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Google VP Bhatia on Geopolitical Tensions, AI

Google VP Bhatia on Geopolitical Tensions, AI

Yahoo16-05-2025

Google VP Karan Bhatia discusses the impact of US-China geopolitical tensions and trade dynamics on global tech industry. He expresses strong optimism for AI adoption and growth potential in the Asia Pacific region, also emphasizing a long-term commitment even as rising trade tensions affect the tech industry. He spoke to Bloomberg's Chief North Asia Correspondent Stephen Engle on the sidelines of APEC trade ministers' meeting in Jeju, South Korea.

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Xi Plays Long Game on US-China Trade as Trump Seeks Quick Wins
Xi Plays Long Game on US-China Trade as Trump Seeks Quick Wins

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Xi Plays Long Game on US-China Trade as Trump Seeks Quick Wins

(Bloomberg) — While Donald Trump hailed the outcome of trade talks in London, Xi Jinping walked away with an understated strategic gain: a negotiating process that buys China time and helps defuse the threat of more harmful tariffs and technology curbs. Shuttered NY College Has Alumni Fighting Over Its Future Trump's Military Parade Has Washington Bracing for Tanks and Weaponry NYC Renters Brace for Price Hikes After Broker-Fee Ban NY Long Island Rail Service Resumes After Grand Central Fire Do World's Fairs Still Matter? Shortly after two days of negotiations wrapped, Trump declared Wednesday on social media that a deal had been 'DONE' to restore the flow of critical magnets from China, and pledged to lift curbs on student visas. Hours earlier, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick revealed Washington would unwind its recent tech curbs, if niche metals essential to US auto and defense firms now flowed fast enough. China's focus was very different. A People's Daily commentary on Thursday — Beijing's most substantial comments so far on the talks — made no mention of export controls. Instead, the Communist Party mouthpiece touted an 'institutional guarantee' established in Geneva for the two sides to bridge differences via a 'consultation mechanism.' In a long-awaited leaders' call before the London negotiations, Xi told Trump the importance of using this channel, it added. The contrast illustrates a disconnect in how the world's biggest economies want to manage their trade dispute, and broader rollercoaster relationship. While Trump seeks quick deals done directly with top leaders, Xi favors a framework led by his lieutenants that wards against being blindsided. Such haggling could drag on for years, with the 'Phase One' deal from the first trade war taking most of Trump's first term. 'Xi is playing a longer game on US-China trade. His time in office is simply much longer than Trump's,' said Christopher Beddor, deputy China research director at Gavekal Research. 'That's not to say there's never any short-term thinking, but the lack of term limits presents very different incentives than for Trump.' While slow-walking negotiations allows China the chance to assess how hard a bargain Trump drives with other nations, the lingering uncertainty is bad for business, he added. Xi showed last week he can be flexible, getting on the phone with Trump as ties spiraled, breaking from the protocol to set up such an interaction. In the Biden era, then National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and Foreign Minister Wang Yi would huddle in foreign locations for days before their leaders spoke directly, managing outcomes and expectations. While the Geneva talks last month wrapped with an identical US-China statement, suggesting a degree of alignment, that accord quickly fell apart over US claims China reneged on a promise to release shipments of rare earths. Beijing says it always intended to keep in place a permit process, which American companies complained moved so slowly some factories were forced to pause production. The lack of a detailed read out from either side this time around has left much in doubt, including on what Beijing committed to on the export of niche metals used in everything from fighter jets to electric vehicles. Lutnick told CNBC on Wednesday that China was going to approve 'all applications for magnets from the United States companies right away' — a sweeping claim that appeared to leave plenty of room for disappointment. Chinese Commerce Ministry spokesman He Yadong pledged his country would 'fully consider the reasonable needs and concerns of all countries in the civilian sector,' at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Thursday, adding that approval work was being strengthened. 'The Chinese incentive is also to keep cards close to their chest, and not make a lot of proclamations about what they have or have not committed to,' said Arthur Kroeber, founding partner and head of research at Gavekal. 'There is a lot of leeway for them within the whole export licensing regime.' One approach could be to restart enough export licenses so commercial buyers aren't stymied, but not so much that firms can stockpile, thus blunting Beijing's future leverage, he added. Adding to the fuzziness, Trump declared on social media that China now faces a 55% charge, a number that appears to include levies introduced during his first presidency. 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In a sign of the Republican leader's growing impatience, he warned Wednesday that he will soon send letters to countries saying, 'this is the deal, you can take it or leave it.' Exemplifying that willingness to keep things moving, Trump's team in a rare move this week put export controls on the negotiating table — previously, such tools have been justified with national security concerns, and were largely off limits. Watering down that rationale could open the door to more cooperation, and advance Trump's stated goal to 'open up China to American trade.' Still, China is unlikely to agree to large purchases of goods that compete in areas where Beijing is looking to build self sufficiency and nurture its own national champions. Rebalancing their economies, a concept touted by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, could involve attracting more Chinese investment into the US. 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Netflix co-CEO sees Warner split as part of broader ‘shakeout'
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Netflix co-CEO sees Warner split as part of broader ‘shakeout'

