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


To: Julius Wong who wrote (164305)10/26/2020 1:24:49 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218149
 
a pebble on the Go board?

very mysterious and prospectively exciting, so watch & brief

reuters.com

Apple supplier Luxshare unnerves Foxconn as U.S.-China feud speeds supply chain shift

TAIPEI/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Apple's AAPL.O top iPhone assembler, Taiwan-based Foxconn, has set up a task force to fend off the growing clout of Chinese electronics manufacturer Luxshare, which it believes poses a serious threat to its dominance, three sources with knowledge of the matter said.

FILE PHOTO: Foxconn Chairman Liu Young-way speaks at an event presenting the company's new technologies in Taipei, Taiwan October 16, 2020. REUTERS/Yimou Lee/File Photo

The project was initiated by Foxconn's founder Terry Gou, according to one of the sources, to target Dongguan-based Luxshare 002475.SZ, which is little-known internationally but is poised to become the first mainland China-headquartered firm to assemble iPhones - a turf until now dominated by Taiwanese manufacturers.

The task force, which the sources say was created last year, has been looking into Luxshare’s technology, expansion plan, hiring strategy and whether the company - which currently makes only 5% of Foxconn’s revenue - is supported by any Chinese government entity.

While the U.S.-China trade war and the coronavirus crisis have intensified pressure on global supply chains, an increasingly acrimonious tech feud between the economic giants has also prompted Beijing to strengthen efforts on creating world-leading local tech firms - and Luxshare’s growth trajectory fits into that mould.

“Luxshare is set to rise ... it’s just a matter of how fast it could be,” one of the sources said.

“It makes sense for China to build up its own supply chain and Luxshare is in line with that state policy.”

RED SUPPLY CHAINThat state policy, analysts say, is gaining traction with the rise of China’s “red supply chain”, where Chinese firms with apparent government support increasingly take on the work of manufacturing products for Apple and other global firms.

“Facing the rise of the red supply chain, the threat of Taiwan manufacturers being replaced continues to increase,” Market Intelligence & Consulting Institute, a think tank backed by Taiwan government, wrote in a September report.

Luxshare, whose chairwoman was once a worker at Taiwanese Apple supplier Foxlink 2392.TW, acquired two smaller factories belonging to Taiwanese iPhone assembler Wistron in China in July. Previously, Luxshare was best known for making Apple's AirPods.

One of the sources called it a “formidable opponent”, and said Foxconn has been conducting extensive research on Luxshare, aiming to “defeat it completely.”

The sources, who have direct knowledge of the matter and are familiar with Foxconn’s thinking, declined to be named citing the sensitivity of the issue.

Public records reveal that while Luxshare is majority-owned by Grace Wang and her brother Wang Laisheng, its minority shareholders include state-owned Chinese investment company Central Huijin Investment Ltd, which has a 1.38% stake.

Luxshare has also received over 1 billion yuan ($148.80 million) in government subsidies since 2016 to the first half of this year, a Reuters calculation of its financial reports shows. Roughly half of that sum came in 2019 alone.

Foxconn told Reuters in a statement the task force described in this story is “not grounded in facts” and there were “no meetings or any other contact.”

“There have also been no other extraordinary actions taken by the management team.” It did not elaborate.

Luxshare declined to comment. Apple did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

‘BLOOD IN THE WATER’

Luxshare was founded in 2004 by Grace Wang, who told Taiwan’s Business Today in July that she was once a worker at Foxlink, owned by Gou’s brother, T.C. Gou.

Its journey up Apple’s value chain has been driven in part by acquiring smaller components makers, starting with the manufacturing of connector cables for the iPhone and Macbook through a 2011 acquisition of its Dongguan neighbour Lanto Electronics, then by making acoustic components for the iPhone, and eventually by manufacturing airpods.

The company’s revenue has risen in tandem with its advance up Apple’s value chain - sales in 2019 hit 62.5 billion yuan, up 75% year-on-year.

That’s roughly 5% of Foxconn’s revenue, formally called Hon Hai Precision Industry, although investor bets on the company’s prospects have lifted its market value to roughly $20 billion above the Taiwan firm’s $39 billion market capitalisation.

Luxshare now gets 58% of its revenue from Apple, according to Morningstar Research

The company’s July acquisition of Wistron’s iPhone plants in Kunshan marks its most significant deal yet, which Fubon Research said could help Luxshare capture up to 30% of iPhone production within the next five years.

Two of the sources familiar with Foxconn said Luxshare had also been actively poaching from Foxconn. In one case, one of the sources said, Luxshare offered 500,000 yuan ($75,009) cash upfront as a relocation subsidy for a senior Foxconn employee to move family from Taiwan to China.

