China

China Articles

China's three top EV makers reported October deliveries Monday morning and all posted big year-over-year gains.
The investing world has seen Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) turn into the greatest story of a lifetime. After having an existential issues in the 1990s, Tim Cook’s journey in the post-Steve Jobs era has...
Karma Automotive said Monday that it will give its first line of all-electric vehicles a new name when the first car debuts next year.
The U.S. president has tentatively approved a deal that would create a U.S. company to manage social media app TikTok, but the story is far from over.
The 22 million active WeChat users in the United States have become a walled garden, which defeats the reasons to have the app at all.
Rumors are that the deal primarily allows Oracle to host TikTok on its cloud computing platform. If so, the term "sale" would be out of place.
Shanghai-based priced an upsized secondary offering of 88.5 million shares at $17, about 8% below last Friday's closing price. But that's only a small bit of the news from electric vehicle makers on...
It has never been clear why Google has had such a small market share in China compared to most other major countries. One theory is that the government has favored local search engines, particularly...
Chinese electric vehicle maker Xpeng completed its IPO on Thursday with shares priced at $15 (above the expected range) and investors getting a nice 54% premium to that price as well.
China-based Internet giant Alibaba reported better than expected fiscal first-quarter results before markets opened Thursday.
Chinese e-commerce company JD.com reported better than expected quarterly results before the markets opened on Monday.
When Nio reported its most recent quarterly results before the markets opened on Tuesday, the electric vehicle maker said that it had a smaller than expected net loss.
Eyenovia shares soared on Tuesday after the company announced an exclusive license agreement with Artic Vision.
China almost certainly will target highly visible U.S. companies if the friction that involves TicTok and WeChat worsens. That makes Tesla a possible target.
China blocking iPhone sales there would be the most visible way to attack the United States for its bans of Huawei and TikTok. Much of Apple's sales comes from what it calls Greater China.