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Lex Greensill decries ‘code of silence' in $677m SoftBank lawsuit
Lex Greensill decries ‘code of silence' in $677m SoftBank lawsuit

AU Financial Review

time18 hours ago

  • Business
  • AU Financial Review

Lex Greensill decries ‘code of silence' in $677m SoftBank lawsuit

Financier Lex Greensill said there was a 'code of silence' around a series of transactions with SoftBank to keep potential losses hidden, in his first public court appearance since the high-profile collapse of his firm. Greensill is giving evidence at a $US440 million ($677 million) London trial brought by Credit Suisse against SoftBank over a restructuring agreement involving his trade finance firm in 2020.

Lex Greensill ‘slippery and prone to lying', court told
Lex Greensill ‘slippery and prone to lying', court told

AU Financial Review

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • AU Financial Review

Lex Greensill ‘slippery and prone to lying', court told

London | The former head of SoftBank's Vision Fund described financier Lex Greensill as 'slippery and prone to lying', according to correspondence disclosed in a complex $US440 million London court battle between the Japanese conglomerate and a fund of the defunct bank Credit Suisse. Rajeev Misra made the comment in an email to a colleague at SoftBank, whose funds were a big investor in Lex Greensill's eponymous lending company before its collapse in 2021 triggered a sprawling political and financial scandal.

AI chips agreement as Trump wraps up Gulf states trip
AI chips agreement as Trump wraps up Gulf states trip

