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Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DinoNavarre who wrote (6264)8/29/2020 1:45:04 AM
From: elmatador1 Recommendation

Recommended By
DinoNavarre

  Respond to of 13808
 
Andy Xie is half right, Dino.

Although the pandemic will have a downward effect on consumption of tech, like smartphones, other tech sub-sectors are actually growing during the Covid pandemic.

PCs, that have been historically going down is going up as people need more of them at home says
HP, Dell beat Wall Street estimates as the demand for PCs rise
money.yahoo.com

The need for data means datacenters' and Internet infrastructure need to grow.


Pandemic sent the shopping experience completely online. Which means Amazon is doing better.


Broadband usage, according to OpenVault Broadband Insights (OVBI) surged during the Covid-19

The firm found that average bandwidth consumption at the end of the first quarter was 402.5 GB, an increase of 47% compared to the first quarter 2019’s average, which was 273.5 GB.

The report found that during COVID-19 upstream internet traffic rose 5.3% between the ends of the first and second quarters.

This, the firm said, was probably due to videoconferencing, education and other uses due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Upstream consumption is up 56% year over year for the second quarter of 2020.

Note that usually we use more downstream then upstream badwidth. The report found a desire for faster tiers. The OVBI found that almost 5% of subscribers have gigabit or faster connections, a 133% year over year increase – and an increase of 75% during the past six months. Sixty-one percent of subscribers have connections of 100 Mbps or faster, an increase of 27% over the past year.

Mobile operators, cleverly, used Covid 19 to push for more spectrum and this means more expansion of mobile networks that drives the likes of Nokia, Ericsson, Cisco and Samsung.



To: DinoNavarre who wrote (6264)8/29/2020 3:38:57 AM
From: clochard1 Recommendation

Recommended By
DinoNavarre

  Respond to of 13808
 
The tech stock bubble doesn't have to pop any more than the bubble of renaissance paintings or big city properties. However what the Fed is doing is making it impossible for people to achieve financial independence from the increasing power of corporations and governments which in turn are becoming unified and global. People are being turned into an ingredient and a product of these entities and have little chance of survival outside their realms. We will have to work or die regardless of age if we can't build viable pension savings. As wages decline due to the increased pricing power of the corporations the incentive to pursue higher education will also decline. The result of all this is the iconic Orwellian nightmare where everybody is dependent on government handouts and nobody can be different. Let's see if we are clever and can work around the problem.



To: DinoNavarre who wrote (6264)9/1/2020 11:48:39 AM
From: elmatador2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DinoNavarre
pak73

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13808
 
Pentagon Names 20 Chinese Firms It Says Are Military-Controlled
By Anthony Capaccio and Jenny Leonard

24 de junho de 2020, 22:51 WEST Updated on 25 de junho de 2020, 05:14 WEST
Huawei, Hikvision and Panda Electronics are on the list

Relations with China have become a U.S. election-year issue

The Pentagon unveiled a list of companies it says are owned or controlled by China’s military, opening them to increased scrutiny in the latest spat between the world’s biggest economies.

The 20 companies included Huawei Technologies Co. and Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology Co., as well as a number of state-run enterprises. In letters to lawmakers dated June 24, the Pentagon said it was providing a list of “Communist Chinese military companies operating in the United States,” which was first requested in the fiscal 1999 defense policy law.

This list includes “entities owned by, controlled by, or affiliated with China’s government, military, or defense industry,” Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffman said in a statement.

“As the People’s Republic of China attempts to blur the lines between civil and military sectors, ‘knowing your supplier’ is critical,” Hoffman said. “We envision this list will be a useful tool for the U.S. government, companies, investors, academic institutions, and like-minded partners to conduct due diligence with regard to partnerships with these entities, particularly as the list grows.”

While the move may be largely symbolic since it doesn’t confer new authorities on the president, it comes as relations between the two superpowers continue to deteriorate, and as China has emerged as a key foreign policy issue in the U.S. election campaign. The U.S. has threatened sanctions against China for its treatment of Muslim minorities and increased grip over Hong Kong, while Beijing has for the past year threated to produce its own blacklist of U.S. companies.

