Latest news with #US-Chinese

Straits Times
4 days ago
- Business
- Straits Times
Bessent says US will never default as Congress faces endgame
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent looks on during a press conference in the Oval Office at the White House on May 30. PHOTO: EPA-EFE Bessent says US will never default as Congress faces endgame WASHINGTON – Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the US 'is never going to default' as the deadline for increasing the federal debt ceiling gets closer. 'That is never going to happen,' Mr Bessent said on June 1 in an interview with CBS's Face the Nation. 'We are on the warning track and we will never hit the wall.' Republican congressional leaders have attached an increase in the debt limit to President Donald Trump's tax and spending Bill, which potentially puts avoiding a default at the mercy of complex negotiations over the legislation. The US Senate returns this week to take up the Bill. Mr Bessent declined to specify an 'X date' – the point at which the Treasury runs out of cash and special accounting measures that allow it to stay within the debt ceiling and still make good on federal obligations on time. 'We don't give out the 'X date' because we use that to move the Bill forward,' Mr Bessent said. In May, Mr Bessent told lawmakers that the US was likely to exhaust its borrowing authority by August if the debt ceiling isn't raised or suspended by then. Wall Street analysts and private forecasters see the deadline falling sometime between late August and mid-October. Mr Bessent also pushed back against a warning by JPMorgan Chase & Co Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon that a crack in the bond market 'is going to happen.' 'I've known Jamie for a long time, and for his entire career he's made predictions like this,' he said. 'Fortunately none of them have come true. That's why he's a great banker. He tries to look around the corner.' 'We are going to bring the deficit down slowly,' Mr Bessent said. 'This has been a long process, so the goal is to bring it down over the next four years.' China call After Mr Trump last week accused authorities in Beijing of violating a US-Chinese tariff truce reached in May, Bessent said he's confident that the latest clash 'will be ironed out' in a call between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping 'very soon.' White House National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said the call is expected to take place this week. Mr Trump 'is going to have a wonderful conversation about the trade negotiations this week with President Xi,' Mr Hassett said on ABC's This Week. 'That's our expectation.' US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on May 30 accused China of failing to comply with elements of the trade agreement brokered in Geneva, saying Beijing continues to 'slow down and choke off things like critical minerals and rare-earth magnets.' 'Maybe it's a glitch in the Chinese system, maybe it's intentional,' Mr Bessent said on June 1. 'We'll see after the president speaks with the party chairman.' He also suggested any impact on the US construction industry from Mr Trump's decision to double US tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to 50 per cent would be offset by benefits to the steel industry. 'So is it going to impact the construction industry, maybe,' Mr Bessent told CBS. 'But it's going to impact the steel industry in a great way. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
22-05-2025
- Business
- Straits Times
Malaysia downplays Huawei deal as US checks China's AI reach
The project caught the attention of the White House, which is working to prevent Beijing from capturing foreign AI markets. PHOTO: EPA-EFE Malaysia declared it will build a first-of-its-kind AI system powered by Huawei Technologies Co. chips, only to distance itself from that statement a day later, underscoring the Asian nation's delicate position in the US-Chinese AI race. Deputy Minister of Communications Teo Nie Ching said in a speech May 19 her country would be the first to activate an unspecified class of Huawei 'Ascend GPU-powered AI servers at national scale'. Malaysia would deploy 3,000 units of Huawei's primary AI offering by 2026, she said in prepared remarks reviewed by Bloomberg News. Chinese startup DeepSeek would also make one of its AI models available to the South-east Asian country, the official added. The project, first reported by the local outlet Malaysia-China Insight, caught the attention of the White House, which is working to prevent Beijing from capturing foreign AI markets. 'As I've been warning, the full Chinese stack is here,' Mr David Sacks, President Donald Trump's AI and crypto czar, wrote on X. The Trump administration was rescinding Biden-era global semiconductor curbs, which restricted chip sales to Malaysia, 'just in time,' he said. When reached for comment by Bloomberg News on May 20, Ms Teo's office said it is retracting her remarks on Huawei without explanation. It's unclear whether the project will proceed as planned. A Huawei representative said that the company hasn't sold Ascend chips in Malaysia and that the government hasn't bought any. On May 21, the Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry issued a separate statement disavowing the project, saying it was privately driven. 