The Advertiser

time16-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Advertiser

AI chips agreement as Trump wraps up Gulf states trip

The United Arab Emirates and the United States have agreed to create a path for the Gulf country to buy some of the most advanced artificial intelligence semiconductors from US companies, a major win for Abu Dhabi's efforts to become a global AI hub. President Donald Trump made the announcement as he wrapped his Gulf tour of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE, with a pledge by oil power Abu Dhabi - the UAE's capital and richest emirate - to hike the value of its energy investments in the US to $US440 billion ($A685 billion) in the next decade. He pledged on Thursday to strengthen US ties with the UAE, announcing deals totalling over $US200 billion, including a $US14.5 billion commitment from Etihad Airways to invest in 28 American-made Boeing aircraft. "We work together and the money that's made here comes back to us," Trump told Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed during a news conference in Abu Dhabi on Friday, touting the business relationship between the US and UAE. "We've made it work, and you know they were being wooed by others. But there's no more wooing, I think we're in pretty good shape," he said. "Absolutely," the crown prince said. The AI deal, finalised on Thursday, is a boost for the UAE, which has been trying to balance its relations with its longtime ally the US and its largest trading partner China. It reflects the Trump administration's confidence that the chips can be managed securely, in part by requiring data centres be managed by US companies. "Yesterday the two countries also agreed to create a path for UAE to buy some of the world's most advanced AI semiconductors from American companies, a very big contract," Trump said. The UAE energy investment commitment was announced during a presentation by Sultan Al Jaber, Abu Dhabi state energy giant ADNOC's chief executive, to Trump during the last stage of his tour that has drawn huge financial commitments from the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The enterprise value of UAE investments in the US energy sector would be boosted to $US440 billion by 2035 from $US70 billion now, Al Jaber told Trump, adding US energy firms will also invest in the UAE. Already in March, when senior UAE officials met Trump, the UAE had committed to a 10-year, $US1.4 trillion investment framework in the US in sectors including energy, AI and manufacturing to deepen reciprocal ties. "We're making great progress for the $US1.4 (trillion) that UAE has announced it intends to spend in the United States," Trump said on his last stop on a Gulf tour that has focused, at least publicly, on investment deals, not security crises in the Middle East, including Israel's war in Gaza. However, Trump did engage in some diplomacy on his whirlwind meetings with some of the world's biggest energy producers. He met with Syria's new interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa in Riyadh and said he would order the lifting of sanctions on Syria at the behest of Saudi Arabia's crown prince, a major US policy shift. The United Arab Emirates and the United States have agreed to create a path for the Gulf country to buy some of the most advanced artificial intelligence semiconductors from US companies, a major win for Abu Dhabi's efforts to become a global AI hub. President Donald Trump made the announcement as he wrapped his Gulf tour of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE, with a pledge by oil power Abu Dhabi - the UAE's capital and richest emirate - to hike the value of its energy investments in the US to $US440 billion ($A685 billion) in the next decade. He pledged on Thursday to strengthen US ties with the UAE, announcing deals totalling over $US200 billion, including a $US14.5 billion commitment from Etihad Airways to invest in 28 American-made Boeing aircraft. "We work together and the money that's made here comes back to us," Trump told Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed during a news conference in Abu Dhabi on Friday, touting the business relationship between the US and UAE. "We've made it work, and you know they were being wooed by others. But there's no more wooing, I think we're in pretty good shape," he said. "Absolutely," the crown prince said. The AI deal, finalised on Thursday, is a boost for the UAE, which has been trying to balance its relations with its longtime ally the US and its largest trading partner China. It reflects the Trump administration's confidence that the chips can be managed securely, in part by requiring data centres be managed by US companies. "Yesterday the two countries also agreed to create a path for UAE to buy some of the world's most advanced AI semiconductors from American companies, a very big contract," Trump said. The UAE energy investment commitment was announced during a presentation by Sultan Al Jaber, Abu Dhabi state energy giant ADNOC's chief executive, to Trump during the last stage of his tour that has drawn huge financial commitments from the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The enterprise value of UAE investments in the US energy sector would be boosted to $US440 billion by 2035 from $US70 billion now, Al Jaber told Trump, adding US energy firms will also invest in the UAE. Already in March, when senior UAE officials met Trump, the UAE had committed to a 10-year, $US1.4 trillion investment framework in the US in sectors including energy, AI and manufacturing to deepen reciprocal ties. "We're making great progress for the $US1.4 (trillion) that UAE has announced it intends to spend in the United States," Trump said on his last stop on a Gulf tour that has focused, at least publicly, on investment deals, not security crises in the Middle East, including Israel's war in Gaza. However, Trump did engage in some diplomacy on his whirlwind meetings with some of the world's biggest energy producers. He met with Syria's new interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa in Riyadh and said he would order the lifting of sanctions on Syria