19-years and 69 days

    Ronnie O’Sullivan tried to defend his first Masters title against Steven Hendry in 1996 as the youngest winner of the title at 19-years and 69 days

    He joins an impressive seniors line-up that includes 2015 world champion Stuart Bingham, 12-time women’s world champion Reanne Evans and former Masters and UK champion Matthew Stevens.

    Chairman Jason Francis branded O’Sullivan the “most commercially valuable player the sport has ever seen” and that he expects The Rocket’s participation to drive ticket sales even higher.

    The seniors tournament will take place May 6-10, being prefaced by World Championship from April 18-May 4.

    O’Sullivan relocated to Dubai last year but will spend April and May in Sheffield as he also attempts to win an eighth world title when he appears in his 34th consecutive World Snooker Championship.

    Changes to the seniors tournaments rules have meant players ranked in the world top 64 are eligible to take part with several having taken the opportunity.

    With four title wins, the most successful player in the seniors is Jimmy White, with the 10-time ranking event winner also slated to take part.

    This comes 25 years after O’Sullivan won his first World Snooker Championship which he won in his 10th year of being a professional at the age of 25, as he seeks to add yet another record to his CV.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Takeoff of China’s flying taxis hits turbulence

    [ad_1]

    HONG KONG (AP) — An unmanned, oval-shaped craft from flying taxi maker EHang hovers, whirring noisily like a mini-helicopter over a riverside innovation zone on the outskirts of the southern Chinese business hub of Guangzhou, part of a trial of a mini-flying taxi that once might have been found only in sci-fi films.

    In nearby Shenzhen, food-delivery drones already are part of daily life and a novelty attraction for tourists, even if such services cost more. In the waterfront park surrounded by high-rises, Polish tourist Karolina Trzciańska and her friends ordered bubble tea and lemon tea by phone, just to give it a try. Their drinks arrived via a drone buzzing through the drizzle about 30 minutes later.

    “This is the first time I’m seeing something like this, so it was super fun to see the food being delivered by the drone,” she said.

    Such businesses are growing quickly with support from the government, though the take off of the so-called “low-altitude economy” faces obstacles such as strict airspace controls and battery limitations.

    Activities in airspace below 1,000 meters (about 3,280 feet) accounted for business turnover worth 506 billion yuan ($70 billion) in 2023, about 0.4% of China’s economy. By 2035, it’s expected to hit 3.5 trillion yuan (about $490 billion), said Zhang Xiaolan, a researcher at the State Information Center, a think tank affiliated with China’s main planning agency.

    Flying cars are in the making

    Guangdong province, home to drone giant DJI with an estimated 70% of the global commercial drone market, leads in development of the low-altitude economy, followed by wealthy eastern coastal provinces Jiangsu and Zhejiang, near Shanghai, according to a report by a research unit of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Peking University, and other institutions.

    Other big players in Guangdong include EHang, logistics company SF Express’s drone arm Phoenix Wings, and automaker XPENG’s flying car unit ARIDGE.

    In October, Guangdong announced it plans to speed up construction of flight service stations and platforms to facilitate airspace operations and will support locally issued discount vouchers for low-altitude tourism.

    Its technology and financial hub Shenzhen has launched a 15-million-yuan ($2.1 million) award for companies that earn certifications required for passenger eVTOLs, short for “electric vertical take-off and landing” vehicles that lift off the ground like helicopters, among other incentives.

    China’s Civil Aviation Administration has granted certificates allowing EHang to offer commercial passenger services with its pilotless eVTOL, a low-altitude aircraft that can reach speeds of 130 kph (81 mph) with a maximum range of 30 kilometers (19 miles).

    EHang hasn’t launched commercial routes, but its vice president, He Tianxing, says it aims to start with aerial sightseeing services. The company has been building takeoff and landing sites in 20 Chinese cities over the past two years. He expects aircraft of various companies will be flying multiple routes, possibly after five years.

    He envisions eventual citywide networks using the rooftops of malls, schools and parks as terminals.

    “It can’t just be a research product, nor an engineer’s toy,” he said.

    Accidents, battery limitations and airspace controls

    The biggest challenge for developing eVTOL aircraft is maintaining longer flights and overcoming battery capacity limitations, said Guo Liming, co-founder of Shenzhen-based Skyevtol, whose single-seat manned eVTOL aircraft, priced at around $100,000, can only fly 20 to 30 minutes before it must be charged.

    It also has not all been smooth skies.

    In September, two XPENG’s eVTOL aircraft collided after a rehearsal for an exhibition and one of them caught fire while landing. The company said no one was hurt, but another expo canceled flying demonstrations a week later.

    Undeterred, XPENG has continued to showcase its flying cars, including a six-wheeled ground vehicle with a detachable eVTOL aircraft. Having invested over $600 million, the company said it has more than 7,000 global orders for its “Land Aircraft Carrier” and has begun preparing for mass production.

    A trial run of sightseeing flights in Dunhuang, a key ancient Silk Road destination famous for its Buddhist caves and dunes, is planned for next July.

    It’s unclear how quickly such aircraft might begin carrying paid passengers regularly. Some companies elsewhere have burned through their funding before reaching the commercial launch stage. In Germany, air taxi makers Lilium and Volocopter filed for bankruptcy, though the latter was later bought by Diamond Aircraft Group, a subsidiary of a Chinese firm.

    After years of commercialization, drone applications are not that widespread in China.

    Even though the country leads in drone technology and manufacturing, policy constraints including limited airspace access, may mean overseas markets are more promising, said Frank Zhou, managing director at GBA Low Altitude Technology Co., which provides technological software to clients.

    “Perhaps for some Southeast Asian countries, if I introduce these applications to them, their demand could explode,” he said.

    Less than one-third of China’s low-altitude airspace was accessible for general aviation use in 2023 and there were problems with uneven distribution and a lack of internet connectivity, Zhang, the State Information Center researcher, said in a report. The number of registered general aviation aerodromes in China, excluding private airports, was just about a tenth of those in the U.S., she said.

    Officials are easing their grip, but there’s turbulence ahead

    Chinese policymakers are gradually working to close the gap. The military generally commands use of most Chinese airspace but has pledged to simplify approval procedures and shorten review times in Shenzhen and five other provinces.

    Proposed revisions of the civil aviation law include a chapter on development and promotion of civilian activities, addressing low-altitude airspace allocation and supervision.

    It’s still early days, said Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis Corporate and Investment Banking.

    He expects progress toward commercialization to materialize around 2030, with passenger-carrying eVTOLs for tourism or industrial purposes starting before flying taxi services. Some of the aerial products could become key exports, he said.

    China is a latecomer to the industry but now leads in developing small drones and low-altitude airspace investments, said Chen Wen-hua, director at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University’s Research Centre for Low Altitude Economy.