(Bloomberg) — Warner Bros. Discovery Inc.'s (WBD) decision to split into two independent companies is a sign of a broader 'shakeout' across a media industry that has become increasingly dominated by streaming and on-demand services, Netflix Inc. (NFLX) co-Chief Executive Officer Greg Peters said. Shuttered NY College Has Alumni Fighting Over Its Future Trump's Military Parade Has Washington Bracing for Tanks and Weaponry NYC Renters Brace for Price Hikes After Broker-Fee Ban NY Long Island Rail Service Resumes After Grand Central Fire Do World's Fairs Still Matter? 'Everything is moving to streaming — everything is moving to on demand,' Peters said Thursday in an interview with Bloomberg Editor-in-Chief John Micklethwait at the Founders Forum Global conference. 'There's going to be a period of shakeout and transition associated with that.' US media groups have struggled to improve profitability in the face of expensive streaming wars against the likes of Netflix and Amazon Prime (AMZN). Warner Bros. Discovery announced this week that it will split into two to unshackle the company's fast-growing streaming business from its struggling legacy media channels. Comcast Corp. (CMCSA) has taken a similar path, dividing NBCUniversal into Versant — which will own cable networks like MSNBC — and the rest, including streaming service Peacock and the NBC broadcast network. 'They have to rationalize their business for that reality' of streaming demand, Peters said. 'We're definitely seeing the results of that.' When asked whether legacy players in the market will merge, he said: 'There's an inevitable logic to that.' That said, Peters said at the event in Oxford that Netflix hasn't generally been acquisitive. 'Our track record is we're builders,' he said. 'We're not buyers.' He did note that Netflix is seeking to increase the value of its intellectual property. Netflix's subscriber base is meanwhile growing in all the markets, according to Peters. 'We've got a lot more room to grow in Asia,' he said, adding that South Korea and India are strong growth markets. American Mid: Hampton Inn's Good-Enough Formula for World Domination New Grads Join Worst Entry-Level Job Market in Years The Spying Scandal Rocking the World of HR Software US Tariffs Threaten to Derail Vietnam's Historic Industrial Boom The SEC Pinned Its Hack on a Few Hapless Day Traders. The Full Story Is Far More Troubling ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. By subscribing, you are agreeing to Yahoo's CGU and Politique de confidentialité Erreur lors de la récupération des données Connectez-vous pour accéder à votre portefeuille Erreur lors de la récupération des données Erreur lors de la récupération des données Erreur lors de la récupération des données Erreur lors de la récupération des données

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slide ahead of fresh inflation data, as Trump renews tariff threat
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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slide ahead of fresh inflation data, as Trump renews tariff threat

