NYSE is reconsidering to allow three Chinese telecom giants to remain listed, the latest twist amid confusion over rules set by the Trump administration and tension within Washington on China policy
Trump has signed an executive order barring transactions with eight Chinese apps including Alipay and WeChat Pay to protect America's national security
The New York Stock Exchange said on Monday it no longer intends to move forward with the delisting of China Mobile Ltd, China Telecom Corp Ltd and China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd
President-elect Joe Biden aims to end the US' trade war with European allies and work with them to deal with China's trade practices, said a key official in the Biden administration
This comes after Donald Trump last month barred U.S. investments in Chinese firms Washington says are owned or controlled by the military
China urged the US to stop unilateral and bullying behaviours and said it would take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises.
Biden will be sworn in as president after Trump's administration spent years ramping up pressure on China, including levying tariffs on $370 billion in imports
The measure, which could affect corporate giants like Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Baidu Inc., serves as another parting shot at Beijing before Trump leaves office in January
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Friday criticized what he called China's "ubiquitous surveillance to repress its citizens in Xinjiang and elsewhere"
For all the talk of an economic decoupling between China and the US and its allies, foreign companies continue to pour money into the Asian nation
The executive order by U.S. President Donald Trump, published last month, barred U.S. investors from buying securities of restricted firms starting in November 2021
The Sino-US trade war has offset the pandemic-induced slowdown
The pair will be at a meeting of the leaders of the 21-nation Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) hosted virtually by Malaysia just two weeks after Trump lost his re-election bid
The world has become too dependent on China to embrace restrictive trade actions against it
Trade frictions between the United States and China may not ease in the near term even if Joe Biden becomes president of the United States, former Chinese finance minister Lou Jiwei said
India, with its market potential, and as a complement to the US economy stands to gain if it plays its cards right
China has been a central foreign policy focus in the 2020 presidential campaign
India has an ambitious plan to increase its renewable energy capacity to 175 gigawatts (GW) by 2022, nearly three-fifths of which will be solar power
Luxshare has also received over 1 billion yuan ($148.80 million) in government subsidies since 2016 to the first half of this year
Speaking at a campaign event in Pennsylvania, a battle ground State, on Saturday, he said Trump opened doors for big banks to make money in China