    One advantage is the ruling Communist Party’s ability to mobilize regulators, industry players and universities to work toward the same goal, he said. But development of the technologies involved and safety concerns and public acceptance will determine how quickly different applications of drones and low-flying vehicles are adopted.

    The future for the low altitude economy is bright, Chen said, “however, the road leading to that bright future might be treacherous.”

    ____

    Associated Press video producer Olivia Zhang and researcher Yu Bing in Beijing contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Shanghai relaxes home-buying rules as China’s property market struggles

    [ad_1]

    Shanghai, the commercial and financial hub of mainland China, has further relaxed its home purchase policy, following Beijing’s lead to rejuvenate the nation’s sluggish property market.

    Local residents could now own an unlimited number of flats outside the city’s outer ring road, an area where two-thirds of Shanghai’s housing is located, municipality authorities said on Monday. Previously, families were restricted to a maximum of two housing units in Shanghai.

    Shop Top Mortgage Rates

    Powered by Money.com – Yahoo may earn commission from the links above.

    The mortgage rate for buyers of a second home will be reduced to an annualised 3.05 per cent, down from 3.35 per cent, aligning it with the rate for first-home purchasers.

    Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

    The policy adjustment aims to address residents’ pent-up housing needs and improve living conditions, while promoting stable and healthy growth in the local real estate market, according to a statement from the Shanghai government.

    Shanghai’s market-boosting measures come after new home prices across 70 mainland cities decreased 3.4 per cent last month from a year earlier, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Home prices nationwide have been falling since April 2022.

    In the pre-owned home market, prices have been falling for more than two years, with July seeing a 5.9 per cent year-on-year drop, following a 6.1 per cent decline in June.

    Shanghai is the financial hub of mainland China. Photo: Xinhua alt=Shanghai is the financial hub of mainland China. Photo: Xinhua>

    Shanghai’s incentives were “in line with expectations”, said Zhu Xinhai, a sales manager at 5i5j Real Estate Brokerage, which is based in the city. However, the local policies “may not be sufficient to ignite strong buying interest because of prevailing pessimism regarding the economy and wage growth”, he said.

    On August 8, the Beijing municipal government initiated a relaxation of housing policies to stimulate homebuying, a surprise move intended to bolster the struggling property sector. Both local and non-local residents can now freely buy new and second-hand homes outside the Fifth Ring Road, a major highway encircling the suburbs.

    The property sector, along with related industries such as home appliances and construction materials, contributes about a quarter of China’s economic output.

    The real estate market, which had experienced three decades of rapid growth, began to decline in late 2020 when Beijing implemented austerity measures to curb excessive leverage among developers and prevent a financial shock to the economy.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Ronnie O’Sullivan: Seven-time world champion withdraws from Northern Ireland Open due to medical reasons

    Ronnie O’Sullivan: Seven-time world champion withdraws from Northern Ireland Open due to medical reasons

    [ad_1]

    Ronnie O’Sullivan has pulled out of the Northern Ireland Open, having already withdrawn from the British Open and Wuhan Open in recent weeks; Seven-time world champion last featured at the English Open in September

    Last Updated: 20/10/24 11:00pm

    Ronnie O’Sullivan withdrew from the Northern Ireland Open ahead of his first round match

    Seven-time world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan has withdrawn from the BetVictor Northern Ireland Open due to medical reasons, the World Snooker Tour (WST) has announced.

    O’Sullivan was due to face Long Zehuang in the last 64 in Belfast on Monday afternoon, but announcement from WST on their website confirmed he had pulled out of the event.

    China’s Long receives a bye to the last 32, with the tournament at the Waterfront Hall in Belfast running until October 27th.

    Ronnie O'Sullivan has now withdrawn from three consecutive events due to medical reasons

    Ronnie O’Sullivan has now withdrawn from three consecutive events due to medical reasons

    O’Sullivan hasn’t featured since being knocked out of the first round of the English Open last month after a shock defeat to He Guoqiang, where he describing his performance as “awful” and “embarrassing”.

    It is the third consecutive tournament that O’Sullivan has withdrawn from, having also skipped the British Open and Wuhan Open in recent weeks. He is next due to feature at the International Champions event in China from November 3-10.

    Ronnie O'Sullivan says if the World Snooker Championship was relocated to Saudi Arabia then he would find the tournament more convenient as a player

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Ronnie O’Sullivan says if the World Snooker Championship was relocated to Saudi Arabia then he would find the tournament more convenient as a player

    Ronnie O’Sullivan says if the World Snooker Championship was relocated to Saudi Arabia then he would find the tournament more convenient as a player

    Trump makes winning start in Belfast

    World No 1 Judd Trump began his title defence with a 4-0 win over Ishpreet Singh Chadha needing just 49 minutes to whitewash his opponent with the aid of breaks of 72, 65 and 112.

    “It was easy to get up for this event,” said Trump, who has won the event four times in the last six years. “Certain venues seem to be made for snooker. Anyone who has played in the semis or final at the Waterfront [Hall] knows how special it is.

    “It’s similar to Alexandra Palace or the Tempodrom in terms of the size of the crowd and the way people react. I thrive on that atmosphere with people enjoying themselves. It helps me show off and play my best shots.”

    Trump will face Matthew Selt in the last 32 after Selt defeated Lyu Haotian 4-1, while World Championship runner-up Jak Jones beat Alexander Ursenbacher 4-0 and Zhou Yuelong recovered from 3-1 down to oust Dominic Dale 4-3.

    Northern Ireland’s Jordan Brown suffered a 4-2 defeat to Robert Milkins, while 18-year-old Stan Moody made breaks of 108 and 105 before beating Ryan Day in a decider.

    Louis Heathcote also came through in a decider in a scrappy contest against former world champion Mark Selby, whose 81 in the first frame was the only break over 50 by either player.

    Stuart Bingham beat Scott Donaldson 4-1 in a similarly low-scoring contest, while China’s Pang Jungxu made a break of 98 in the decider as he beat compatriot Yuan Sijun 4-3.

    Sky Sports+ has officially launched and will be integrated into Sky TV, streaming service NOW and the Sky Sports app – giving Sky Sports customers access to over 50 per cent more live sport this year at no extra cost. Stream The new EFL season, Test cricket and more top sport with NOW.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • CNBC Daily Open: With an unchanged PPI, the Fed’s near the finish line

    CNBC Daily Open: With an unchanged PPI, the Fed’s near the finish line

    [ad_1]

    A television station broadcasts the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate cut on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024.

    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    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. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Winning week for markets
    All
    major U.S. indexes rose Friday on the back of encouraging inflation data and positive earnings from big banks. That gave them a winning week. Asia-Pacific markets mostly traded higher Monday. China’s Shanghai Composite rose around 2% in choppy trading. Over the weekend, Beijing reported a lower-than-expected consumer inflation rate and producer prices falling for September.

