SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: IC720 who wrote (1527486)3/6/2025 7:36:59 AM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

Recommended By
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1579893
 
Convicted felon & CON artist trump's US STOCK MARKET IS IMPLODING. Just like clockwork, everything POS trump touches IT DIES...



To: IC720 who wrote (1527486)3/6/2025 7:44:44 AM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

Recommended By
rdkflorida2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579893
 
BOOM: Trump's MAGA moves pushes Canada, Mexico & Europe to China
Tensions between Trump and Europe could could have an unintended beneficiary: China
Published Thu, Mar 6 20251:13 AM ESTUpdated An Hour Ago
cnbc.com

Key Points
  • As the Trump administration shakes up transatlantic ties, analysts told CNBC that China is making strategic moves to get closer to Europe.
  • Fraying U.S.-Europe relations may make Europe less susceptible to American pressure, and could open possibilities for more trade ties between Europe and China, according to some analysts.
  • Though Europe is now seeking “independence” from the U.S., it is still unclear whether the bloc will reciprocate Beijing’s advances, according to European Council for Foreign Relations’ Alicja Bachulska.
Tensions between the U.S. and Europe have hit something of a low in recent weeks — and China could be poised to use the spat to bolster its relationships on the continent.

Transatlantic strains came to head last week during a disastrous meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office. What started out as a potential signing of a critical minerals deal ended in a public shouting match.

Trump has also made repeated threats of tariffs on EU imports and said that the bloc was “formed to screw the United States.” Vance, meanwhile, lambasted Europe last month at the Munich Security Conference, saying he was worried about “the threat from within.”

This strain in the so-called “special relationship” has seen Beijing become an unexpected ally and advocate for Europe, with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi visiting the continent last month to urge for closer ties and more cooperation.

“China is clearly responding with a charm offensive, trying to portray itself as a stabilizing force and a potential alternative pole, exploiting European fears and hoping for a reset on Beijing’s own terms,” Alicja Bachulska, policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, told CNBC by email.

After both the EU and Ukraine were shut out of surprise U.S.-led peace talks with Russia, Wang saidat the Munich Security Conference that China hopes all parties can participate in peace talks to end the war in Ukraine. “As the war is taking place on European soil, it is all the more necessary for Europe to play its part for peace,” he said in comments reported by Reuters.

China to double down on transformative tech and winning global south: Analyst

For Beijing, expressing support for Europe’s role in the Ukraine peace negotiations is a “low cost way” to signal its respect for the EU and “draw contrast with Trump,” according to Gabriel Wildau, managing director at Teneo.

“China aims at gaining strategic influence over Europe, as their investment and trade policies demonstrate. The forays in the context of Ukraine should be assessed in that light,” Ian Bremmer, president of political risk consultancy Eurasia Group, told CNBC via email.

No longer ‘slaves’ to the Americans
As Trump doubles down on protectionist policies, analysts say China stands to gain from a Europe free from U.S. pressure to impose sanctions and restrictions against Beijing.

Europe has historically broadly aligned with U.S. trade policies designed to protect Western tech innovations and its economic interests.

Take Dutch chip equipment maker ASML, for example, whose sales of advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment has been restricted by the Dutch government following U.S. export controls.

“A lot of Europe’s clamping down on China was at the request of the U.S. That, in a sense, is part of the price of being subjugated … and dependent on the U.S. for defense,” David Roche, strategist at Quantum Strategy, told CNBC in a call.

“The Europeans may be getting hit [by potential tariffs], but they will no longer be slaves to the Americans,” Roche said.

A fractured transatlantic alliance could therefore benefit Beijing, as Europe becomes “less susceptible” to U.S. pressure, said Teneo’s Wildau, which may lead to a rollback of existing export controls or at least the halting of new ones.

Europe needs the help
One example of a change in trade policy could be the European Union’s current tariffs on Chinese vehicles, according to Wildau, who said the bloc’s leaders might conclude that they have “no choice” but to reverse course.

