Month: March 2024

Chinese leader issues positive message at meeting with U.S. business leaders

China’s economy has struggled to recover from severe self-imposed restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic that it lifted only at the end of 2022. But Xi said that China was again contributing to world economic growth in the double digits percentage-wise.

“Sino-U.S. Relations are one of the most important bilateral relations in the world. Whether China and the United States cooperate or confront each other has a bearing on the well-being of the two peoples and the future and destiny of mankind,” Xi was cited as saying by China’s official Xinhua News Agency.

Participants at the meeting included Stephen A. Schwarzman, the billionaire head of investment firm Blackstone.

Trade and tariffs have increasingly drawn attention in the run-up to the U.S. presidential election, and the Biden administration has shown little sign of moderating punitive measures against Chinese imports imposed by his predecessor and assumed rival in the November polls, Donald Trump.

U.S. Officials have renewed concerns over Chinese industrial policy practices and overcapacity, and the resulting impact on U.S. workers and companies, that they blame in part on China’s massive trade surplus that amounted to more than $279 billion last year, its lowest level in about a decade.

Following the meeting, the U.S.-China Business Council said in a statement that it was honored to have a dialogue with the country’s top leader to “discuss our concerns over the decline in trade, investment, and business confidence, as well as our desire to help improve engagement and commercial exchange between our two countries.”

“We stressed the importance of rebalancing China’s economy by increasing consumption there and encouraged the government to further address longstanding concerns with cross-border data flows, government procurement, better protection of intellectual property rights, and improved regulatory transparency and predictability,” the Washington-based council said. Its president, Craig Allen, was among the

Former Google engineer charged with stealing AI tech while secretly working with Chinese firms

A former software engineer at Google has been charged with stealing artificial intelligence technology from the company while secretly working with two companies based in China, the U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday.

Linwei Ding, a Chinese national, was arrested in Newark, Calif., on four counts of federal trade secret theft, each punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

The case against Ding was being announced at an American Bar Association Conference in San Francisco by Attorney General Merrick Garland, who along with other law enforcement leaders has repeatedly warned about the threat of Chinese economic espionage and about the national security concerns posed by advancements in artificial intelligence.

“Today’s charges are the latest illustration of the lengths affiliates of companies based in the People’s Republic of China are willing to go to steal American innovation,” FBI director Christopher Wray said in a statement.

“The theft of innovative technology and trade secrets from American companies can cost jobs and have devastating economic and national security consequences.”

Ding uploaded files to personal account: indictment

U.S. Justice Department leaders in recent weeks have been sounding alarms about how foreign adversaries could harness AI technologies to negatively affect the United States.

Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a speech last month that the administration’s multi-agency Disruptive Technology Strike Force would place AI enforcement at the top of its priority list. Wray told business leaders at an event last week that AI and other emerging technologies had made it easier for adversaries to try to interfere with the U.S. political process.

WATCH | Canadian court bars Chinese student over spying concerns: 

Federal court bars Chinese student over espionage risk concerns

A Federal Court judge has barred a Chinese engineering student from studying in Canada, over concerns the engineering student could be pressured by

China’s Xi meets American CEOs to boost confidence in world’s second largest economy

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/Taipei
CNN
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Chinese leader Xi Jinping met more than a dozen US CEOs and academics on Wednesday as Beijing renewed efforts to woo back foreign investors and mend strained relations with the United States.

Foreign direct investment in China has slumped in recent months as a combination of slower growth, regulatory crackdowns, onerous national security legislation and questions about the country’s long-term prospects have shaken confidence in the world’s second biggest economy.

The group of CEOs included Cristiano Amon of Qualcomm (QCOM), Raj Subramaniam of FedEx (FDX) and Stephen Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group (BX).

Xi invited US businesses to “continue to invest in China” and pledged further reforms to open the country’s markets to foreign firms, according to a readout of the meeting published by the foreign ministry.

“China’s growth prospects are bright, and we have the confidence,” he said, adding that the country’s economy has not yet peaked.