    Tesla’s Cybercab and Robovan
    Tesla shares slumped 8.8% after the company’s “We, Robot” event disappointed investors. At the Thursday night event, CEO Elon Musk unveiled the Cybercab, a two-seater with no steering wheels or pedals, and the Robovan, an autonomous vehicle that has a big capacity. But Musk offered little other details, causing analysts to cast doubt on the company.

    More assurances from China
    In a press briefing held Saturday, Chinese Minister of Finance Lan Fo’an told reporters the space for Beijing to increase its budget deficit is “rather large,” but the government is still discussing stimulus plans, according to a CNBC translation of the Chinese. Lan also announced measures to support employment and the real estate industry.

    Banks’ earnings in good shape
    JPMorgan Chase, the biggest bank in the U.S., reported third-quarter earnings and revenue that beat estimates. Net interest income grew 3% from a year ago and helped revenue to increase 6%. Wells Fargo had a decent third quarter. The bank beat estimates for earnings, but unlike JPMorgan, revenue was below expectations and NII decreased.

    [PRO] Earnings will show market direction
    After the deluge of data such as September’s jobs reports and consumer price index report, earnings will determine the path of markets for the near term. Big banks dominate third-quarter reports this week. It’s Bank of America and Goldman Sachs’ turn on Tuesday, while Morgan Stanley announces its earnings on Wednesday.

    The bottom line

    It seems like September’s hotter-than-expected inflation reading was indeed a blip.

    With a snap of its fingers, the producer price index assuaged worries over inflation remaining stubborn. The index, which measures wholesale prices – and thus generally prefigures changes in the CPI – was unchanged in September from August, defying expectations from a Dow Jones survey of a 0.1% increase.

    In fact, last week’s inflation figures looked so promising that Goldman Sachs think the Federal Reserve has just about brought inflation down to its 2% target without crashing the economy, as CNBC’s Jeff Cox reports.

    While consumer sentiment dipped slightly in October, according to the University of Michigan’s Survey of Consumers, “long run business conditions lifted to its highest reading in six months,” wrote Joanne Hsu, the survey’s director.

    JPMorgan Chase’s third-quarter earnings may be the first taste of that. The biggest bank in America beat estimates on both revenue and earnings. As banks generally reflect the health of the broader economy, it’s a signal things aren’t all bad despite dipping consumer confidence.

    Admittedly, earnings reflect what has already happened. Investors care more about what’s going to happen. But consumers are “fine and on strong footing,” as JPMorgan’s CFO Jeremy Barnum told reporters.

    Markets cheered the string of positive news.

    On Friday, the S&P 500 added 0.61%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.97% and the Nasdaq Composite was up 0.33%.

    That capped off a winning week for Wall Street – their fifth in a row. The S&P and Nasdaq climbed 1.1%, while the Dow did a bit better with its 1.2% increase for the week.

    “What we’re seeing … is a broadening of the market,” said Craig Sterling, head of U.S. equity research at Amundi US.

    It’s a reminder that subduing inflation is just a stop toward investors’ real endgame of a healthy stock market.

    – CNBC’s Jeff Cox, Samantha Subin and Brian Evans contributed to this story.   

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • China market investors adopting ‘Buy First Think Later’ approach: Wealth manager

    China market investors adopting ‘Buy First Think Later’ approach: Wealth manager

    [ad_1]

    Magellan Capital's Britney Lam explains why she remains bullish on the Chinese market, and where she's still hoping to see more gains come through.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • John Higgins becomes second snooker player to make 1,000 career centuries in defeat at English Open

    John Higgins becomes second snooker player to make 1,000 career centuries in defeat at English Open

    [ad_1]

    John Higgins reaches 1,000 career centuries but is knocked out of the English Open; Ronnie O’Sullivan is the only other player to have reached the four-figure century milestone

    Last Updated: 19/09/24 11:36pm

    John Higgins became only the second snooker player to reach 1,000 career centuries

    John Higgins became only the second snooker player to reach 1,000 career centuries despite crashing out of the English Open in Brentwood.

    The 49-year-old Scot achieved the milestone with breaks of 108 and 105 in the third and fifth frames of his quarter-final clash against Mark Allen.

    But it was not enough to seal a win that would have boosted his hopes of staying in the top 16 as Allen – who hit a century of his own in the opening frame – held firm in a gruelling decider to edge a 4-3 win.

    Ronnie O’Sullivan is the only other player to have reached the four-figure century milestone, having done so in the final frame of his 2019 Players Championship final win over Neil Robertson.

    Earlier, Judd Trump set up a quarter-final clash with China’s Wu Yize after hitting back from behind to claim a 4-2 win over Fan Zhengyi.

    The world No 1 nudged one closer to joining O’Sullivan and Higgins in the thousand-century club as he reeled off a break of 101 in the course of winning three frames in a row to extend his winning run.

    Mark Selby held his nerve to carve out a 4-3 win over Si Jiahui and book a last-eight meeting with India’s Ishpreet Singh Chadha, who also overcame a final frame decider against China’s He Guoqiang.

    Anthony Joshua’s heavyweight showdown with Daniel Dubois takes place on Saturday September 21 live on Sky Sports Box Office. Book Joshua v Dubois now!

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Facing budget crunches, Chinese tax collectors descend on companies

    Facing budget crunches, Chinese tax collectors descend on companies

    [ad_1]

    BEIJING (AP) — Chinese authorities are chasing unpaid taxes from companies and individuals dating back decades, as the government moves to plug massive budget shortfalls and address a mounting debt crisis.

    More than a dozen listed Chinese companies say they were slapped with millions of dollars in back taxes in a renewed effort to fix local finances that have been wrecked by a downturn in the property market that hit sales of land leases, a main source of revenues.

    Policies issued after a recent planning meeting of top Communist Party officials called for expanding local tax resources and said localities should expand their “tax management authority and improve their debt management.”

    Local government debt is estimated at up to $11 trillion, including what’s owed by local government financing entities that are “off balance sheet,” or not included in official estimates. More than 300 reforms the party has outlined include promises to better monitor and manage local debt, one of the biggest risks in China’s financial system.

    That will be easier said than done, and experts question how thoroughly the party will follow through on its pledges to improve the tax regime and better balance control of government revenues.

    “They are not grappling with existing local debt problems, nor the constraints on fiscal capacity,” said Logan Wright of the Rhodium Group, an independent research firm. “Changing central and local revenue sharing and expenditure responsibilities is notable but they have promised this before.”

    The scramble to collect long overdue taxes shows the urgency of the problems.

    Chinese food and beverage conglomerate VV Food & Beverage reported in June it was hit with an 85 million yuan ($12 million) bill for taxes dating back as far as 30 years ago. Zangge Mining, based in western China, said it got two bills totaling 668 million RMB ($92 million) for taxes dating to 20 years earlier.

    Local governments have long been squeezed for cash since the central government controls most tax revenue, allotting a limited amount to local governments that pay about 80% of expenditures such as salaries, social services and investments in infrastructure like roads and schools.