The U.S. list of companies said to be affiliated with the Peoples Liberation Army was mandated under the Defense Authorization Act of 1999, but no administration ever put out the required report. Trump has the authority under the International Emergency Economics Powers Act of 1977 to level financial sanctions against those companies.

‘Baseless’China’s foreign and defense ministries, as well as the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, which oversees China’s government-run companies, didn’t immediately reply to a fax during a public holiday in the country. Huawei, which already faces a number of restrictions from the U.S. government, also didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

Hikvision called the U.S. move “baseless,” saying its ownership details have always been publicly available as a listed company and “independently operated enterprise.” It said it would continue to work with the U.S. government “to answer questions and correct misunderstandings about the company.” The company was among a number of Chinese entities put on a blacklist last year by the Trump administration.

“Hikvision strongly opposes the decision by the U.S. government to misapply a never-used provision of a 21-year-old law,” a company spokesperson said. “Not only is Hikvision not a ‘Chinese military company,’ Hikvision has never participated in any R&D work for military applications.”

Read More: Biden, Trump Quit Praising Xi to Feud Over Who’d Be Tougher

China has long pursued a policy known as ‘civil-military integration’ that allows enterprises from both sectors to share dual-use technologies. In some cases, the policy allows the Chinese military to access technologies that might otherwise be difficult to obtain under sanctions imposed after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.

“The list put out today by the Pentagon is a start but woefully inadequate to warn the American people about the state-owned and -directed companies that support the Chinese government and Communist Party’s activities threatening U.S. economic and national security,” Republican Senator Marco Rubio said in a statement.

China hawks in Congress have long pushed him to direct his Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to deploy sanctions against Huawei. It’s unclear, however, whether the president would be willing to take such aggressive action against some of China’s most prized business champions in an election year, as the Beijing government would likely retaliate against American companies.

‘Long Overdue’Derek Scissors, a China expert at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said it was “long overdue for the government to indicate which Chinese firms have tight links to the PLA. But if there’s no meaningful action coming with that, it would just be posturing, possibly in reaction to the Bolton book.”

In his memoir, which on sale Tuesday, former National Security Advisor John Bolton asserted that Trump asked Xi Jinping, China’s leader, to bolster purchases of American agricultural products to help him win re-election in November. Trump has rejected that claim.

Some of the other major companies on the list include:

--Aviation Industry Corporation of China: Known AVIC, this state-owned company makes military and civil aircraft, and also provides plane components to Airbus SE and Boeing Co.

--China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation and China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation: These are state-owned companies that manufacture military components as well as satellites and unmanned aerial vehicles.

--China Railway Construction Corporation: This is a state-owned company that’s involved in construction of infrastructure projects such as railroads, tunnels and port terminals.

--China Telecommunications Corp.: This company owns Hong Kong-listed China Telecom Corp., the country’s No. 2 phone company, with $54 billion in revenue last year. The Federal Communications Commission is reviewing the license for China Telecom’s U.S. unit, saying the company’s links to the government pose a national security risk. State-owned China Telecom’s lawyers responded earlier this month with a letter saying the company obeys all U.S. laws and does not present a security risk.

--China Mobile Communications Group Co.: It owns China’s biggest mobile phone operator, with more than 940 million subscriptions. The FCC denied the U.S. arm of Hong Kong-listed China Mobile Ltd. a license for the U.S. last year, saying that granting the application “would raise substantial and serious national security and law enforcement risks.”

Here is the full list: Aviation Industry Corporation of China;
  1. China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation;
  2. China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation;
  3. China Electronics Technology Group Corporation;
  4. China South Industries Group Corporation;
  5. China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation;
  6. China State Shipbuilding Corporation;
  7. China North Industries Group Corporation;
  8. Huawei Technologies Co.;
  9. Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology Co.;
  10. Inspur Group;
  11. Aero Engine Corporation of China;
  12. China Railway Construction Corporation;
  13. CRRC Corp.;
  14. Panda Electronics Group;
  15. Dawning Information Industry Co.;
  16. China Mobile Communications Group;
  17. China General Nuclear Power Corp.;
  18. China National Nuclear Power Corp.;
  19. China Telecommunications Corp.

— With assistance by Feifei Shen, Yuan Gao, Dave McCombs, Ville Heiskanen, and Kyunghee Park