Xi also called for “a better future” between China and the US. “Whether it is traditional fields such as economy, trade and agriculture, or emerging fields such as climate change and artificial intelligence, China and the United States should help boost each other’s development,” he said.

Bilateral relations have already shown improvement since he met with US President Joe Biden in San Francisco in November, Xi added.

The optics of Xi’s meeting with the US visitors were carefully managed by Chinese state media.

Footage aired on state broadcaster CCTV shows Xi’s American guests diligently taking notes and nodding in agreement as the Chinese leader speaks. Meanwhile, photos released by state-run news agency Xinhua show the US participants walking behind Xi in

Releases | Investment in Major Indian Broiler Business

Mitsui & Co., Ltd. (“Mitsui”, Head Office: Tokyo, President and CEO: Kenichi Hori) has decided to invest in Sneha Farms Pvt. Ltd. (“Sneha”), one of India’s leading broiler producers. After the investment, the company will become an associated company of Mitsui.

With the country’s GDP per capita reaching US$2,400, chicken consumption is about to enter an expansionary phase. India has a sizeable non-vegetarian population, and has achieved continuous economic growth and sustained development. Sneha is a chicken supplier based in Hyderabad, the capital city of the state of Telangana. Its integrated operations encompass feed manufacturing, broiler production, meat processing and packing, transportation, and retail. It is one of India’s leading companies in terms of production volume. Through its collaboration with Mitsui, Sneha also aims to expand its share in the Indian market and plans to double its production over the next five years. Furthermore, Sneha is aiming for full-scale entry into the market for high added-value food products, such as frozen and chilled ready-to-eat meals.

Mitsui will continue to contribute to the stable supply of chicken and other sources of protein, for which demand is expected to grow.

Chicken has the best feed efficiency and smallest environmental footprint of any livestock product. It is subject to few religious constraints, and demand is expected to grow worldwide. For many years, Mitsui has been building an integrated chicken production business, especially in the Japanese market, through its group companies, including its subsidiary Prifoods Co., Ltd. Using knowledge accumulated through its activities in Japan, Mitsui is also expanding its overseas business. It invested in Zalar Holding S.A. (“Zalar Holding”), the biggest broiler business in Morocco and Senegal, in 2018, and invested in Wadi Poultry S.A.E., Egypt’s biggest broiler producer, in 2024.

Meanwhile in the marine products area, Mitsui is strengthening farming and processing

Trump’s Truth Social is losing money and has scant sales. Yet it could trade at a $5 billion value.

Former President Donald Trump will soon be at the helm of a publicly traded company that will trade under the ticker “DJT,” after his initials, and boast a potential valuation of more than $5 billion — a lofty amount for a business that’s losing money and has scant revenue. 

Trump’s next career move as head of a publicly traded company comes after shareholders of Digital World Acquisition Corp. (DWAC), a so-called blank-check company, also known as a SPACapproved a merger on Friday morning with the Trump Media & Technology Group. With the nod, DWAC will combine with Trump Media & Technology Group and could soon begin trading under the latter name. 

Typically, investors put their money into companies they believe will provide solid returns for their investment, though time-honored fundamentals such as profit and revenue growth, dividends and share appreciation. But Trump Media’s main business, Truth Social, is a social media platform that is lagging rivals such as Facebook and “X” (formerly Twitter), with scant revenue and mounting losses, according to regulatory filings. 

That hasn’t fazed investors in DWAC, some of whom appear to be supporters of Trump, who are touting the stock on Truth Social. “I am holding and not selling! I believe in TRUTH and MAGA,” one member of a Truth Social group focused on the DWAC stock posted on Friday morning. 

Typically, a company with the financial profile of Trump Media & Technology Group would be hard-pressed to reach a valuation of $5 billion, but the stock does not appear to be trading on traditional financial mileposts like revenue and profit, said Kristi Marvin, chief executive of SPACInsider.com. 