    Pressures have been building as the economy slowed and costs piled up from “zero-COVID” policies during the pandemic.

    Economists have long warned the situation is unsustainable, saying China must beef up tax collection to balance budgets in the long run.

    Under leader Xi Jinping, the government has cut personal income, corporate income, and value-added taxes to curry support, boost economic growth and encourage investment — often in ways that favored the rich, tax scholars say. According to most estimates, only about 5% of Chinese pay personal income taxes, far lower than in many other countries. Government statistics show it accounts for just under 9% of total tax revenues, and China has no comprehensive nationwide property tax.

    Finance Minister Li Fo’an told the official Xinhua News Agency that the latest reforms will give local governments more resources and more power over tax collection, adjusting the share of taxes they keep.

    “The central government doesn’t have a lot of responsibility for spending, so it doesn’t feel the pain of cutting taxes,” said Cui Wei, a professor of Chinese and international tax policy at the University of British Columbia.

    The effectiveness of the reforms will depend on how they’re implemented, said Cui, who is skeptical that authorities will carry out a proposal to increase central government spending. That “will require increasing central government staffing, and that’s an ‘organizational’ matter, not a simple spending matter,” he said.

    “I wouldn’t hold my breath,” Cui said.

    Sudden new tax bills have hit some businesses hard, further damaging already shaky business confidence. Ningbo Bohui Chemical Technology, in Zhejiang on China’s eastern coast, suspended most of its production after the local tax bureau demanded 500 million yuan ($69 million) in back taxes on certain chemicals. It is laying off staff and cutting pay to cope.

    Experts say the arbitrary way taxes are collected, with periods of leniency followed by sudden crackdowns, is counterproductive, discouraging companies from investing or hiring precisely when they need to.

    “When business owners are feeling insecure, how can there be more private investment growth in China?” said Chen Zhiwu, a finance professor at the University of Hong Kong’s business school. “An economic slowdown is inevitable.”

    The State Taxation Administration has denied launching a nationwide crackdown, which might imply past enforcement was lax. Tax authorities have “always been strict about preventing and investigating illegal taxation and fee collection,” the administration said in a statement last month.

    As local governments struggle to make ends meet, some are setting up joint operation centers run by local tax offices and police to chase back taxes. The AP found such centers have opened in at least 23 provinces since 2019.

    Both individuals and companies are being targeted. Dozens of singers, actors, and internet celebrities were fined millions of dollars for avoiding taxes in the past few years, according to a review of government notices.

    Internet livestreaming celebrity Huang Wei, better known by her pseudonym, Weiya, was fined 1.3 billion yuan ($210 million) for tax evasion in 2021. She apologized and escaped prosecution by paying up, but her social media accounts were suspended, crippling her business.

    The hunt for revenue isn’t limited to taxes. In the past few years, local authorities have drawn criticism for slapping large fines on drivers and street vendors, similar to how cities like Chicago or San Francisco earn millions from parking tickets. Despite pledges by top leaders to eliminate fines as a form of revenue collection, the practice continues, with city residents complaining that Shanghai police use drones and traffic cameras to catch drivers using their mobile phones at red lights.

    Outside experts and Chinese government advisors agree that structural imbalances between local and central governments must be addressed. But under Xi, China’s most authoritarian leader in decades, decision-making has grown more opaque, keeping businesses and analysts guessing, while vested interests have pushed back against major changes.

    “They have a hermetically sealed process that makes it difficult for people on the outside to know what is going on,” says Martin Chorzempa, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

    Beijing has been reluctant to rescue struggling local governments, wary it might leave them dependent on bailouts. So, the central government has stepped in only in dire cases, otherwise leaving local governments to resolve debt issues on their own.

    “In Chinese, we have a saying: You help people in desperate need, but you don’t help the poor,” said Tang Yao, an economist at Peking University. “You don’t want them to rely on soft money.”

    Economists say intervention may be required this time around and that the central government has leeway to take on more debt, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of only around 25%. That’s much lower than many other major economies.

    Accumulated total non-financial debt, meanwhile, is estimated at nearly triple the size of the economy, according to the National Institution for Finance and Development and still growing.

    “This is a huge structural problem that needs a huge structural solution that is not forthcoming,” said Logan Wright of the Rhodium Group, an independent research firm. “There’s really no way around this. And it’s getting worse, not better.”

    ___

    Fu Ting reported from Washington.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • ‘Don’t see a next leg up’ for Chinese equities from China’s third plenum: Strategist

    ‘Don’t see a next leg up’ for Chinese equities from China’s third plenum: Strategist

    [ad_1]

    Brian McCarthy of Macrolens shares his expectations for China's third plenum.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • China’s economic picture is ‘better than you think’: Ben Harburg

    China’s economic picture is ‘better than you think’: Ben Harburg

    [ad_1]

    Share

    Ben Harburg of Core Values Alpha says deflation is so entrenched in China that “numbers don’t show the amount of consumption that is truly going on.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • World Snooker Championship: Mark Williams knocked out by Si Jiahui in last-frame thriller as seeds keep tumbling

    World Snooker Championship: Mark Williams knocked out by Si Jiahui in last-frame thriller as seeds keep tumbling

    [ad_1]

    Three-time world champion Mark Williams beaten 10-9 by 2023 semi-finalist Si Jiahui at the Crucible; Welshman’s exit means six seeds have now fallen in the first round so far; Ronnie O’Sullivan begins bid for eighth title against Jackson Page on Wednesday afternoon

    Last Updated: 23/04/24 6:23pm

    Mark Williams lost 10-9 to Si Jiahui in the first round of the World Snooker Championship

    Mark Williams’ quest for a fourth World Snooker Championship title ended in the first round as he lost a last-frame thriller to 2023 semi-finalist Si Jiahui.

    Sixth seed Williams – world champion in 2000, 2003 and 2018 – led 5-4 after Monday’s opening session but then found himself 8-5 down as Si reeled off four frames in a row on Tuesday afternoon.

    The 49-year-old then recovered from 9-7 down to force a decider but his Chinese opponent, 21, knocked in a nerveless break of 77 in the 19th frame to secure a second-round meeting with fellow qualifier Jak Jones.

    Si lost to Luca Brecel in the 2023 semi-finals in Sheffield

    Si lost to Luca Brecel in the 2023 semi-finals in Sheffield

    Williams’ exit takes the number of seeds eliminated in the first round to six, with defending champion Luca Brecel, four-time winner Mark Selby, Ali Carter, Gary Wilson and Zhang Anda also dispatched.

    O’Sullivan plays first match on Wednesday afternoon

    Williams was hoping to become the oldest champion in the tournament’s history, a record held by Ronnie O’Sullivan, who was 46 years and 148 days when he won the most recent of his seven Crucible trophies in 2022.