at the behest of Saudi Arabia's crown prince, a major US policy shift. The United Arab Emirates and the United States have agreed to create a path for the Gulf country to buy some of the most advanced artificial intelligence semiconductors from US companies, a major win for Abu Dhabi's efforts to become a global AI hub. President Donald Trump made the announcement as he wrapped his Gulf tour of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE, with a pledge by oil power Abu Dhabi - the UAE's capital and richest emirate - to hike the value of its energy investments in the US to $US440 billion ($A685 billion) in the next decade. He pledged on Thursday to strengthen US ties with the UAE, announcing deals totalling over $US200 billion, including a $US14.5 billion commitment from Etihad Airways to invest in 28 American-made Boeing aircraft. "We work together and the money that's made here comes back to us," Trump told Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed during a news conference in Abu Dhabi on Friday, touting the business relationship between the US and UAE. "We've made it work, and you know they were being wooed by others. But there's no more wooing, I think we're in pretty good shape," he said. "Absolutely," the crown prince said. The AI deal, finalised on Thursday, is a boost for the UAE, which has been trying to balance its relations with its longtime ally the US and its largest trading partner China. It reflects the Trump administration's confidence that the chips can be managed securely, in part by requiring data centres be managed by US companies. "Yesterday the two countries also agreed to create a path for UAE to buy some of the world's most advanced AI semiconductors from American companies, a very big contract," Trump said. The UAE energy investment commitment was announced during a presentation by Sultan Al Jaber, Abu Dhabi state energy giant ADNOC's chief executive, to Trump during the last stage of his tour that has drawn huge financial commitments from the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The enterprise value of UAE investments in the US energy sector would be boosted to $US440 billion by 2035 from $US70 billion now, Al Jaber told Trump, adding US energy firms will also invest in the UAE. Already in March, when senior UAE officials met Trump, the UAE had committed to a 10-year, $US1.4 trillion investment framework in the US in sectors including energy, AI and manufacturing to deepen reciprocal ties. "We're making great progress for the $US1.4 (trillion) that UAE has announced it intends to spend in the United States," Trump said on his last stop on a Gulf tour that has focused, at least publicly, on investment deals, not security crises in the Middle East, including Israel's war in Gaza. However, Trump did engage in some diplomacy on his whirlwind meetings with some of the world's biggest energy producers. He met with Syria's new interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa in Riyadh and said he would order the lifting of sanctions on Syria at the behest of Saudi Arabia's crown prince, a major US policy shift. The United Arab Emirates and the United States have agreed to create a path for the Gulf country to buy some of the most advanced artificial intelligence semiconductors from US companies, a major win for Abu Dhabi's efforts to become a global AI hub. President Donald Trump made the announcement as he wrapped his Gulf tour of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE, with a pledge by oil power Abu Dhabi - the UAE's capital and richest emirate - to hike the value of its energy investments in the US to $US440 billion ($A685 billion) in the next decade. He pledged on Thursday to strengthen US ties with the UAE, announcing deals totalling over $US200 billion, including a $US14.5 billion commitment from Etihad Airways to invest in 28 American-made Boeing aircraft. "We work together and the money that's made here comes back to us," Trump told Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed during a news conference in Abu Dhabi on Friday, touting the business relationship between the US and UAE. "We've made it work, and you know they were being wooed by others. But there's no more wooing, I think we're in pretty good shape," he said. "Absolutely," the crown prince said. The AI deal, finalised on Thursday, is a boost for the UAE, which has been trying to balance its relations with its longtime ally the US and its largest trading partner China. It reflects the Trump administration's confidence that the chips can be managed securely, in part by requiring data centres be managed by US companies. "Yesterday the two countries also agreed to create a path for UAE to buy some of the world's most advanced AI semiconductors from American companies, a very big contract," Trump said. The UAE energy investment commitment was announced during a presentation by Sultan Al Jaber, Abu Dhabi state energy giant ADNOC's chief executive, to Trump during the last stage of his tour that has drawn huge financial commitments from the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The enterprise value of UAE investments in the US energy sector would be boosted to $US440 billion by 2035 from $US70 billion now, Al Jaber told Trump, adding US energy firms will also invest in the UAE. Already in March, when senior UAE officials met Trump, the UAE had committed to a 10-year, $US1.4 trillion investment framework in the US in sectors including energy, AI and manufacturing to deepen reciprocal ties. "We're making great progress for the $US1.4 (trillion) that UAE has announced it intends to spend in the United States," Trump said on his last stop on a Gulf tour that has focused, at least publicly, on investment deals, not security crises in the Middle East, including Israel's war in Gaza. However, Trump did engage in some diplomacy on his whirlwind meetings with some of the world's biggest energy producers. He met with Syria's new interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa in Riyadh and said he would order the lifting of sanctions on Syria at the behest of Saudi Arabia's crown prince, a major US policy shift.