US stock futures pulled back on Thursday ahead of a fresh batch of inflation data, as President Trump renewed his threat to impose "take it or leave it" tariffs on trading partners. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) fell roughly 0.6%, or over 250 points, as component Boeing (BA) slumped in the wake of a deadly plane crash in India. S&P 500 futures (ES=F) dropped 0.5%, while contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) also moved 0.5% lower. Stocks are staying downbeat after the S&P 500 (^GSPC) snapped this week's run of wins, as investors add growing tensions in the Middle East to worries over Trump's trade policy, including the fragility of the US-China detente. For now the spotlight is on the May reading on wholesale inflation due later, after its consumer counterpart showed an easing in price pressures in the wake of Trump's "reciprocal" tariff hikes in April. 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Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Congress it's "highly likely" that countries in trade negotiations with the US will see an extension of the 90-day tariff pause, currently set to expire July 9. Chime is set to debut on the Nasdaq later today under the ticker symbol CHYM. The digital bank raised $864 million in its IPO, and priced shares at $27 each for a valuation of $11.6 billion. Chime's entrance in the public markets has been viewed as another indicator of whether the IPO market is thawing after a freeze due to tariff-induced uncertainty. Other recent go-publics, like stablecoin issuer Circle (CRCL) and Nvidia-backed CoreWeave (CRWV), saw massive rallies after their IPOs. As my colleague Josh Schafer wrote yesterday, the largest tech stocks are once again leading the market higher, and that enthusiasm has trickled down to newly issued public offerings. In a June 9 research report, Carson Group associate portfolio manager Blake Anderson found that tech IPOs have been outperforming non-tech IPOs, with shares tied to tech IPOs rising an average of 108% from their deal price. Beyond Chime, other closely watched IPO hopefuls in the pipeline include crypto exchange Gemini; buy now, pay later firm Klarna ( AI chipmaker Cerebras ( and medical supplies company Medline. Read more here about the details of Chime's IPO. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. President Trump's Truth Social posts aren't moving markets like they used to, notes Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer. Stocks barely budged as he posted on Wednesday that a US-China deal was "done" — something that would have swung markets around a month earlier. Instead, stocks found their direction from economic data, Josh reports: Read more here from today's Morning Brief. The dollar (DX=F) fell further on Thursday as concerns grew about US tariffs after President Trump said he would soon tell trading partners about unilateral levies. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Boeing stock fell on Thursday by 8% in premarket trading after an Air India aircraft carrying over 200 people crashed minutes after taking off from the western Indian city of Ahmedabad. Aviation tracking site Flightradar24 said the plane was a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, one of the most modern passenger aircraft in service. Air India confirmed the plane, which was headed to Gatwick Airport in the UK, crashed in a civilian area near the airport, but has not specified if there are any fatalities. It is still not clear what caused the crash. According to Reuters, Boeing confirmed it was aware of the crash and was working to gather more information. The news comes as the planemaker is trying to rebuild trust relating to the safety of its jets and increase production under new Chief Executive Officer Kelly Orthberg. "There's revised fears of the problems that plagued Boeing aircraft and Boeing itself in recent years," said Chris Beauchamp, analyst at IG Group. Economic data: Producer Price Index (May); Initial jobless claims (week ending June 7) Continuing claims (week ending May 31) Earnings: Adobe (ADBE), Lovesac (LOVE), RH (RH) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning: Boeing stock slides after plane crashes in India The $11 trillion gap in costing Trump's 'big, beautiful' bill Gundlach: 'Reckoning is coming' for US debt Trump says he will set unilateral tariff rates within weeks Americans flunk on retirement literacy. Here's why it matters. Nvidia, Samsung to take stakes in robot AI startup Skild US long-dated debt faces crucial test in $22 billion auction Oracle stock jumps as AI boosts revenue forecast Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading: Oracle (ORCL) stock rose 8% in premarket trading on Thursday after the tech company raised its annual forecast, driven by demand for its AI related cloud services. "Oracle's once-stodgy image levels up to 'cloud-native mage,' and the competitive map now looks less like a classic three-player real time strategy and more like a battle-royale with everyone dropping in, looking for compute loot", said Michael Ashley Schulman, partner at Running Point Capital Advisors. GameStop (GME) shares slumped on Thursday by 11% after announcing a convertible notes offering. The press release said: "GameStop intends to use the net proceeds from the offering for general corporate purposes, including making investments in a manner consistent with GameStop's Investment Policy and potential acquisitions." Boeing (BA) stock fell 8% before the bell on Thursday after a plane crashed in India, with more than 200 people on board, near the airport in the country's