    O’Sullivan begins his bid for an outright record eighth world title against Jackson Page at 2.30pm on Wednesday, with that match then concluding from 1pm the following day.

    Jak Jones is Si's second-round opponent this year after he beat 11th seed Zhang Anda at the weekend

    Jak Jones is Si’s second-round opponent this year after he beat 11th seed Zhang Anda at the weekend

    Si led Luca Brecel 14-5 in last year’s semi-final, only to lose the match 17-15 as Brecel won 12 of the next 13 frames in a Crucible-record comeback.

    Si’s clash with Williams was viewed as one of the ties of the first round, with Williams winning the previous tournament on the calendar, the Tour Championship in Manchester.

    Williams, 49, defeated Judd Trump, Mark Allen and O’Sullivan – the top three players in the world rankings – in successive matches to claim his second ranking title of the season, after the British Open in Cheltenham in October.

    Dominic Dale is playing at The Crucible for the first time in 10 years

    Dominic Dale is playing at The Crucible for the first time in 10 years

    What else happened on Tuesday?

    Elsewhere, 2020 finalist Kyren Wilson surged into an 8-1 lead over Dominic Dale.

    Dale, who is the oldest player at this year’s competition at the age of 52 and playing at the Crucible for the first time in 10 years, had one moment to cheer against Wilson – a sublime 120 clearance.

    World No 17 Jack Liswoski leads seventh seed and 2016 finalist Ding Junhui 5-4, while Mark Allen romped into a 7-2 advantage over Robbie Williams.

    Ad content | Stream Sky Sports on NOW

    Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from the Premier League and EFL, plus darts, cricket, tennis, golf and so much more.

    Get Sky Sports on WhatsApp

    You can now receive messages and alerts for the latest breaking sports news, analysis, in-depth features and videos from our dedicated WhatsApp channel. Find out more here…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Architect of Shanghai’s most expensive district wants to end cities’ ’50 Shades of Grey’

    Architect of Shanghai’s most expensive district wants to end cities’ ’50 Shades of Grey’

    [ad_1]

    In his two decades in China, architect Ben Wood has helped build over a dozen commercial projects that combine historic architectural styles with modern commerce—most famously in Shanghai’s buzzy Xintiandi area, where you can find a Shake Shack or a Tiffany’s housed in a 19th-century styled building.

    Now Wood wants more of his fellow designers to ditch the glass and steel of modern buildings and embrace more traditional materials and designs. “Whether it’s natural stone, wood…what’s the most sustainable resource we have in this world right now?” Wood said last Thursday at Fortune China’s ESG Summit in Shanghai, China. These materials are “overlooked by the ‘50 Shades of Grey’ that high-rise architects are selling people in this room today.”

    “Why buy ‘50 Shades of Grey’ when you can have color?” Wood said. “It’s not a stylistic issue, it’s a meaning issue, of what does that material mean?”

    For Chicago’s Soldier Field stadium, pictured soon after its renovation in 2003, architect Ben Wood tried to preserve the original facade while redoing the interior.

    Jeff Haynes—AFP via Getty Images

    Wood, who now runs Studio Shanghai, an architectural design firm based in the Chinese megacity, is famous for wanting to protect historic styles in his projects. The architect is perhaps best known for his work on Xintiandi, a high-rise shopping district near the city’s French Concession that opened in 2001, and the controversial 2003 redesign of Chicago’s Soldier Field, which preserved the external facade of the old stadium while renovating the interior.

    Shanghai awarded the Xintiandi redevelopment contract to Hong Kong-based developer Shui On and its owner Vincent Lo on one condition: That the billionaire tycoon preserve some of the local architecture. 

    Wood remembers the need to preserve the area’s “shikumen” architecture, a unique blend of Chinese and Western styles from the mid-19th century. Upon visiting the French Concession for the first time, Wood says he remembered thinking, “All these buildings are going to be torn down.”

    “My god, you can’t do that,” he said.

    Customers sit and dine in the open air area of a restaurant in the Xintiandi retail district in Shanghai, China.Customers sit and dine in the open air area of a restaurant in the Xintiandi retail district in Shanghai, China.
    Shanghai’s Xintiandi emulates the “Shikumen,” or “stone gate,” style: a mix of Chinese and European designs that came to the fore in the 19th century.

    Qilai Shen—Bloomberg via Getty Images

    When it came time to rebuild Xintiandi, builders carefully dismantled the old buildings, then used the same natural materials to rebuild them in the same architectural style, only with modern trappings like up-to-date wiring and plumbing. 

    Wood’s fellow architects have since credited him for showing the value in preserving old buildings. “China needed someone like Wood to show them you can make more money by saving rather than tearing down old buildings. No one had done that before because it was so much easier to work with a blank slate,” Cliff Pierson, an editor at Architectural Record magazine, told The New York Times in 2006. 

    Today, Xintiandi is mostly shopping malls and high-rises, surrounding a historic-styled, low-rise compound of high-end shops, popular eateries, and a museum honoring the birthplace of the Chinese Communist Party.

    Xintiandi is a jumble of Chinese history and modern commercialism, where a Shake Shack is down the road from a museum honoring the birth of the Communist Party of China.

    Qilai Shen—Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Ben Wood’s latest project—again developed with Vincent Lo and Shui On—is Panlong Tiandi, a commercial complex built from a renovated suburban village in southwestern Shanghai that opened in May. The developer says the shopping district attracted about 200,000 visitors a day after its launch, and has continued to attract similar numbers in the months since.

    Panlong Tiandi’s popularity with Chinese shoppers is a bright spot amid a wider slowdown in China’s economy, particularly in its property sector, which Wood referred to last week. 

    “China is facing an economic crisis,” Wood said. “It won’t be solved by building more tall buildings.” Instead, it “will be solved by returning…to a more community-oriented life,” Wood suggests. 

    The country’s economic recovery has stumbled since the country lifted COVID restrictions almost a year ago. Consumption is not recovering as quickly as officials had hoped, putting pressure on local and foreign companies alike. A property bust—triggered by private developers who borrowed excessive sums of money to build more projects—is also dragging down a willingness to spend.

    On Thursday, Wood called on conference attendees to push for better urban designs.

    “You get the cities you deserve,” he said. “So if you don’t insist on a livable city? God help them.”

    Fortune’s Brainstorm Design conference is returning on Dec. 6 at the MGM Cotai in Macau, China. Panelists and attendees will debate and discuss “Empathy in the Age of AI” or how new technologies are revolutionizing the creative industry.

    Subscribe to the new Fortune CEO Weekly Europe newsletter to get corner office insights on the biggest business stories in Europe. Sign up before it launches Nov. 29.

    [ad_2]

    Nicholas Gordon

    Source link

  • China relaxes capital controls to entice badly needed foreign investment | CNN Business

    China relaxes capital controls to entice badly needed foreign investment | CNN Business

    [ad_1]

    Editor’s Note: Sign up for CNN’s Meanwhile in China newsletter which explores what you need to know about the country’s rise and how it impacts the world.