'The said initiative was not developed, endorsed, or coordinated by the government of Malaysia, nor does it form part of any government-to-government agreement or nationally mandated technology programme,' the ministry said in its statement. The unusual about-face comes after the US Commerce Department released – then tweaked – guidance warning overseas companies against using Huawei's Ascend. The use of those chips 'anywhere in the world' could violate US export controls, the agency originally said, before removing that globally focused language during a spat with Beijing. Malaysia is in many ways the perfect test of the Trump administration's new-fashioned AI diplomacy. The idea, championed in part by Mr Sacks, is to proliferate American AI hardware across the world – with security guardrails – to ensure that companies building data centers in South-east Asia or the Middle East don't turn to Chinese alternatives. The US has limited time to entrench itself in those markets, Mr Sacks argues, as Huawei makes progress in catching up with industry leader Nvidia Corp. At the same time, the Trump administration has promised to crack down on illegal shipments of advanced Nvidia chips to China via third countries. Officials have identified Malaysia as a particular concern. The Trump administration's urgency stems in part from the growing prowess of Huawei, which has emerged as China's national semiconductor champion since its breakthrough in processors for the Mate 60 Pro in 2023. The company has since expanded into adjacent arenas from EVs to AI, where it's begun making chips it hopes can compete with Nvidia. Huawei's Ascend lineup is thought to be so far largely confined to use in China by domestic firms that otherwise can't legally access Nvidia's cutting-edge products. The Ascend chips are still quite capable, though, particularly in running AI services, according to industry experts. Mr Jensen Huang, Nvidia's chief executive officer, called Huawei one of the world's most formidable technology companies and said China was 'right behind' the US in the AI race. That race ramped up last week during Mr Trump's whirlwind trip to the Middle East. His administration announced deals to ship tens of thousands – and likely upwards of a million – advanced Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. chips to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Those two Gulf nations have huge AI ambitions and long been a focus of Washington's semiconductor policy. The deals, which still require licenses for actual shipments, have sown divisions within the Trump administration and drawn bipartisan criticism from Capitol Hill. China hawks worry the agreements could benefit Beijing, which has deep ties in the region. Some policymakers are also concerned the projects, which include a UAE data center that could be one of the world's largest, may undermine efforts to ensure the most significant AI progress happens on American soil. As Mr Trump officials hammer out the fine print of the Gulf accords, they're drafting a replacement for former President Joe Biden's so-called AI diffusion framework. Those regulations, which Mr Sacks mentioned in his post, were a dramatic expansion of chip curbs originally focused on China. They imposed new licence requirements for many countries including Malaysia, as well as national caps on the volume of sales that could be approved – with ways for companies to bypass those limits in exchange for security guarantees. Malaysia is a high priority. US firms including Oracle Corp. are planning massive data center clusters in the nation, and are keen to import high-end Nvidia chips for those facilities – in volumes that may not have been possible under Biden-era rules. The regulations barred American hyperscalers from housing more than 7 per cent of their global capacity in any one nation outside the US and a handful of close partners. Oracle was set to blow past that limit in Malaysia, according to the research firm SemiAnalysis. One element of Mr Trump's replacement regulations, Bloomberg News has reported, will be chip controls on countries suspected of diverting US hardware to China – including Malaysia. Trump officials this year pressured Malaysian authorities to crack down on semiconductor transshipment to China. The country is also in the cross hairs of a court case in Singapore, where three men have been charged with fraud for allegedly disguising the ultimate customer of AI servers that may contain high-end Nvidia chips barred from China. Malaysian officials are probing the issue. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


Malaysian Reserve
20-05-2025
- Business
- Malaysian Reserve
Malaysia downplays Huawei deal as US checks China's AI reach
MALAYSIA declared it'll build a first-of-its-kind AI system powered by Huawei Technologies Co. chips, only to distance itself from that statement a day later, underscoring the Asian nation's delicate position in the US-Chinese AI race. Deputy Minister of Communications Teo Nie Ching said in a speech Monday her country would be the first to activate an unspecified class of Huawei 'Ascend GPU-powered AI servers at national scale.' Malaysia would deploy 3,000 units of Huawei's primary AI offering by 2026, she said in prepared remarks reviewed by Bloomberg News. Chinese startup DeepSeek would also make one of its AI models available to the Southeast Asian country, the official added. The project, first reported by the local outlet Malaysia-China Insight, caught the attention of the White House, which is working to prevent Beijing from capturing foreign AI markets. 