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China Threatens Retaliation After Pentagon Adds Alibaba, Baidu, BYD to Military Blacklist
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China Threatens Retaliation After Pentagon Adds Alibaba, Baidu, BYD to Military Blacklist

China's Ministry of Commerce on Saturday threatened to retaliate after the US Defense Department added a number of Chinese companies, including Alibaba (HKG:9988), Baidu (HKG:9888) and BYD (HKG:1211, SHE:002594), to its list of firms it deems linked with the Chinese military."China will resolutely and forcefully retaliate, and the US will bear full responsibility for the consequences," a spokesperson for the Ministry of Commerce said over the weekend, adding that "China expresses its strong dissatisfaction and firm opposition" to the designations.The Pentagon published its updated Section 1260H list on June 8, which supersedes an earlier version from January 2025. The updated roster now also includes electric-vehicle maker Nio (HKG:9866), pharmaceutical research and manufacturing services provider WuXi AppTec (HKG:2359, SHA:603259), AI robotics company Robosense Technology (HKG:2498), and Unitree Robotics, which is currently pursuing an initial public offering in Shanghai. Nvidia recently said it plans to collaborate with Unitree to build robots.The list also names telcos China Mobile (HKG:0941, SHA:600941), China Telecom (HKG:0728, SHA:601728), and China Unicom (HKG:0762), as well as chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International (HKG:0981, SHA:688981), Huawei Technologies, Contemporary Amperex Technology (SHE:300750, HKG:3750) and Tencent (HKG:0700), most of which were added in January.The June update also reinstated ChangXin Memory Technologies and Yangtze Memory Technologies on the list after they were withdrawn from the February version. Both companies are among China's leading memory chipmakers and are currently pursuing public listings.As the Pentagon noted, being on the list means an entity is identified as a contributor to China's "Military-Civil Fusion strategy," supporting the modernization goals of the People's Liberation Army "by ensuring it can acquire advanced technologies and expertise developed by PRC companies, universities, and research programs that appear to be civilian entities."While these Chinese companies face no formal sanctions under the list, the Pentagon is prohibited from entering into, renewing or extending contracts with them or acquiring their products starting June 30, 2026.Several newly listed companies pushed back, with Alibaba saying it is "not a Chinese military company nor part of any military-civil fusion strategy." The company warned that it will take "all available legal action against attempts to misrepresent the company."Baidu said there was "no justification" for its inclusion, adding that it does not expect the designation to impact its business.BYD, which recently toppled Tesla as the world's top electric vehicle seller, echoed Alibaba and Baidu's statements, adding that the move will not impact its business.Meanwhile, analysts from Jefferies said the update was largely anticipated, noting that an earlier version of the list had briefly appeared in February before being withdrawn without explanation.Jefferies also noted on June 9 that while the Defense Department is prohibited from procurement of goods and services from entities in the list, "it does not restrict US citizens from engaging in trading activity with the listed companies."In a separate Jefferies note on June 9, analysts from the bank said 10 companies were removed from the list, including, most notably, CNOOC (HKG:0883, SHA:600938)."The immediate implication for companies on the 1260H list is that they are prohibited from providing any goods or services to the US military directly or via contractors. We believe the final decision-maker is the US president," said Jefferies."President Trump has just concluded his China trip, and, in our view, the US-China relationship is moving in an incrementally positive direction. In our view, President Trump is largely occupied with Iran, the high oil price (thus higher inflation risk), and the upcoming mid-term election, implying there will be less motivation for the US to escalate geopolitical tension with China."

Shanghai Composite^SZSEHKG:0700HKG:0728HKG:0762HKG:0883HKG:0941HKG:0981HKG:1211HKG:2359HKG:2498HKG:3750HKG:9866HKG:9888HKG:9988SHA:600938SHA:600941SHA:601728SHA:603259SHA:688981SHE:002594SHE:300750
Pentagon Accuses Alibaba, Tencent, BYD, CATL of China Military Links
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Pentagon Accuses Alibaba, Tencent, BYD, CATL of China Military Links

