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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Julius Wong who wrote (149714)7/19/2019 9:11:39 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218125
 
much misunderstandings and plenty of alt-perceptions


On 19 Jul 2019, at 8:12 AM, J wrote:

There are a few misunderstandings w/r to team China common by perception of others elsewhere, them be …

- whenever the folks chant, “when china aggregates enough gold, would go on a gold RMB standard and/or help to free gold price from its paper cousin”

Against which I ponder, is there such a thing as “enough” when it comes to gold aggregation?

- sometime I see something about China needing to maintain a certain growth rate vs some other growth rate, and

I ruminate, is it that china needs to maintain a certain growth rate, or that china needs to maintain stability, growth and reform?

- when it comes to “China may never become rich” which I guess the suspect WSJ and such same means per capita basis,

I guess that WSJ and the lot have not considered what the implications would be if team China achieve 50% of the boogey

And I reckon the same lot do not consider the rest of the nation-states meeting team China half-way w/r to per capita anything

Further, suppose a few provinces of China beats Korea, Japan, and province Taiwan by per capita

On 18 Jul 2019, at 10:15 PM, D wrote:

China’s State-Driven Growth Model Is Running Out of Gas - WSJ
wsj.com

Latest data suggest China may not match the trajectory of Taiwan, South Korea and Japan

New data showing the toll trade tensions are taking on China’s economy are merely a symptom of a more serious malaise: The country’s state-led growth model is running out of gas. A recession or crisis may not be imminent, but the long-run implications are just as serious. Absent a change in direction, China may never become rich.



To: Julius Wong who wrote (149714)7/19/2019 2:53:15 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218125
 
42% overall market share seems okay for team Huawei
scmp.com

Nearly 60 per cent of Huawei’s 50 5G contracts are from Europe


Huawei, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment vendor, said more than half of the contracts it has signed so far to supply next-generation 5G gear are with European operators.


Huawei has secured 50 5G commercial contracts globally, of which 28 were signed in Europe, Chen Lifang, president of the telecoms giants public affairs and communications department, said in Brussels on Thursday.

The Shenzhen-based company, which leads in global 5G equipment sales, did not disclose the names of its partners. Huawei’s major competitors in network development, Finland’s Nokia and Sweden’s Ericsson, had secured 43 contracts and 22 contracts as of the end June, respectively. Huawei’s crosstown rival, ZTE, has publicly announced 25 commercial deals.

Huawei earned 204.5 billion yuan (US$29.8 billion) from Europe, the Middle East and Africa – its biggest overseas market region – in 2018, according to its annual report. That accounted for about 28.4 per cent of its total revenue and more than the combined contribution from the Americas and Asia-Pacific, excluding China regions.

Europe, which has generally resisted pressure from the US to shut out Huawei, is an important market that the company could not afford to lose after a series of bans in North America and Oceania.

“Huawei is following closely the 5G framework of the EU, and fully supports this framework,” Chen said at the Brussels round table on Thursday, according to the transcript on Huawei EU’s official Twitter account.

Huawei does not have a risk management or cybersecurity mechanism with the Chinese government, but only with governments in Germany, Britain and Canada, she added, according to the Twitter post.

In Britain, Huawei is helping develop 5G networks for all four of the country’s major mobile phone operators, even though the government has yet to confirm whether the Chinese technology company will be permitted to build 5G wireless infrastructure, according to a report by The Guardian earlier this month.

Following the establishment of the British lab, Huawei in March opened its second European cybersecurity lab in Brussels, as the company tries to assuage concerns of local governments and fight back at US allegations that its equipment poses a national security risk.