The European auto industry has been under increasing pressure as carmakers battle with multiple headwinds ranging from the transition to electric vehicles, rising competition from China and now the threat of U.S. tariffs.

Chinese cooperation could help Europe manufacture the parts needed for its EVs, enabling the bloc to catch up with the technology and meet its sustainability goals, Roche suggested – with this just being one gap that China could potentially fill.

“The reality is, in the broadest sense of the word, Europe has to look for alternative markets to the U.S. China can help,” Roche added.

President Trump’s recent moves have stirred leaders in Europe, with Germany’s Friedrich Merz telling public broadcaster ARD in a speech after his party’s victory last week that the U.S. is now “indifferent” to the fate of Europe, and that his priority is for Europe to “achieve independence from the USA.”

“Merz’s comments will not go unnoticed by Beijing,” Thanos Papasavvas, founder and chief investment officer at ABP Invest told CNBC via email: “The key question here is whether Germany’s traditional business relationship with China would also be seen in the same vein by other member States.”

Still the same China
Some analysts say it is unclear how much progress can be made in repairing what has long been a strained relationship between Europe and China, however.

“After all, this is still the same China that the EU had to deal with for the past few years – China that is supporting Russia, China that is threatening Europe’s industrial power, and China that is imposing sanctions on European officials and civil society organisations,” the European Council on Foreign Relations’ Bachulska said.



To: IC720 who wrote (1527486)3/6/2025 7:48:09 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
IC720

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579893
 
Vance, Tulsi and Hegseth visit Texas border today.



To: IC720 who wrote (1527486)3/6/2025 7:49:25 AM
From: FJB  Respond to of 1579893
 
Elon Musk wants to privatize USPS and Amtrak.



To: IC720 who wrote (1527486)3/6/2025 7:49:48 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
IC720

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1579893
 
  • Easy way for Trump to cut $500 billion in spending — Rand Paul loves the idea.
  • ‘Rescission’ can’t be blocked by Supreme Court.
  • Susan Collins stopped it last time.



  • To: IC720 who wrote (1527486)3/6/2025 7:50:25 AM
    From: sylvester801 Recommendation

    Recommended By
    rdkflorida2

      Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579893
     
    BOOM: While US stock market IMPLODES, China's STOCKS R SKYROCKETING
    China’s New AI Tools Ignite Stock Market Frenzy as Alibaba Soars · Bloomberg
    Charlotte Yang and Luz Ding
    Thu, March 6, 2025 at 2:31 AM MST 4 min read

    (Bloomberg) -- A spate of new artificial intelligence tools from China sparked frenzied trading in the nation’s stock market, propelling an index of technology companies to a multi-year high.

    Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. paced the gains on Thursday after unveiling its latest open-sourced AI model. The platform marked a big leap over the previous version, using just a fraction of the data DeepSeek’s R1 employs.

    The flurry of AI announcements also included Tencent’s new open-source video model Hunyuan and a similar product from short-video platform Kuaishou Technology. Earlier this week, Manus AI launched what it called a general AI agent, or a bot that can perform tasks, saying its model is performing better than OpenAI’s DeepResearch on some fronts.

    While questions remain over the long-term profit potential of AI models, investors show few signs of holding back. Alibaba’s stock surged 8.4% in Hong Kong, boosting an index of Chinese tech shares by 5.4% to the highest closing level since 2021. Kuaishou jumped 16%, the most in more than two years. In mainland China, Focus Technology Co., which has AI agent products, soared by the 10% daily limit.

    The gains follow DeepSeek’s AI breakthrough earlier this year, which ignited a bull run for Chinese stocks and sent shockwaves across global markets. The tech sector got another boost this week after China said at the National People’s Congress it would support the extensive application of large-scale AI models and development of new-generation intelligent terminals and manufacturing equipment.