The U.S. added dozens of Chinese companies to a list of firms it says support Beijing's military, a move that could heighten tensions between the world's two largest economies.The Pentagon added several major Chinese technology, electric-vehicle, and battery companies, including Alibaba (HKG:9988), Tencent (HKG:0700), BYD (HKG:1211, SHE:002594), CATL (HKG:3750, SHE:300750), Baidu (HKG:9888), and Nio (HKG:9866), to its list of "Chinese military companies," according to a notice published Monday.The U.S. Department of Defense said the companies were designated under Section 1260H of the National Defense Authorization Act, which requires the Pentagon to identify entities it deems linked to China's military or that support military-civil fusion efforts.The Pentagon briefly published the updated list in February, when President Donald Trump's planned visit to China was still under consideration, before withdrawing it without explanation.It later asked the Federal Register to remove the notice from public inspection and withdraw it from publication, stating: "We would like to remove this notice from public inspection and withdraw the notice from publication," without providing a reason.The list was released less than a month after Trump met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, where the two leaders discussed trade and technology issues.The updated list also includes Huawei Technologies, DJI, Semiconductor Manufacturing International (HKG:0981, SHA:688981), China Mobile (HKG:0941, SHA:600941), China Telecom (HKG:0728), China Unicom (HKG:0762), Hikvision (SHE:002415), SenseTime (HKG:0020), Unitree Robotics, TP-Link, among others.Also included was WuXi AppTec (HKG:2359, SHA:603259), one of China's largest pharmaceutical research and manufacturing services providers.WuXi AppTec said separately in a statement on Tuesday that its inclusion on the list was "clearly a mistake" and that it would take immediate steps to challenge the designation.The company said it does not meet the statutory criteria for a "Chinese military company" and is not owned, controlled by, or affiliated with any Chinese military or government entity.China's embassy in Washington criticized the designation, saying Beijing opposed "making discriminatory lists to go after Chinese companies.""The U.S. should stop its wrong practice and create a fair, just, and non-discriminatory environment for Chinese companies," an embassy spokesperson said in a statement to Reuters.The spokesperson added that Chinese companies operate in accordance with local laws and regulations.The new list is largely unchanged from the withdrawn February version, except for the addition of memory chipmakers CXMT and YMTC, whose earlier removal had sparked criticism from U.S. lawmakers.Bloomberg News reported earlier that the Pentagon's decision to initially remove YMTC and CXMT prompted the list's swift withdrawal in February.The notice also removed several entities from the previous list, including CNOOC China and CNOOC International Trading, both of which are owned by state-controlled oil producer CNOOC.However, the Pentagon added CNOOC subsidiary China BlueChemical (HKG:3983) to the updated list and said in the filing that CNOOC is directly owned and controlled by China.The notice also removed several entities from the previous list, including Anhui Sun Create Electronics, China International Information Services, China National Chemical Engineering, China Traffic Construction USA, COSCO Shipping Finance, among others.Companies designated under the program may seek reconsideration by submitting information to challenge their inclusion on the list, according to the notice.While the designation carries limited immediate legal consequences, the Pentagon has increasingly used the list to restrict companies' access to U.S. military contracts and research funding.The designation is also viewed by investors as a warning signal that can precede broader U.S. trade, investment, or regulatory restrictions.

HKG:0700HKG:0728HKG:0762HKG:0883HKG:0941HKG:1211HKG:2359HKG:3750HKG:9866HKG:9888HKG:9988SHA:600938SHA:600941SHA:603259SHE:002594SHE:300750
Asia

Market Chatter: China Sees Rebound in LNG Imports in May

China's liquefied natural gas imports rose to 4.9 million tons in May, marking a marginal year-on-year increase. The rebound offers a stark contrast to April's imports, which hit an eight-year low, with the country raising purchases to satisfy summer demand, Bloomberg News reported Tuesday.The Iran war has choked Gulf shipments, which typically supply one-third of China's needs. Qatar's drop was offset by increases from Canada, Malaysia, Oman and Russia, according to the report.State-owned CNOOC (SHA:600938, HKG:0883) and Zhejiang Energy have purchased cargoes for June and July delivery amid falling inventories and expected hot summer weather, Bloomberg wrote.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Shanghai Composite^SZSEHKG:0883SHA:600938
Chipmaker CXMT Wins Approval for China's Largest IPO Since 2022
US Markets