“This has never traded on fundamentals, and I don’t expect it to, going forward,” Marvin told CBS MoneyWatch. “This is almost like a barometer for Trump and

Ottawa reaches deal with Google over controversial Online News Act

Ottawa has been locked in battle with U.S. tech giants Google and Meta over the sharing of Canadian news on their platforms

The Liberal government is hinting that it will take steps to limit how much money Canada’s publicly funded broadcaster can collect under Ottawa’s new revenue-sharing agreement with Google.

The agreement announced Wednesday requires Google to provide up to $100 million a year to Canadian news organizations whose content is featured on their sites, with each outlet’s share of the pie depending on how many full-time journalists they employ.

Under draft regulations laid out in the Online News Act, which will regulate the deal, CBC/Radio-Canada currently stands to collect the largest share, since they employ one-third of the journalistic workforce in Canada.

“I don’t think that CBC/Radio-Canada needs to leave with a third of the envelope, so we will address that in the final regulations that will be published soon before the coming-into-force of the law,” Pascale St-Onge said in French. 

Both the Opposition and Bloc Québécois have been critical of how much CBC/Radio-Canada stands to collect from the deal — as much as $33 million a year, according to Conservative MP Rachael Thomas, the official Opposition critic for Canadian Heritage. 

“Those local media outlets will receive very little, and possibly nothing at all. This bill has killed them,” said Thomas, who sits on the Canadian Heritage committee where St-Onge testified Thursday. 

“Big tech has colluded with big government to do away with news in this country. It will be less choice for Canadians and less access for Canadians. It’s a shame.”

Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet pointed to the revenues CBC/Radio-Canada already receives, including nearly $1.3 billion in the last fiscal year from government funding, plus advertising and subscriptions. 

“After a careful calculation I arrived to a huge

Money blog: Big drop in energy bills on way in summer; government urged to let some Britons retire early | UK News

By Brad Young, Money team

On Summer Scholes’s 16th birthday, two days after her mum died, the first thing on her mind was getting a job to keep a roof over her head.

It was 2021, and alongside her studies in Margate, Summer said she worked for £4.62 an hour (the minimum wage for under-18s at the time) just so she and her aunt could pay rent and put food in the fridge.

By the time she was 18, last September, she was spending the summer working 50 hours a week in hospitality for £375, while her colleagues aged 21 were legally entitled to at least £134 more for the same job.

There are three different adult minimum wages in the UK, determined by age. On Monday, the government will reduce this to two, but inequality between those aged 18-20 and those aged 21 and over will remain.

“I strongly disagree with it. As someone who is 19, I see the work that I do and the work that my friends do, and I believe that we work just as hard, if not harder, than some of the people who are older than us,” Summer told the Money blog.

She said she had felt undervalued, adding: “I think it should be based on someone’s work ethic and their ability to do a job.

“I was unable to save for any of my future studies, which is why I’m now at college for an extra couple of years.”

Sky News understands from sources at the Department for Business and Trade that the government believes the pay disparity will encourage businesses to keep younger employees and avoid them being exposed to prolonged unemployment.

But GMB Union officer Ross Holden said the cost of living crisis did not discriminate based on age and

Bank of Canada warns of low productivity ‘emergency,’ making it harder to control inflation

Open this photo in gallery:

Carolyn Rogers, Senior Deputy Governor of the Bank of Canada, at a press conference in Ottawa on March 6.Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press

The Bank of Canada issued a stark warning about the country’s weak labour productivity and low levels of business investment on Tuesday, saying the situation is an emergency that makes it harder to control inflation and which could erode living standards if left unaddressed.

In an unusually blunt speech in Halifax, senior deputy governor Carolyn Rogers said that Canada is slipping further behind the United States and other peer countries when it comes to economic output per hour worked.

She pointed to weak business investment, meagre competition and a failure to properly integrate skilled immigrants into the Canadian work force.

“I’m saying that it’s an emergency – it’s time to break the glass,” the central bank’s second-in-command told the business audience.