    Hong Kong
    CNN
     — 

    China is allowing foreigners in Shanghai and Beijing to move their money freely into and out of the country, in a significant move toward relaxing its strict capital controls as it tries to woo overseas investors.

    The news was announced just weeks after official data showed foreign direct investment (FDI) in the country had hit a record quarterly low amid a slump in business confidence.

    Foreign investors — either individuals or companies — at the Shanghai pilot free trade zone, where tens of thousands of firms are located, can remit their funds without any restriction or delay, according to a statement from the city government posted Thursday.

    The funds need be “real and [legally] compliant” and related to their investments in China, it said. The rules, which do not apply to mainland Chinese nationals, took effect on September 1.

    Shanghai’s free trade zone is one of China’s largest and is slightly bigger than the city of Seattle.

    It’s home to Tesla’s Gigafactory as well as the country headquarters of hundreds of multinationals, including HP, AstraZeneca and BlackRock.

    On the same day, the Beijing city government proposed similar regulations, pledging to facilitate cross-border fund flows for foreign businesses. It’s seeking public feedback on the proposal.

    The policies are aimed at attracting foreign investment to build an open economy, the government said.

    China maintains a “closed” capital account, which means companies and individuals can’t move money in or out of the country except in accordance with strict rules.

    The Chinese currency has weakened more than 6% against the US dollar since the start of April, as economic growth lost momentum and its central bank eased monetary policy more aggressively than its Western peers. A weak currency could further reduce a country’s investment appeal and accelerate the outflow of capital.

    Thursday’s measures are the latest effort by Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s government to woo foreign capital and stabilize ties with the West.

    A gauge of FDI in China plunged in the second quarter, hitting its lowest level since 1998, when records began, according to data published by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange last month.

    Separate statistics published by the commerce ministry Sunday showed that its measure of FDI dropped more than 5% during the first eight months of 2023, compared with a year earlier.

    Business confidence among American firms in China appears to have plummeted.

    On Tuesday, a survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai showed that only 52% of respondents were optimistic about their five-year business outlook, the lowest level since the survey began in 1999. That compares with 55% in 2022 and 78% in 2021.

    Foreign companies and investors have grown wary of rising risks in the world’s second largest economy, including a slowdown marked by weak domestic demand and a housing crisis, Beijing’s desire to prioritize national security over economic growth and deteriorating relations between China and many Western countries.

    China has made a series of moves recently to stabilize foreign trade and investment, including cutting a tax on stock trading for the first time since 2008.

    On Monday, the People’s Bank of China met with a number of top Western companies, including JP Morgan, Tesla and HSBC, pledging to further open up the financial industry and “optimize” the operating environment for overseas companies.

    The latest relaxation in capital controls is part of a policy package announced by Beijing and Shanghai, the country’s two biggest cities, to facilitate foreign trade and investment.

    Expatriates working at foreign enterprises in the Shanghai free trade zone — including employees from Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan — can transfer their income abroad without restriction, according to the rules.

    Beijing’s policy contains similar measures. It also promised to make it easier for foreign companies to transfer data overseas with “fast-track” channels and encouraged them to invest in the city’s high-end manufacturing, services and green industries.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Chinese EV maker Nio releases a smartphone it expects at least half of its users to buy

    Chinese EV maker Nio releases a smartphone it expects at least half of its users to buy

    [ad_1]

    Chinese electric vehicle maker Nio launches a smartphone at an event in Shanghai on Sept. 21, 2023.

    Evelyn Cheng | CNBC

    SHANGHAI — Chinese electric car brand Nio on Thursday released an Android smartphone, which the company expects at least half its users to buy, CEO William Li told CNBC in an exclusive interview ahead of the launch.

    The phone, priced from around $900 to $1,000, is an Android device that’s about $150 cheaper versus a comparable Huawei phone, Li said in Mandarin.

    He told CNBC that among Nio users from which the company makes a profit, more than half are iPhone users, while the other half uses flagship Android phones from Huawei and other brands.

    “I believe this portion of users are very likely to use this new form [of device] when they are changing their phones,” Li said according to a CNBC translation, citing the phone’s overall performance and car connectivity.

    Nio is the first high-end Chinese electric car brand to release its own smartphone, which Li said the company developed in about a year. Electric car companies in China have sought to make in-car entertainment and mobile phone connectivity a selling point for their vehicles.

    Delivery starts on Sept. 28, with orders starting immediately.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    Nio shares

    Swedish electric car maker Polestar, which counts China as a major market, told CNBC earlier this month it plans to launch a phone in December.

    Smartphone companies Apple and Xiaomi have long been reportedly working on their own cars.

    Less than two years ago, Huawei released the Aito brand, which sells electric cars in China that are integrated with the smartphone company’s operating system. Huawei also sells its in-car software to other electric car companies such as Avatr and BAIC’s Arcfox.

    That connectivity allows drivers to sync their personal device settings — such as for music — with the car. Nio also has a standalone mobile app.

    A smartphone for cars

    While the new Nio device resembles a typical smartphone, it comes with a special button that acts as a key for the car, Li told CNBC on Wednesday.

    The Nio smartphone also allows users to connect more seamlessly with the car, such as when transitioning between the phone and the vehicle during online meetings, he said.

    What we are pursuing is the car experience and the emotional experience we can provide to our users.

    The new device is an opportunity for Nio to make more money per user.

    “We pay more attention to the value that each user brings to our entire brand, and it is more convenient to connect users. It is also more efficient than before,” Li said. “What we are pursuing is the car experience and the emotional experience we can provide to our users.”

    The phone is available to all consumers in China, not just those who own Nio cars, Li added.

    He pointed out that the Nio phone app has 600,000 active users a day, about 1.5-times the number of car users.

    Nio holds a product event in Shanghai on Sept. 21, 2023.

    Evelyn Cheng | CNBC

    Nio’s monthly deliveries rose to around 20,000 in August and July, after a decline in delivery volume the prior three months.

    In the second quarter ended June 30, Nio reported that revenue from the “other sales” category was mainly driven by a boost in the sales of used cars, accessories and power services, which more than doubled from a year ago to 1.59 billion yuan ($217.86 million) despite a decline in total revenue.

    The company attributed the year-on-year and quarter-on-quarter increase in other sales to “continued growth of our users.”

    Europe market

    We believe time is still on Nio’s side.

    It’s more important for the world to cooperate, especially on addressing climate issues, he added.

    “I don’t think anyone should block users from using good products through multiple ways” such as investigations, he said.

    Investing for the future

    In China, the penetration of new energy vehicles has expanded quickly, but an overall slowdown in economic growth has weighed on the market.

    Competition in the domestic electric car market is “fierce,” Li said, noting challenges for industry peers as well.