David Collins, a manufacturing consultant based in Taipei and Kunshan, says that Chinese firms see both Foxconn’s legacy status, coupled with its move away from China, as prime opportunity to usurp it.

“Foxconn’s share price is down roughly 50% from two years ago. They see blood in the water.”

($1 = 6.6658 Chinese yuan renminbi)

Reporting by Josh Horwitz in Shanghai and Yimou Lee in Taipei; Editing by Brenda Goh & Shri Navaratnam



To: Julius Wong who wrote (164305)10/26/2020 6:44:38 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218149
 
Let us see what if anything the financial market does tonight w/ Team China October Surprise just launched

This launch is not actually targeting Trump per se, but aiming at all the warmongering Neo-people around him, and same in the Senate and the House, and in Canada, Australia, Britain, Sweden, etc etc, and Japan and and and, irrespective of political flavouring

First shot, and until Shanghai share index to zero, no balls shown by Team China

bloomberg.com

China to Sanction Boeing, Raytheon Over Arms Sales to Taiwan

China will impose unspecified sanctions on the defense unit of Boeing Co., Lockheed Martin Corp., and Raytheon Technologies Corp. after the U.S. approved $1.8 billion in arms sales to Taiwan last week.

The sanctions will be imposed “in order to uphold national interests,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters Monday in Beijing. “Boeing Defense” would be among those sanctioned, he said.

The State Department last week approved $1.8 billion in new weapons for Taiwan and submitted the package to Congress for a final review. The submission comes two months after the U.S. and Taiwan completed the sale of 66 new model F-16 Block 70 aircraft from Lockheed, and as tensions between the two superpowers continue to escalate ahead of the American election.

Boeing Defense is one of the broader company’s three business units, according to its website. Shares in Boeing, down almost 50% this year, dropped as much as 2.2% in U.S. pre-market trading.

A spokesperson for Boeing emphasized the firm’s relationship with China in the aviation space. Boeing has “worked together successfully with the aviation community in China for almost 50 years to support Chinese efforts to ensure a safe, efficient and profitable aviation system to keep pace with the country’s rapid economic growth.”

“It’s been a partnership with long-term benefits and one that Boeing remains committed to,” the spokesperson said in the emailed statement.

One China PrincipleRepresentatives from Raytheon weren’t immediately available for comment outside of normal U.S. business hours.

Zhao condemned Lockheed’s F-16 Block 70 sale at the time, saying it violates the One China principle, interferes in China’s internal affairs and will have a “major impact” on U.S.-China relations. Taiwan’s presidential office thanked the U.S for the sale. In July, China -- which considers Taiwan part of its territory and resists any recognition of its de facto independence -- had announced sanctions on Lockheed Martin for a previous arms sale to the island.

Read more: Taiwan Walks Tightrope Between China and Not China: QuickTake

U.S. arms manufacturers face strict limitations on what kind of business they can do with countries deemed by Washington to be strategic rivals, such as China. Lockheed generated 9.7% of its revenue in the Asia-Pacific region last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, though that’s not broken down by individual countries.

China has previously threatened to sanction U.S. companies, including General Dynamics Corp. and Honeywell International Inc., on numerous occasions over arms sales to Taiwan. It also warned it could blacklist FedEx Corp., while Ford Motor Co.’s main joint venture partner in China was fined 162.8 million yuan ($24.3 million) last year, days after the U.S. put a ban on doing business with Huawei Technologies Co.

While China has often invoked the threat of putting U.S. companies on a blacklist -- or list of “unreliable entities” -- in response to various actions by U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration over the past year, it has yet to name any, at least publicly.

Delicate TimeFor Boeing, China’s action comes at a delicate time. The company, reeling from the hit to air travel from the coronavirus pandemic, is trying to get its besieged 737 Max plane back into the air after two fatal crashes saw it grounded around the world. China was the first place to ground the plane, and also has the world’s biggest 737 Max fleet.

Europe’s top aviation regulator said earlier this month the plane will be safe enough to fly again before the end of this year, while U.S. Federal Aviation Administration chief Steve Dickson flew the Max in September and said the controls were “very comfortable.”

China, which had nearly 100 Max planes in operation prior to the grounding, doesn’t have a clear timetable for allowing the plane back into the air, Feng Zhenglin, director of the Civil Aviation Administration of China, told reporters in Beijing last week.

— With assistance by John Liu, Jing Li, and Kyunghee Park

(Updates with share move, additional detail.)