Chipmaker CXMT Wins Approval for China's Largest IPO Since 2022

ChangXin Memory Technologies has received approval from the Shanghai Stock Exchange to proceed with an initial public offering, targeting 29.5 billion yuan in proceeds, which would make it the largest IPO in China in four years.The Shanghai bourse's Listing Review Committee on Wednesday noted that CXMT "meets the issuance conditions, listing conditions, and information disclosure requirements" for an IPO.The chipmaker plans to list 10.6 billion shares on the STAR Market board, accounting for at least 10% of its share capital post-issuance.CXMT has agreed to grant underwriters an overallotment option to issue up to an additional 15% of the shares in the offering.China International Capital Corporation and CITIC Securities are serving as lead underwriters.Based on its IPO target size, the deal would mark the largest in China since CNOOC's (SHA:600938, HKG:0883) 32.3 billion yuan Shanghai IPO in 2022. It would also be the biggest in Asia since Contemporary Amperex Technology or CATL's (SHE:300750, HKG:3750) HK$41 billion Hong Kong IPO last year.CXMT describes itself as the world's fourth-largest supplier of dynamic random access memory (DRAM). The company competes with South Korea's Samsung Electronics (KRX:005930) and SK Hynix (KRX:000660), and US-based Micron Technology. They collectively control 90% of the DRAM market, according to The Wall Street Journal.DRAM is a chip that serves as a key component for processors, including those used for artificial intelligence models.The company supplies its products to domestic clients like Alibaba Holdings (HKG:9988), ByteDance, Tencent Holdings (HKG:0700) and Xiaomi (HKG:1810).Of the total proceeds, CXMT plans to use 13 billion yuan to upgrade its DRAM technology, 9 billion yuan for DRAM research and development, and 7.5 billion yuan to upgrade its production line."After years of development, the company has broken through key core technologies in DRAM and successfully achieved independent R&D, design, and commercial mass production of its products, filling a long-standing gap in the global market for DRAM products from mainland China," according to a translated text of CXMT's IPO prospectus.The IPO comes as CXMT continues to bank on the strong global demand for chips amid the AI boom. For the first quarter ended March 31, CXMT swung to an attributable net profit of 24.8 billion yuan from an attributable net loss of 1.56 billion yuan a year earlier. Revenue surged 719% to 50.8 billion yuan from 6.2 billion yuan.The company expects to book up to 57 billion yuan in attributable profit for the first half of 2026, versus an attributable net loss of 2.33 billion yuan a year prior. Revenue is forecast to jump by up to 677% from a year earlier to up to 120 billion yuan.Ao Fei, managing director at Beijing Xinhan Capital, told Bloomberg that CXMT's "position in the industry and its strategic importance to the nation speaks for itself.""CXMT is the reason China has been able to get a foothold in DRAM, arguably the most critical memory segment powering the AI revolution.""This is a national champion that has catalyzed China's entire semiconductor supply chain, serves as a training ground for the next generation of talent, and has elevated the industry to a new frontier," Ao reportedly said."You could argue that ChangXin today occupies the same pivotal position that CATL held at the time of its listing."Meanwhile, Dong Shaopeng, a senior research fellow at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China, told China's Global Times that the Shanghai bourse's approval of CXMT's listing follows the outcome of policy guidance, industrial efforts and coordinated support from the financial system."Against this backdrop, continued breakthroughs in China's semiconductor industry could bring structural adjustments to the global chip market landscape," Dong was quoted by the Global Times as saying.CXMT's Shanghai IPO also comes amid an influx of new listings in mainland China and Hong Kong. Total funds raised from A-share IPOs in the first quarter of 2026 rose 8% year over year to 27.4 billion yuan, according to data from KPMG.

Shanghai CompositeHKG:0700HKG:0883HKG:1810HKG:3750HKG:9988KRX:000660KRX:005930SHA:600938SHE:300750
Asia

Market Chatter: CNOOC Begins Bohai Oilfield Full Production

CNOOC (SHA:600938, HKG:0883) started full production at the Kenli 10-2 oilfield phase one in the south Bohai Sea, China, Reuters reported Wednesday, citing state media.Daily output exceeded 20,440 barrels, according to the report.The oilfield, with proven geological reserves over 100 million metric tons, includes a central platform and two unmanned wellhead platforms, Reuters wrote.Shares of the oil company closed 3% lower on the Shanghai bourse and 2% on the Hong Kong bourse.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

HKG:0883SHA:600938
Asia

CNOOC's Profit Rises 7% in Q1

CNOOC (HKG:0883, SHA:600938) posted net profit attributable to shareholders of 39.1 billion yuan for the first quarter, up 7.1% from 36.6 billion yuan a year earlier, according to a Tuesday Hong Kong bourse filing.Earnings per share at the oil giant came in at 0.82 yuan, compared with 0.77 yuan in the prior-year period.Revenue rose 8.6% to 116.1 billion yuan from 106.9 billion yuan a year earlier.

HKG:0883SHA:600938