Canada has long lagged the United States when it comes to how much the economy produces per hour of work. But the situation has gotten worse over the past decade, especially coming out of the pandemic. Before the final quarter of last year, productivity had declined for six straight quarters.

“Back in 1984, the Canadian economy was producing 88 per cent of the value generated by the U.S. economy per hour,” Ms. Rogers said.

Auerback: Canada’s productivity problem runs deep and ripples far in the economy

“That’s not great. But by 2022, Canadian productivity had fallen to just 71 per cent of that of the United States. Over this same period of time, Canada also fell behind our G7 peers, with only Italy seeing a larger decline in productivity relative to the United States.”

The speech contained few hints about the near-term trajectory of monetary policy ahead of the bank’s next

Verizon Joins RE100 and Shares New Milestones in its Responsible Business Plan

Verizon Sourcing LLC

Verizon Sourcing LLC

NEW YORK, March 28, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Today, Verizon announced it has joined RE100, a global initiative bringing together the world’s most influential businesses committed to 100% renewable electricity. Led by the Climate Group and in partnership with CDP, RE100’s mission is to accelerate change towards zero carbon grids at scale, an objective that Verizon is proud to support. As previously announced, Verizon aims to source renewable energy equivalent to 100% of its annual electricity usage by 2030, with an interim target of 50% by 2025.

“As a core part of our business, Verizon looks to benefit the communities where we operate, identify ways to be stronger and more resilient and create long-term, measurable value for our shareholders, customers, employees and society alike,” said James Gowen, Senior Vice President, Global Supply Chain & Sourcing, and Chief Sustainability Officer at Verizon. “Joining this global initiative further underscores Verizon’s dedication to reducing our carbon footprint and transitioning to renewable energy to help protect the planet for future generations.”

The move to join RE100 aligns with Verizon’s long-standing commitment to drive both environmental and social progress as part of its responsible business plan, Citizen Verizon, empowering the company to deliver on its mission to move the world forward by addressing pressing societal issues.

Verizon’s recently published 2023 ESG Report highlights the company’s efforts to minimize its carbon footprint through emissions and energy management. As of year-end 2022, Verizon had achieved a 23.3% reduction in scopes 1 and 2 emissions and 15.1% reduction in scope 3 emissions over a 2019 baseline. Verizon continues to leverage its AI capabilities, IoT offerings, supplier relationships and increasingly electric fleet to drive emissions reduction not only throughout its operations, but also for its customers. As of year-end 2023, Verizon solutions had enabled the

China’s Xi meets American CEOs in bid to boost confidence in ailing economy

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping met with top U.S. executives in Beijing on Wednesday as his government tries to reassure foreign businesses about a market that remains crucial for their bottom lines despite persistent tensions between the world’s two biggest economies.

Xi met the group of American businesspeople and academics at the Great Hall of the People, Chinese state media reported. The meeting was preceded by a group photo.

Participants included Blackstone founder Stephen Schwarzman, Bloomberg Chair Mark Carney, FedEx President Rajesh Subramaniam and Qualcomm President and CEO Cristiano Amon, according to state media reports.

During the meeting, Xi said the Chinese economy was “healthy and sustainable,” an achievement that “cannot be separated from international cooperation,” according to state media, which reported that he “listened carefully” to the American participants.

The executives were in China for a series of business-related events, including the China Development Forum, an annual high-level meeting that ended Monday. Other prominent U.S. business leaders, such as Apple CEO Tim Cook, have also been in China in recent days as the government and American companies engage in a mutual charm offensive.

China has been struggling to bounce back from three years of pandemic isolation, its economic recovery weighed down by structural issues that include a real estate crisis, high local government debt, industrial overcapacity, lackluster consumption and youth unemployment, though the economy managed a 5.2% growth rate last year.  

“The mood here is still pretty dark — about the economy, about the trajectory of the country overall, about China’s place in the world,” Scott Kennedy, senior adviser and trustee chair in Chinese business and economics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, CSIS, in Washington, said in an interview in Beijing last week.

“There’s been some economic recovery, but it has not translated into people