'As I've been warning, the full Chinese stack is here,' David Sacks, President Donald Trump's AI and crypto czar, wrote on X. The Trump administration was rescinding Biden-era global semiconductor curbs, which restricted chip sales to Malaysia, 'just in time,' he said. As I've been warning, the full Chinese stack is here. We rescinded the Biden Diffusion Rule just in time. The American AI stack needs to be unleashed to compete. — David Sacks (@DavidSacks) May 20, 2025 When reached for comment by Bloomberg News on Tuesday, Teo's office said it's retracting her remarks on Huawei without explanation. It's unclear whether the project will proceed as planned. A Huawei representative said that the company hasn't sold Ascend chips in Malaysia and that the government hasn't bought any. The unusual about-face comes after the US Commerce Department released — then tweaked — guidance warning overseas companies against using Huawei's Ascend. The use of those chips 'anywhere in the world' could violate US export controls, the agency originally said, before removing that globally focused language during a spat with Beijing. Malaysia is in many ways the perfect test of the Trump administration's new-fashioned AI diplomacy. The idea, championed in part by Sacks, is to proliferate American AI hardware across the world — with security guardrails — to ensure that companies building data centers in Southeast Asia or the Middle East don't turn to Chinese alternatives. The US has limited time to entrench itself in those markets, Sacks argues, as Huawei makes progress in catching up with industry leader Nvidia Corp. At the same time, the Trump administration has promised to crack down on illegal shipments of advanced Nvidia chips to China via third countries. Officials have identified Malaysia as a particular concern. The Trump administration's urgency stems in part from the growing prowess of Huawei, which has emerged as China's national semiconductor champion since its breakthrough in processors for the Mate 60 Pro in 2023. The company has since expanded into adjacent arenas from EVs to AI, where it's begun making chips it hopes can compete with Nvidia. Huawei's Ascend lineup is thought to be so far largely confined to use in China by domestic firms that otherwise can't legally access Nvidia's cutting-edge products. The Ascend chips are still quite capable, though, particularly in running AI services, according to industry experts. Jensen Huang, Nvidia's chief executive officer, called Huawei one of the world's most formidable technology companies and said China was 'right behind' the US in the AI race. That race ramped up last week during Trump's whirlwind trip to the Middle East. His administration announced deals to ship tens of thousands — and likely upwards of a million — advanced Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. chips to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Those two Gulf nations have huge AI ambitions and long been a focus of Washington's semiconductor policy. The deals, which still require licenses for actual shipments, have sown divisions within the Trump administration and drawn bipartisan criticism from Capitol Hill. China hawks worry the agreements could benefit Beijing, which has deep ties in the region. Some policymakers are also concerned the projects, which include a UAE data center that could be one of the world's largest, may undermine efforts to ensure the most significant AI progress happens on American soil. As Trump officials hammer out the fine print of the Gulf accords, they're drafting a replacement for former President Joe Biden's so-called AI diffusion framework. Those regulations, which Sacks mentioned in his post, were a dramatic expansion of chip curbs originally focused on China. They imposed new license requirements for many countries including Malaysia, as well as national caps on the volume of sales that could be approved — with ways for companies to bypass those limits in exchange for security guarantees. Malaysia is a high priority. US firms including Oracle Corp. are planning massive data center clusters in the nation, and are keen to import high-end Nvidia chips for those facilities — in volumes that may not have been possible under Biden-era rules. The regulations barred American hyperscalers from housing more than 7% of their global capacity in any one nation outside the US and a handful of close partners. Oracle was set to blow past that limit in Malaysia, according to the research firm SemiAnalysis. One element of Trump's replacement regulations, Bloomberg News has reported, will be chip controls on countries suspected of diverting US hardware to China — including Malaysia. Trump officials this year pressured Malaysian authorities to crack down on semiconductor transshipment to China. The country is also in the cross hairs of a court case in Singapore, where three men have been charged with fraud for allegedly disguising the ultimate customer of AI servers that may contain high-end Nvidia chips barred from China. Malaysian officials are probing the issue. –BLOOMBERG
Business Times
20-05-2025
- Business
- Business Times
Malaysia downplays Huawei deal as US aims to curb China AI power