    But he expects business investments will help Nio create barriers to entry. “We believe time is still on Nio’s side,” Li said.

    He noted the company spends about $500 million on research and development every quarter. Other major areas of investment for the company, he said, are battery charging and development of a mass market brand.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • CNBC Daily Open: For banks, big profits don’t mean stock gains

    CNBC Daily Open: For banks, big profits don’t mean stock gains

    [ad_1]

    A person enters the JPMorgan Chase headquarters in New York, June 30, 2022.

    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Lackluster markets
    U.S. stocks
    traded mixed Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average the only major index to rise, though all big indexes ended in the green for the week. Asia-Pacific markets fell Monday. China’s Shanghai Composite retreated around 1.2%, leading losses in the region, after disappointing economic data.

    The Chinese economy slows
    China’s second-quarter gross domestic product grew 6.3% from a year ago, falling short of the 7.3% increase analysts had expected. Moreover, the number looks impressive on a year-on-year basis only because Shanghai was in lockdown this time last year. When tabulated month over month, GDP grew only 0.8%, much slower than the 2.2% increase in the first quarter.

    Caged bird
    Twitter’s experiencing negative cash flow because of an approximately 50% drop in advertising revenue and “heavy debt,” Elon Musk said Saturday morning. Musk, who is Twitter’s CTO and executive chairman, told a BBC reporter in April that the company’s “roughly breakeven” and expected to have positive cash flow within the next quarter.

    Thawing Activision Blizzard deal
    Microsoft’s one step closer to acquiring Activision Blizzard. The U.S. Appeals Court on Friday denied the Federal Trade Commission’s motion to stop the $68.7 billion deal, while Britain’s competition regulator said it would consider Microsoft’s proposals to “restructure the transaction.” Meanwhile, Sony’s signed a 10-year agreement with Microsoft to keep Activision’s Call of Duty on the PlayStation console.

    [PRO] Retail therapy
    China’s economy may be slowing, but the country’s “premium” spenders are still splashing out on goods, according to Bernstein. The private wealth management firm estimates there are 263 million people in that category, who are spending on products from these companies and potentially boosting their shares.

    The bottom line

    Despite big banks posting solid earnings for their second quarter, they didn’t reap rewards in stock markets Friday.

    Citigroup’s earnings and revenue beat expectations. Its shares sank 4.05%. Likewise, Wells Fargo reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue, and raised its guidance for full-year net interest income. Still, market response was muted. Shares of Wells Fargo slipped 0.34%

    Even JPMorgan, the grand dame of U.S. banks, didn’t manage to rouse investor interest. Its net income soared 67% year over year; its stock inched up 0.6%.

    Why aren’t investors more excited about banks?

    The memory of March’s banking turmoil, I think, still lingers. Higher interest rates may benefit big banks because their deposits are relatively sticky compared with those at regional banks — such as the ill-fated Silicon Valley Bank.

    But high rates are also deepening commercial real estate debt, impeding dealmaking and lowering loan demand — all headwinds for banks, regardless of their size. It’s hard, in other words, to muster enthusiasm over banks when rates are still at historically high levels.

    Another reason for the disinterest in the banking sector, I think, is because stocks are essentially promises of future earnings. And there’s nothing new or exciting that banks can do, really, to generate income.

    In fact, I’d argue that banks are supposed to be boring. No one wants the place where they entrust their money to be exciting. The banks that collapsed this year were all, loosely speaking, deviating from boring banking business: Focusing on tech startups, the crypto industry, or — in the case of Credit Suisse — just straightforwardly plagued by scandals.

    It’s maybe not a bad thing, then, that investors aren’t piling into big banks.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • China’s producer prices plunge the most in seven years as deflation hangs over economy

    China’s producer prices plunge the most in seven years as deflation hangs over economy

    [ad_1]

    People walk past buildings in Shanghai, Shanghai, China, on Friday, April 21, 2023.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Inflation in China stayed at low levels in May, as the economy struggles to recover even after its strict Covid lockdown measures lifted late last year.

    Producer price index in May fell 4.6%, compared to a decline of 3.6% in April. A Reuters poll showed economists expected to see a decline of 4.3% in producer prices.

    The reading marked the steepest year-on-year drop in seven years, when producer prices saw a year-on-year drop of 7.2% in May 2016.

    China’s consumer price index in May rose 0.2% compared to a year ago, government data showed. Economists surveyed by Reuters expected a 0.3% rise. CPI in April was at a two-year low of 0.1%.

    Month-on-month, prices fell 0.2% — economists predicted a 0.1% decline.

    China’s low consumer inflation and deflation in its producer prices come in contrast to relatively high inflation in major economies around the world.

    Global central banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have been fighting to bring down rising prices for more than a year. Just this week, Canada and Australia defied expectations and raised interest rates.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    After the release , the onshore Chinese yuan weakened 0.06% after to 7.1154 against the U.S. dollar. The CSI 300 Index, which tracks the largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen, shed 0.2% and last traded slightly above the flatline.

    The latest data is among a batch of economic indicators that point to a cooling economy in China.

    Pinpoint Asset Management’s Zhiwei Zhang said, “The risk of deflation is still weighing on the economy. Recent economic indicators send consistent signals that the economy is cooling.”

    Zhang expects the Chinese government’s next fiscal policy review to take place after its second quarter gross domestic product is released next month.

    This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • China’s answer to Boeing and Airbus, the C919, takes first commercial flight | CNN

    China’s answer to Boeing and Airbus, the C919, takes first commercial flight | CNN

    [ad_1]



    CNN
     — 

    China’s first large homegrown passenger jet made its inaugural commercial flight on Sunday, flying from Shanghai to Beijing, Chinese state news agency Xinhua reported.

    Flying as China Eastern Airlines flight MU9191, the new narrow-body C919 plane left Shanghai at 10:32 a.m. local time. It was welcomed with a water salute after it landed at the Beijing Capital International Airport at 12:31 p.m.

    After years of research and development, the launch of the C919 is seen as a pivotal moment in Beijing’s “Made in China 2025” strategy, which aims to boost local manufacturing, including by reducing reliance on foreign airplanes for its aviation sector.

    “The first commercial flight is a coming-of-age ceremony of the new aircraft, and C919 will get better and better if it stands the test of the market,” said Zhang Xiaoguang, director of the marketing and sales department of COMAC, in a Xinhua report.

    With a range of up to 5,555 kilometers (3,452 miles), the C919 will take on the world’s two major aircraft manufacturers, Airbus and Boeing. It will be a direct competitor to their A320 and B737 narrowbody jets, most commonly used for domestic and regional international flights.

    Built by COMAC (Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China) in China, the first C919 was delivered to China Eastern Airlines in December 2022 and in the months since has been put through a series of test flights.

    The single-aisle, twin-engined aircraft has 164 seats in a two-class cabin configuration consisting of business and economy seats.

