Chinese retail investors are flocking to their domestic stock market in a display of patriotism amid escalating trade tensions.
JD.com accuses rival platforms of coercing couriers to leave JD Takeaway, vows to increase full-time riders. Trump's tariffs on Chinese imports a concern.
Alibaba's Damo Academy wins FDA endorsement for AI cancer detection tool. Former execs warn of China's AI advantage and US tech competition.
Former Alphabet CEO Eric Schmidt warns China will surpass US in AI unless Trump takes action. He also states that US values must be embedded in AI strategy.
Chamath Palihapitiya criticized Nvidia for circumventing U.S. export controls, enabling China to access advanced AI chips, and warned that the company's actions could undermine U.S. interests.
In a throwback video, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (NYSE: BABA) co-founder Jack Ma expressed that trade wars, such as the one brewing between the U.S. and China, are obscuring deeper issues of resource allocation and wealth concentration, while posing a risk to global stability.
U.S.-listed Chinese stocks like Alibaba, JD.com, and PDD Holdings may soon face delisting risks due to escalating trade tensions and new policy guidance.
The CEO of Nvidia Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA), Jensen Huang, has arrived in Beijing following the recent implementation of U.S. restrictions on the company's chip sales to China.
Nvidia failed to warn customers about new U.S. export rules for H20 chip sales to China, resulting in a $5.5 billion charge. Chinese tech giants have been stocking up on chips, driving demand. Despite this, analysts remain optimistic about Nvidia's investments in AI and its plans to develop $500 billion in infrastructure. NVDA stock is down 6.35% at $105.11.
Hongkong Post on Wednesday announced the suspension of its postal services for parcels containing goods to the United States, citing what it describes as "bullying" and "unreasonable" actions by the U.S. government regarding new tariffs and postal fees.
Major Chinese companies trading lower due to Trump's increased tariffs. China's GDP grew in Q1 but trade war dims outlook and prompts calls for stimulus.
Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) has reportedly not communicated to some of its major Chinese customers about the new U.S. export rules affecting its AI chip.
Nvidia will take a $5.5 billion charge due to U.S. export restrictions on AI chips to China, but analyst Dan Ives says the long-term AI demand story remains strong despite rising geopolitical tensions.
Although Alibaba enjoyed a nice pop due to a brief respite in tensions, the U.S.-China trade war remains a key catalyst for BABA stock puts.
Alibaba's AI app Quark surpassed ByteDance's Doubao to become the most popular in China with 150M monthly active users. Alibaba's cloud unit also expands its AI platform.
The possibility of a U.S.-China decoupling could lead to a massive $2.5 trillion sell-off, according to a recent analysis by Goldman Sachs.
After a remarkable rally on Wednesday, Wall Street experienced a sharp decline on Thursday.
Jack Ma celebrates Alibaba Cloud's 15th anniversary, showcasing Blossom project and upgrading global AI tools. Plans 380B yuan investment in 3 years.
Nvidia's stock has dropped 17.34% year-to-date, but the company has seen a reversal of planned export restrictions on its H20 AI chips to China after CEO Jensen Huang met with former President Trump at Mar-a-Lago.
The iShares China Large-Cap ETF rebounded Wednesday afternoon. Trump's announcement of a 125% tariff on Chinese imports meanwhile heightened investor fears over U.S.-China tensions.
Peterffy has a positive take on tariffs, even though a tariff-induced selloff wiped out trillions in equity capital.
Alibaba's cloud division is upgrading its AI tools for international markets. Its latest models include Qwen-Max and QwQ-Plus, rivaling US models.
As Washington doubles down on its trade war with China, and tariffs now going as high as 104%, some leading experts believe that the Middle Kingdom might have an ace up its sleeve, that could hit the United States where it hurts most—Services.
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. shares have plummeted 32.50% since mid-March as escalating trade tensions between the U.S. and China threaten to derail the e-commerce giant's international business model.
The iShares China Large-Cap ETF had gained as much as 4.6% Tuesday morning. The ETF is now falling sharply Tuesday afternoon as U.S.-China trade tensions reached new highs.
Shares of Alibaba Group Holding Limited (NYSE: BABA) are falling Tuesday as tensions between the United States and China reignited fears of a prolonged trade war.
DeepSeek, in partnership with Tsinghua University, developed a method to enhance language models for faster and better results, outperforming existing ones.
Alibaba Inc. (NYSE: BABA) shares are trading lower Friday after China announced a 34% tariff on all goods imported from the U.S., effective April 10.
President Trump enacts a 34% tariff on imports from China, raising the total duties on Chinese goods to 54% and prompting swift criticism from Beijing.
Alibaba to release upgraded AI model Qwen 3 by April, joining China's wave of affordable AI services. Stock up 56% YTD after leadership reshuffle.
Chinese tech giants ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent have placed over $16 billion in orders for Nvidia's H20 server chips, driven by increased demand for DeepSeek's low-cost AI models, amid ongoing supply challenges and U.S. export restrictions.
As Palo Alto looks for more affordable AI models, this analyst has warned that the demand for AI hardware could be a larger problem.
At Alibaba's historic 2014 IPO, Jack Ma shared his Forrest Gump-inspired philosophy, saying "No matter what happens, you are you," and today, 11 years later, the company has grown into a $319 billion e-commerce and digital services giant.
Alibaba.com saw 27% growth in orders from US SME buyers during March 2025 Expo, aided by technology & AI. Pickleball-related orders up 197%.
Dan Niles highlights the challenges for the "tough" CoreWeave IPO, stemming from the reduction in AI spending in 2025.
Alibaba's stock has rebounded by 60% this year, adding $100 billion to its valuation, after a rallying call from Jack Ma in 2023 and a renewed focus on AI and core businesses.