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (164305)10/26/2020 6:48:43 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218149
 
Super bullish for gold and bitcoin

bloomberg.com

U.S., India Set to Sign Defense Pact Amid China Border Standoff

Archana Chaudhary
26 October 2020, 17:04 GMT+8



Michael Pompeo is greeted by U.S. Ambassador to India Kenneth Juster in New Delhi on Oct. 26.Photographer: Adnan Abidi/AFP via Getty Images
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The U.S. and India are set to sign a defense agreement and boost trade ties in high-level talks that come as the South Asian nation sees its worst border conflict with China in four decades.

Secretary of State Michael Pompeo arrived in New Delhi on Monday and along with Defense secretary Mark Esper will attend a 2+2 ministerial dialog with foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and defense minister Rajnath Singh to discuss cooperation on pandemic response and challenges in the Indo-Pacific.

The discussions are taking place barely a week before presidential elections in the U.S. and at a time when India, a member of the informal four-nation Quad grouping along with America, Japan and Australia, is in talks to de-escalate military tensions with Beijing.

On Tuesday, India is expected to announce the signing of the Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement, which will give it access to the U.S.’ geo-spatial intelligence inputs to help improve the accuracy of automated hardware systems, missiles and drones, according to senior administration officials.

For more on India-U.S. ties:
Pompeo Calls for United ‘Quad’ Bloc on China in Virus Crisis
Xi’s Show of Force Against India Is a Strategic Gift for Trump
Why Chinese and Indian Troops Are Clashing, Again: QuickTake
India’s China Standoff Shows Risks of Getting Too Close to Trump
How Asia Fell Out of Love With China’s Belt and Road Initiative

The talks are also set to further boost India’s defense purchases from the U.S., currently at $20 billion, and help address its security concerns in the Indian Ocean region as it seeks to compete with China, which has an economy that is about five times larger.

“South Asia and the Indian Ocean is India’s primary strategic theater, and India’s domain of influence,” said Bec Strating, a senior lecturer in politics and international relations at Melbourne’s La Trobe University. “India is likely to want to maintain its influence in the Indian Ocean and South Asia, manage relations with U.S. and PRC to its advantage, and maintain its own strategic autonomy.”

Pompeo will also travel to the Maldives, Sri Lanka and Indonesia later in the week as part of the U.S. push to counter Chinese influence in Asia.

Building AlternativesHis visit will help ensure relations between the two nations “don’t lose momentum” during the transition period until a new administration is sworn in early next year, said Tanvi Madan, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution. “This is also a way of showing solidarity with India at a time when there is bipartisan support for its conflict with China.”

The U.S. has been increasingly concerned about China expanding its influence in the region through infrastructure and security investments in smaller neighbors.

Beijing committed $126 billion in Central and South Asia between 2000-2017, of which $120 billion was for infrastructure, according to Virginia-based AidData. In comparison, India spent $2.86 billion on aid to six of its neighbors over four years ending 2018, according to figures provided to the nation’s parliament and reported by the Economic Times.

“Secretary Pompeo’s visit to Sri Lanka, Maldives and Indonesia is a sign that the Indo-Pacific is being elevated as a region,” said Madan, author of the book “Fateful Triangle: How China Shaped US-India Relations during the Cold War.”

Trade NetworksTraditionally wary of both Chinese and American influence in its neighborhood, India has become more comfortable with outreach by friendly nations.

The South Asian nation has shown a willingness to build trade and strategic networks with partner nations, lending its support to the U.S.-Maldives defense pact and agreeing to Australia joining the Malabar naval exercises this year despite China’s reservations.

New Delhi is also working with Japan and Australia as the U.S. pushes to build an Economic Prosperity Network to reduce economic dependence on Chinese supply chains in a post-Covid world.

While Beijing is “certainly growing its influence in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Maldives, these countries clearly prioritize their relationships with India over China,” said Derek Grossman, Washington-based analyst with the RAND Corporation. The U.S. is working with India to “build a more attractive alternative for these countries to work with in the future.”

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (164305)10/26/2020 6:51:12 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218149
 
Hyper ultra bullish for bitcoin and gold and silver

scmp.com

Beijing gives cautious welcome to Vladimir Putin’s hint over Russia-China military alliance
The Russian President has said the idea of a formal pact between Moscow and Beijing is ‘certainly imaginable’ although the prospect appears remote at present

Comments may have been intended as a sign of goodwill as relations between China and US continue to deteriorate



To: Julius Wong who wrote (164305)10/26/2020 12:54:50 PM
From: Maple MAGA   Respond to of 218149
 
house of Wong drops coverage of SXL

House of Wong wisahes to inform stakeholders of SXL that we no longer offer guidance on SXL .
Tge infancy stage of this company is womb bound ,we initiated cover but then realized this is grab bag devbelopments in a unknown mining address creating vast risk with capped off upside so we have dropped coverage.
House of Wong the speculative think tank creating huge coil spring gains in every corner of the globe.