[KUALA LUMPUR] Malaysia declared it will build a first-of-its-kind AI system powered by Huawei Technologies chips, only to distance itself from that statement a day later, underscoring the Asian nation's delicate position in the US-Chinese AI race. Deputy Minister of Communications Teo Nie Ching said in a speech on May 19 her country would be the first to activate an unspecified class of Huawei 'Ascend GPU-powered AI servers at national scale.' Malaysia would deploy 3,000 units of Huawei's primary AI offering by 2026, she said in prepared remarks reviewed by Bloomberg News. Chinese startup DeepSeek would also make one of its AI models available to the South-east Asian country, the official added. The project, first reported by the local outlet Malaysia-China Insight, caught the attention of the White House, which is working to prevent Beijing from capturing foreign AI markets. 'As I've been warning, the full Chinese stack is here,' David Sacks, President Donald Trump's AI and crypto czar, wrote on X. The Trump administration was rescinding Biden-era global semiconductor curbs, which restricted chip sales to Malaysia, 'just in time,' he said. When reached for comment by Bloomberg News on Tuesday (May 20), Teo's office said it was retracting her remarks on Huawei without explanation. It is unclear whether the project will proceed as planned. Huawei did not provide immediate comment. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies. Sign Up Sign Up The unusual about-face comes after the US Commerce Department released – then tweaked – guidance warning overseas companies against using Huawei's Ascend. The use of those chips 'anywhere in the world' could violate US export controls, the agency originally said, before removing that globally focused language during a spat with Beijing. Malaysia is in many ways the perfect test of the Trump administration's new-fashioned AI diplomacy. The idea, championed in part by Sacks, is to proliferate American AI hardware across the world – with security guardrails – to ensure that companies building data centres in South-east Asia or the Middle East do not turn to Chinese alternatives. The US has limited time to entrench itself in those markets, Sacks argues, as Huawei makes progress in catching up with industry leader Nvidia. At the same time, the Trump administration has promised to crack down on illegal shipments of advanced Nvidia chips to China via third countries. Officials have identified Malaysia as a particular concern. The Trump administration's urgency stems in part from the growing prowess of Huawei, which has emerged as China's national semiconductor champion since its breakthrough in processors for the Mate 60 Pro in 2023. The company has since expanded into adjacent arenas from EVs to AI, where it's begun making chips it hopes can compete with Nvidia. Huawei's Ascend lineup is thought to be so far largely confined to use in China by domestic firms that otherwise cannot legally access Nvidia's cutting-edge products. The Ascend chips are still quite capable, though, particularly in running AI services, according to industry experts. Jensen Huang, Nvidia's chief executive officer, called Huawei one of the world's most formidable technology companies and said China was 'right behind' the US in the AI race. That race ramped up last week during Trump's whirlwind trip to the Middle East. His administration announced deals to ship tens of thousands – and likely upwards of a million – advanced Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices chips to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Those two Gulf nations have huge AI ambitions and long been a focus of Washington's semiconductor policy. The deals, which still require licences for actual shipments, have sown divisions within the Trump administration and drawn bipartisan criticism from Capitol Hill. China hawks worry the agreements could benefit Beijing, which has deep ties in the region. Some policymakers are also concerned the projects, which include a UAE data centre that could be one of the world's largest, may undermine efforts to ensure the most significant AI progress happens on American soil. As Trump officials hammer out the fine print of the Gulf accords, they're drafting a replacement for former President Joe Biden's so-called AI diffusion framework. Those regulations, which Sacks mentioned in his post, were a dramatic expansion of chip curbs originally focused on China. They imposed new licence requirements for many countries including Malaysia, as well as national caps on the volume of sales that could be approved – with ways for companies to bypass those limits in exchange for security guarantees. Malaysia is a high priority. US firms including Oracle are planning massive data centre clusters in the nation, and are keen to import high-end Nvidia chips for those facilities – in volumes that may not have been possible under Biden-era rules. The regulations barred American hyperscalers from housing more than 7 per cent of their global capacity in any one nation outside the US and a handful of close partners. Oracle was set to blow past that limit in Malaysia, according to the research firm SemiAnalysis. One element of Trump's replacement regulations, Bloomberg News has reported, will be chip controls on countries suspected of diverting US hardware to China – including Malaysia. Trump officials this year pressured Malaysian authorities to crack down on semiconductor transshipment to China. The country is also in the crosshairs of a court case in Singapore, where three men have been charged with fraud for allegedly disguising the ultimate customer of AI servers that may contain high-end Nvidia chips barred from China. Malaysian officials are probing the issue. BLOOMBERG


Bloomberg
20-05-2025
- Business
- Bloomberg
Malaysia Downplays Huawei Deal As US Aims To Curb China AI Power
Malaysia declared it'll build a first-of-its-kind AI system powered by Huawei Technologies Co. chips, only to distance itself from that statement a day later, underscoring the Asian nation's delicate position in the US-Chinese AI race. Deputy Minister of Communications Teo Nie Ching said in a speech Monday her country would be the first to activate an unspecified class of Huawei 'Ascend GPU-powered AI servers at national scale.'