western city of Ahmedabad. The plane, which was headed to Gatwick airport in the UK, crashed in a civilian area. Oil prices pulled back early Thursday morning, reversing earlier overnight gains as traders assessed a US decision to pull some diplomats out of the Middle East. The decision to reduce staffing in Iraq came after Iran threatened to hit US assets in the region ahead of its talks with the US over nuclear-related activity. Brent crude futures fell to under $69 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude traded below $68 a barrel — both down around 1%. Prices jumped over 4% on Wednesday amid reports of a potential evacuation. Reuters reports: Read more here. Gold (GC=F) rose for a second day in a row as tensions in the Middle East, coupled with Trump's claims of upcoming unilateral tariffs, pushed risk-averse investors toward the haven commodity. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Chime is set to debut on the Nasdaq later today under the ticker symbol CHYM. The digital bank raised $864 million in its IPO, and priced shares at $27 each for a valuation of $11.6 billion. Chime's entrance in the public markets has been viewed as another indicator of whether the IPO market is thawing after a freeze due to tariff-induced uncertainty. Other recent go-publics, like stablecoin issuer Circle (CRCL) and Nvidia-backed CoreWeave (CRWV), saw massive rallies after their IPOs. As my colleague Josh Schafer wrote yesterday, the largest tech stocks are once again leading the market higher, and that enthusiasm has trickled down to newly issued public offerings. In a June 9 research report, Carson Group associate portfolio manager Blake Anderson found that tech IPOs have been outperforming non-tech IPOs, with shares tied to tech IPOs rising an average of 108% from their deal price. Beyond Chime, other closely watched IPO hopefuls in the pipeline include crypto exchange Gemini; buy now, pay later firm Klarna ( AI chipmaker Cerebras ( and medical supplies company Medline. Read more here about the details of Chime's IPO. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. President Trump's Truth Social posts aren't moving markets like they used to, notes Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer. Stocks barely budged as he posted on Wednesday that a US-China deal was "done" — something that would have swung markets around a month earlier. Instead, stocks found their direction from economic data, Josh reports: Read more here from today's Morning Brief. The dollar (DX=F) fell further on Thursday as concerns grew about US tariffs after President Trump said he would soon tell trading partners about unilateral levies. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Boeing stock fell on Thursday by 8% in premarket trading after an Air India aircraft carrying over 200 people crashed minutes after taking off from the western Indian city of Ahmedabad. Aviation tracking site Flightradar24 said the plane was a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, one of the most modern passenger aircraft in service. Air India confirmed the plane, which was headed to Gatwick Airport in the UK, crashed in a civilian area near the airport, but has not specified if there are any fatalities. It is still not clear what caused the crash. According to Reuters, Boeing confirmed it was aware of the crash and was working to gather more information. 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Nvidia, Samsung to take stakes in robot AI startup Skild US long-dated debt faces crucial test in $22 billion auction Oracle stock jumps as AI boosts revenue forecast Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading: Oracle (ORCL) stock rose 8% in premarket trading on Thursday after the tech company raised its annual forecast, driven by demand for its AI related cloud services. "Oracle's once-stodgy image levels up to 'cloud-native mage,' and the competitive map now looks less like a classic three-player real time strategy and more like a battle-royale with everyone dropping in, looking for compute loot", said Michael Ashley Schulman, partner at Running Point Capital Advisors. GameStop (GME) shares slumped on Thursday by 11% after announcing a convertible notes offering. The press release said: "GameStop intends to use the net proceeds from the offering for general corporate purposes, including making investments in a manner consistent with GameStop's Investment Policy and potential acquisitions." Boeing (BA) stock fell 8% before the bell on Thursday after a plane crashed in India, with more than 200 people on board, near the airport in the country's western city of Ahmedabad. The plane, which was headed to Gatwick airport in the UK, crashed in a civilian area. Oil prices pulled back early Thursday morning, reversing earlier overnight gains as traders assessed a US decision to pull some diplomats out of the Middle East. The decision to reduce staffing in Iraq came after Iran threatened to hit US assets in the region ahead of its talks with the US over nuclear-related activity. Brent crude futures fell to under $69 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude traded below $68 a barrel — both down around 1%. Prices jumped over 4% on Wednesday amid reports of a potential evacuation. Reuters reports: Read more here. Gold (GC=F) rose for a second day in a row as tensions in the Middle East, coupled with Trump's claims of upcoming unilateral tariffs, pushed risk-averse investors toward the haven commodity. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Sign in to access your portfolio

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