
Starbucks Opens Free Study Rooms in China to Lure Back Customers
The study areas have been launched in some stores in southern Guangdong Province, home to millions of young workers at the country's export, manufacturing and technology hubs, Starbucks China said in a statement on its official Weibo account this week.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
12 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Toyota's Internal Inertia Stifles Digital Transformation Effort
Inside Toyota Motor Corp., a group of employees are worried about the company's future in an era when a car's software matters just as much as its sheet metal. The world's biggest automaker is known for churning out reliable cars like clockwork, but it's been struggling to keep up with Elon Musk's Tesla Inc., China's BYD Co. and other frontrunners in the industry's shift toward electric vehicles with sophisticated software.
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Global Gains, Local Taxes: China Tightens Rules on Overseas Stock Profits
Mainland Chinese investors riding the U.S. bull marketfrom Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) to Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)are getting unexpected phone calls. Local tax authorities have started enforcing a long-ignored rule: a 20% levy on global capital gains and dividends. If you've spent more than 183 days a year in China, you're a tax residentand now, you're on the hook. The rule isn't new. But for years, Beijing looked the other way. That's changing fast. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 7 Warning Signs with TSN. What's triggered the clampdown? For starters, China needs cash. The central government raised its 2024 budget deficit to the highest in over three decades. Meanwhile, U.S. markets have soaredup over 60% since early 2022making now a tempting time to reel in offshore profits. China has had access to overseas bank data since it joined the OECD's Common Reporting Standard in 2018. In Hong Kong, banks routinely report account details for clients flagged as Chinese tax residents. Until recently, that information sat quietly. Now, it's being put to work. But not all investors are affected equally. Those trading Hong Kong stocks via the Stock Connect program remain exempt from capital gains taxat least through 2027. Domestic trades are still tax-free too. That policy protects China's capital markets, even as the net tightens around overseas profits. For investors caught off guard, the sting is real. Unlike in the U.S., they can't offset past losses to reduce the bill. The message from Beijing is subtle but serious: if you've made money abroad, now's the time to settle up. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Inicia sesión para acceder a tu portafolio


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
On GPS: Is a second ‘China shock' coming?
The 'China shock' at the turn of this century wreaked havoc on US manufacturing and upended the global trade system. Fareed speaks with David Autor, one of the economists who first identified the 'China shock.' He warns that a second shock is coming — and this one will be worse.