    Alibaba in particular has gone on a tear, gaining some $153 billion of market value since a January low. Investors have warmed to the company founded by Jack Ma as it stabilizes a business sideswiped by a years-long government crackdown. Its growing prowess in AI and mounting signs of Beijing’s support helped galvanize its comeback.

    “The supportive rhetoric to AI announced at the NPC sets a proper context for Chinese AI innovation to move forward,” said Linda Lam, head of equity advisory North Asia at Union Bancaire Privee. “Looking ahead, we expect a proliferation of open-source AI applications from China and the US, to propel the tech rally globally,”

    In the wake of DeepSeek’s emergence, multiple companies have trotted out models and services they claim match the Chinese startup’s or OpenAI, whose ChatGPT is credited with igniting the generative AI boom. The litany of rollouts has captivated both investors and the Chinese public.

    READ: Alibaba Leads Competitors Playing Catchup With China’s DeepSeek

    Even with the recent surge in tech shares, valuations are still not demanding. The Hang Seng Tech index is trading at around 19 times forward earnings, compared to 45 times four years ago.

    “We see a further re-rating happening in the market given how cheap a lot of the China tech stocks look compared to their US peers. Showcasing the enthusiasm is that even some hardware tech names which haven’t really performed earlier are going up,” said Ken Wong, an Asian equity portfolio specialist at Eastspring Investments.

    Alibaba’s latest model is intended to take on both DeepSeek’s R1 and OpenAI’s o1. The new reasoning model is considered efficient at 32 billion parameters, as demand grows for AI that requires minimal data and consumes less computational resources. Parameters are the parts of the AI model learned from the training data, and help adjust its behavior to make more accurate predictions or generate meaningful outputs.

    Alibaba has pledged to invest more than 380 billion yuan ($52 billion) on AI infrastructure such as data centers over the next three years, a major commitment that broadcasts the e-commerce pioneer’s ambitions of becoming a leader in artificial intelligence.

    That target marks one of China’s biggest AI infrastructure budgets, underscoring Alibaba’s growing ambitions in the field. But it comes at a time investors are pondering whether big tech firms are overestimating future demand for AI services, or the capital needed to create them.

    Meanwhile, Manus AI said its AI agent did better than OpenAI’s DeepResearch on some metrics using the GAIA benchmark, designed for assessing an AI model’s ability to handle real-world scenarios.

    --With assistance from Saritha Rai, Debby Wu, Jing Jin and Shikhar Balwani.

    (Updates prices throughout.)



    To: IC720 who wrote (1527486)3/6/2025 7:52:01 AM
    From: FJB  Respond to of 1579893
     

    Driverless Uber now available in Austin.

    Need an Uber? How about one without a driver?

    Beginning Tuesday, rideshare hailers on Uber in Austin, Texas, can call a driverless Waymo, from Google’s parent company, Alphabet, for the first time. Travelers will be able to book rides across 37 square miles in Austin, the backyard of competitor Tesla, and in the Lone Star State that has long been a testing ground for driverless vehicles.

    “We’re true believers in the technology, and so personally, I believe autonomous vehicles coming to market is a good thing for the world… we’re happy and genuinely excited to see autonomy coming to market and starting to scale,” said Andrew Macdonald, Uber’s senior vice president of mobility and business operations, in an interview with CNN. “When you have a supportive city, when you have a supportive local government, it encourages competition, it encourages innovation, and that ends up being a good thing for consumers.”

    It appears there’s no bad blood between the two companies. Uber and Waymo, who were once embroiled in a lawsuit over self-driving technology, are now partners.

    “Our partnership with Uber in Austin is an exciting step toward further scaling our safe, convenient, and sustainable autonomous technology,” said Nicole Gavel, Waymo’s head of business development and strategic partnerships, in a statement.

    Riders in Austin who request an UberX, Uber Green, Uber Comfort or Uber Comfort Electric could be matched with a Waymo fully autonomous all-electric Jaguar I-PACE vehicle, at no additional cost, for up to four people.