    According to the 2022 Shanghai Science and Technology Progress Report issued by the Shanghai government, 32 clients had placed a total of 1,035 orders for the plane as of the end of 2022.

    Many of the plane’s major elements such as the nose, fuselage, outer wing, vertical stabilizer and horizontal stabilizer were designed by COMAC.

    However, the company enlisted Western companies to assist with some components. This includes the plane’s LEAP-1C engines, which were developed by CFM International, a joint venture between General Electric and French high-tech industrial group Safran.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Foreign businesses in China fear they’re being targeted in a ‘campaign’ of government crackdowns. It’s probably not that simple.

    Foreign businesses in China fear they’re being targeted in a ‘campaign’ of government crackdowns. It’s probably not that simple.

    [ad_1]

    Foreign investors and businesspeople with exposure to China are becoming increasingly unnerved. And for good reason.

    In March, Chinese authorities detained an employee of Japanese drug manufacturer Astellas Pharma JP:4503 ALPMY for alleged espionage violations. The Chinese seem confident in their case. Beijing’s ambassador to Japan said there was ample evidence of wrongdoing, and, despite the uproar, the Astellas employee remains detained.

    That…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • After a ‘rollercoaster’ quarter, strategists are still relatively upbeat about Asia-Pacific markets

    After a ‘rollercoaster’ quarter, strategists are still relatively upbeat about Asia-Pacific markets

    [ad_1]

    “China’s growth recovery and north Asia’s earnings rebound in 2024 remain our key investment themes and overweight areas,” Goldman Sachs’ strategists, led by Timothy Moe, wrote in a Saturday note.

    Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    It’s been a dramatic quarter for Asia-Pacific stock markets, but strategists are expecting the region to be in better shape than its global peers.

    Stocks in the Asia-Pacific were mixed on the first day of trade of the second quarter of the year, with economists predicting China’s recovery will cushion the dampening effect of high global interest rates on the regional economy.

    Mainland China’s bourses led gains in the wider region on Monday, with the Shenzhen Component closing its session 1.4% higher and the Shanghai Composite up by 0.72%.

    “China’s growth recovery and north Asia’s earnings rebound in 2024 remain our key investment themes and overweight areas,” Goldman Sachs’ strategists, led by Timothy Moe, wrote in a Saturday note.

    The firm reiterated its expectations for China’s economy to grow by 6% this year — more than the government’s target of “around 5%.” The Goldman strategists said their views are supported by strong activity data seen in the previous quarter.

    China’s official manufacturing purchasing managers’ index rose to 52.6 in February, marking the highest reading of factory activity data since April 2012, before falling to 51.9 in March.

    S&P Global Ratings, in its second quarter outlook report, added that although China’s growth may not completely erase the impact of a global slowdown on Asia-Pacific markets, it will provide some support.

    “China’s economy is on track to recover this year. For other economies this will dampen but not offset the hit of slower growth in the U.S. and Europe, the fading impact of domestic re-opening post the pandemic, and higher interest rates,” S&P’s Asia-Pacific economists Louis Kuijs and Vishrut Rana wrote in the report.

    “We maintain our cautiously optimistic outlook for Asia-Pacific,” S&P economists wrote.

    ‘Rollercoaster’ Q1

    Goldman Sachs strategists pointed to the volatility seen in Asia-Pacific stocks in the first quarter for the year.

    “The first quarter of 2023 was a rollercoaster for investors in Asian regional equities,” the strategists wrote in the note.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    hide content

    The MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan index saw gains of roughly 11%, peaking at around 560 levels at the end of January.

    It erased all of the gains by mid-March to fall below levels seen at the start of the year, and recently saw a rally of about 5%. That puts the index at a year-to-date gain of 3.62% as of last week’s close.

    The index fell nearly 0.24% in a volatile first trading day of the quarter on Monday.

    ‘Relatively resilient’ to banking stresses

    Goldman Sachs strategists added that overall macroeconomic conditions are beneficial for markets in the Asia-Pacific.

    “The partial replacement of expectations of higher Fed rate hikes by lower US growth is relatively more favorable for most Asian economies,” Goldman strategists wrote, adding that “Asia appears relatively resilient to the recent DM [developed markets] banking stresses,” referring to recent banking turmoil in the United States and Europe.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    BNP Paribas took a similar view.

    “We think risks to Asian banks are limited,” BNP Paribas’ Manishi Raychaudhuri said in a March 27 note, describing the region’s debt-to-GDP ratios as relatively “safe.”

    “Asia’s USD debt fell over the past 3 years and most Asian economies’ forex reserves appear safe relative to forex debt,” he wrote in the note.

    “Liquidity remains abundant in Asia. Interest rates also have not risen too sharply in Asia,” he said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • China denies Mark Mobius’ claims that its government is restricting capital flow

    China denies Mark Mobius’ claims that its government is restricting capital flow

    [ad_1]

    Chinese authorities have denied claims by billionaire investor Mark Mobius, who said he is unable to wire funds out of China due to government restrictions on capital flow.

    Asked in an interview with Fox Business last week about whether he’s reduced his exposure to China, Mobius said, “the government is restricting the flow of money out of the country.”

    He warned investors of “all kinds of barriers” imposed by the government.

    “I’m personally affected because I have an account with HSBC in Shanghai,” he told Fox Business. “I can’t get my money out.”

    Mark Mobius, executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management’s Emerging Markets Group

    Dario Pignatelli | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    China has strict rules on foreign exchange and taking money out of the country.

    Officials at the State Administration on Foreign Exchange (SAFE) told CNBC in a Monday statement that it’s a matter of a “basic process and internal control requirements of the bank handling specific business.” They did not name HSBC.

    “We have noticed that relevant market participants have doubts about the bank’s handling of their personal fund remittance businesses,” SAFE said in its statement. “There is no change in the country’s policy on cross-border remittance of funds.”

    On Tuesday, Mobius told Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao the “problem has been resolved” but did not elaborate.

    When asked about the Ming Pao report, HSBC said, “We do not comment on individual client circumstances.”

    Outlook for emerging markets looks good this year, says Mobius Capital Partners' Mark Mobius

    SAFE said it will continue guiding and urging commercial banks to optimize cross-border financial services and improve their service levels.

    Peter Alexander, managing director of Z-Ben, a Shanghai-based investment management consulting firm, said he did not encounter problems in cross-border capital flows out of China.

    “I spent this morning speaking to a dozen clients all of whom confirmed to me that there are no issues in the operations of cross-border capital flows,” he wrote in a LinkedIn post. “Business as usual.”

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    He said what Mobius is facing may be a process that “any individual looking to conduct overseas transfers” goes through. He added that his business has “never had a single issue” wiring money in and out of China.

    “As for Mobius, well the issue raised is with his personal bank account,” Alexander wrote. He pointed out that Mobius is “far from alone in his frustration” as other have experienced the same issues.

    — CNBC’s Iris Wang contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link