It's chess, not checkers: China can play the long game against Trump
It's chess, not checkers: China can play the long game against Trump

The Age

time30-04-2025

  • Business
  • The Age

It's chess, not checkers: China can play the long game against Trump

That misconception of how trade works has him convinced that because China exports more goods to the US (nearly $US440 billion last year) than America exports to China (about $US144 billion), China has more to lose in the trade war than the US. 'They're playing with a pair of twos,' Trump has said. Trade, of course, doesn't work in that simplistic fashion. It delivers mutual benefit. China gets the jobs and economic activity that its exports generate, while US companies and consumers get access to cheaper goods and equipment that the US doesn't make or could only manufacture at prohibitive cost. Americans enjoy a higher standard of living than they would if trade were balanced. If Trump's tariffs halt the flow of cheap Chinese goods to the US, Americans will suffer reduced living standards, reduced growth and – because of the damage on importing companies and those US manufacturers reliant on imported components – reduced economic activity and employment. Loading So, yes, if the trade war persists, China will lose export income, jobs and inevitably factories. Its economy will shrink to some degree. The US, however, will paradoxically suffer more, because of the size of its deficit and the extent to which Americans consume more and save less than the Chinese. Last week's International Monetary Fund revisions of its forecasts for growth, for instance, saw America's GDP growth for this year revised down by 90 basis points, from the 2.7 per cent it was expecting in January to 1.8 per cent. China's GDP growth was reduced by 60 basis points, from 4.6 per cent to 4 per cent. It is easier for China to respond to slower growth by lifting consumption (which it needed to do anyway to stave of deflation) than it is for the US to replace the Chinese goods and equipment that it doesn't have the capacity to manufacture itself. Another way of looking at is to say that China will experience something of a demand shock because its access to a major market has been cut off. The US will experience – indeed, is already experiencing – a supply shock. The world saw how damaging a supply shock can be in the aftermath of the COVID pandemic. It's within Beijing's control to stimulate domestic demand to offset the loss of external demand. There's not much the US can do in the near to medium term to replace the supply lost from a country that accounts for almost a third of global manufacturing output. If the US truly wanted to cut off imports from China and others, it should have spent some years building up its domestic manufacturing base, and its access to the critical minerals and other inputs needed, before launching an assault on global trade. Chaotic and inept Given how chaotic and inept the introduction of the tariffs has been, with changes being made on a daily basis as consequences for US industries that should have been obvious long before 'Liberation Day' emerge, it is apparent that little intelligent thought was given to the practical effects on the US of a trade war on everyone before it was launched. China will be hurt by the trade war. The consensus among investment banks seems to be that it could lose between about 10 million and 16 million jobs and its GDP growth could, in the worst case, be halved. The US, however, could be plunged into a self-induced recession, trashing what was a healthy economy. Its worst case is a stagflationary recession: a sharp decline in growth that coincides with a rise in inflation caused by the shortages and higher prices of goods. Trump's 'America First' isolationism, his axing of US financial and humanitarian aid to developing countries, his aversion to multilateralism and his trade war on allies, friends and foes alike have changed, possibly forever, the rest of the world's view of America. He's undermined trust in brand America. China sees that as a generational opportunity. China has held trade talks with Japan and South Korea – two of America's closest military and trade allies – about a trilateral approach to trade, has made overtures to the European Union (and Australia), and Xi himself has recently visited Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia, seeking to strengthen trade relations. It's not just an opportunity to diversify the markets for its exports which, after Trump's 2018-19 trade war, it was doing anyway to reduce its dependence on the US. With the US withdrawing from the rest of the world and the multilateral institutions that have supported global trade and American global hegemony, Trump has given China a unique window of opportunity to reduce America's global influence and build relationships with countries that were America's close allies, until they were hit by Trump's tariffs. Lots of bluff China is trying to edge closer towards filling the global leadership vacuum caused by America's abrupt retreat from globalisation and multilateralism. There's a lot of bluff in what Trump is trying to do, whether he understands that, or not. He's trying to coerce countries into one-sided trade deals. No doubt there will be some who fold, either because they believe the benefits of maintaining, or gaining, access to the US market outweigh the costs, or they are afraid of the implications for their broader relationship with America if they refuse to concede. Loading Xi isn't going to be bluffed or intimidated. He'd like to de-escalate and resume trading as normal, but doesn't want to lose face by being seen to beg Trump for a ceasefire. He wants the Trump administration, which has conceded that tariffs and retaliatory tariffs of the current magnitude can't be sustained, to make the first move. Xi isn't dependent on elections and populism. He heads an authoritarian state and one in which trade war has ignited a nationalistic fervour of anti-Americanism, as it has done in Canada and elsewhere. Trump, with his poll numbers diving as America's vulnerabilities to the trade wars are starting to be exposed, and with the prospect of the midterm elections next year – at which he could lose control of the House – on the horizon, has the weaker hand to play.

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