Putin, Kim Jong Un to attend China's military parade
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The Trump administration has announced it will make it more difficult for Intel, Samsung and SK Hynix to manufacture microchips in China.
Analysis: The leaders of three of the world’s largest countries will be gathering for a Eurasian summit in China this weekend. Trump will be the talk of Tianjin.
Sen. Roger Wicker, visiting Taiwan, called the island claimed by China a "free country." Beijing condemned the visit itself as a "serious violation" of bilateral pacts.
The bilateral war game in Japan will mark the U.S. Mid-Range Capability missile system's third deployment in the Western Pacific.
Two years after the oil deal was signed, it collapsed — with the Taliban accusing the Chinese company of breaching the contract and some Chinese employees likening the Taliban's actions to robbery.
Chinese chip companies and artificial-intelligence developers are building up their arsenal of homegrown technology, backed by a government determined to win the AI race.
The parade on Sep. 3 will unveil cutting-edge equipment like fighter jets, missile defense systems, and hypersonic weapons, marking the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II.
China's major state-owned banks reported weaker first-half net interest margins amid lower interest rates as the world's second largest economy grapples with deflation and global economic volatility.
Deflationary pressures have been weighing on China’s economy, with real wages at non-state-owned companies rising just 1.7 per cent in 2024, according to the latest official data available. A real estate crisis has hurt consumer sentiment in a country where most household wealth is held in property.
A move to force employers to pay into benefits for their employees has left people worrying that small businesses will close and jobs will be lost.
Just days before the start of the U.S. export season for soybeans, the world’s top importer doesn’t appear to have bought a single American cargo for the coming year.
A relationship frozen after a deadly clash high in the Himalayas five years ago appears to be thawing under the heat of Washington’s economic pressure.