Newly launched BYD Seal is displayed during the launch of the Chinese-made BYD brand in Jakarta, on January 18, 2024, and at the same time introduced 2 other types of battery-powered vehicles (EV, electric vehicle) that will be sold in Indonesia, with an investment of 1.3 billion US dollars. (Photo by BAY ISMOYO / AFP) (Photo by BAY ISMOYO/AFP via Getty Images)
Bay Ismoyo | Afp | Getty Images
China’s Minister of Commerce Wang Wentao said that the speedy rise of the country’s electric vehicle firms was not because of subsidies, but due to “constant innovations.”
The allegations about “overcapacity” by the U.S. and Europe are without merit, he said, China’s ministry of commerce reported Monday. Wang also attributed China’s EV edge to “well-established supply chain system and market competition.”
Wang made the remarks during a roundtable discussion in Paris on Sunday with representatives from more than 10 Chinese companies including EV makers Geely and BYD as well as EV battery manufacturer CATL, a statement from the commerce ministry showed.
Wang noted that the Chinese EV industry has “made an important contribution to the global response to climate change as well as green and low-carbon transformation.” He also said the Chinese government will protect the “legitimate rights and interests” of Chinese firms.
The EU launched an investigation in October to determine if it should impose tariffs on imports of battery EVs from China “to offset state subsidies, and to level the playing field,” following a substantial increase in in imports.
The European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in September that the “global market is flooded with cheaper electric vehicles” and that prices are “kept artificially low” because of “huge state subsidies.”
Yellen is currently in China for meetings on matters including managing the bilateral economic relationship between the U.S. and China and to advance American interests.
Washington and Beijing will hold “intensive exchanges” that will “facilitate a discussion around macroeconomic imbalances, including their connection to overcapacity,” Yellen said Saturday following a meeting with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng.
“I intend to use this opportunity to advocate for a level playing field for American workers and firms,” she said, adding that “a shift away from policies that drive overcapacity would benefit the American, Chinese, and global economies.”
Chairman, President and CEO of IBM Arvind Krishna attends the 55th annual World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 22, 2025.
Yves Herman | Reuters
IBM reported third-quarter results that topped Wall Street estimates and lifted its guidance, citing ongoing artificial intelligence tailwinds. Still, the stock dropped 5% in extended trading.
Here’s how the company performed versus LSEG estimates:
Earnings per share: $2.65 adjusted vs. $2.45 expected
Revenue: $16.33 billion vs. $16.09 billion expected.
Revenue increased 9% from about $15 billion in the year-ago period, IBM said. The company reported net income of $1.74 billion, or $1.84 per share, after recording a loss of $330 million, or 36 cents per share, a year earlier. The results from last year included the impact of a $2.7 billion pension settlement charge.
“Clients globally continue to leverage our technology and domain expertise to drive productivity in their operations and deliver real business value with AI,” CEO Arvind Krishna said in release.
IBM upped its revenue guidance and said it now expects “more than” 5% revenue growth, up from “at least” 5%. Free cash flow for the year is expected to hit $14 billion, up from a $13.5 billion estimate last quarter.
Krishna also said the company’s AI book of business has surpassed $9.5 million, up from $7.5 billion during the second quarter.
Amazon on Wednesday unveiled a new robotic system that’s capable of performing multiple tasks at once in the company’s warehouses.
The system, called Blue Jay, is made up of a series of robotic arms that are suspended from a conveyor belt-like track. Those arms are tipped with suction-cup devices that allow them to grab items of varying shapes and sizes.
Blue Jay combines “what used to be three separate robotic stations into one streamlined workplace that can pick, sort, and consolidate in a single place,” Amazon said in a blog.
The robotic system’s goal is to assist employees with otherwise strenuous tasks “while creating greater efficiency in less physical space,” the company said.
Amazon is testing Blue Jay at one of its warehouses in South Carolina. So far, the company has observed that the system is able to pick, pack, stow and consolidate “approximately 75% of items we store at our sites.”
Blue Jay joins a growing fleet of robotic machinery being deployed across Amazon’s legions of warehouses. Over the past several years, Amazon has debuted robots capable of handling different tasks, ranging from removing items from shelves to sorting boxes. In May, it debuted “Vulcan,” a robotic system that has a sense of touch.
Amazon’s warehouse automation efforts were largely jumpstarted by its $775 million acquisition of Kiva Systems in 2012.
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The announcement comes as Amazon’s warehouse automation has come under growing scrutiny, particularly over how the technology is impacting its sprawling frontline workforce.
The New York Times on Tuesday published an investigation showing that Amazon’s automation team expects that it can avoid hiring more than 160,000 people in the U.S. by 2027, amounting to savings of about 30 cents on every item that Amazon packs and delivers. The report was based on interviews and internal strategy documents, the Times said.
In response to the report, an Amazon spokesperson told CNBC that the documents offer an “incomplete and misleading picture of our plans.”
“In this instance, the materials appear to reflect the perspective of just one team and don’t represent our overall hiring strategy across our various operations business lines — now or moving forward,” the spokesperson said in an email.
As the nation’s second-largest private employer, Amazon’s automation playbook could become a bellwether for the broader job market and other corporations. The company had more than 1.54 million employees globally at the end of the second quarter. That figure excludes delivery drivers, which are contracted through third-party firms.
The company on Wednesday said that employees remain “at the center” of its robotics development. Amazon said its goal is to “reduce physically demanding tasks, simplify decisions and open new career opportunities” for workers.
Amazon has sought to highlight how increasing automation in its facilities will lead to employees adopting “more rewarding” roles within the company. It offers an apprenticeship program in mechatronics and robotics, which involves honing skills around maintaining and monitoring robotic machinery.
Applied Digital said on Wednesday that it signed a $5 billion infrastructure lease agreement with a U.S. hyperscaler.
Shares of the data center company dropped more than 7% following the announcement, continuing a recent slumped that’s sent the stock down over 20% in the past week. The stock has still almost quadrupled this year.
The lease announced on Wednesday is for about 15 years and will deliver 200 megawatts of capacity at the company’s Polaris Forge 2 campus in North Dakota. It brings the company’s total leased capacity to 600 megawatts at its two Polaris Forge campuses.
Across the tech industry, the major cloud providers and other internet giants are rapidly investing in artificial intelligence infrastructure and announcing plans for massive new data centers to handle an expected surge in demand. Applied Digital didn’t name its partner for the latest agreement, just disclosing that it’s an “investment grade hyperscaler.”
In an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street,” CEO Wes Cummins said the five U.S. hyperscalers are Microsoft, Meta, Oracle, Amazon and Google, “so that’s really who we’re targeting.” He said the tenant for the first lease was CoreWeave.
“We started down this path a couple years ago and we stubbed our toe a few times, but I think we’ve really dialed in the process of the ability to build at scale,” Cummins said, adding that the company has a 4 gigawatt “active pipeline.”
In June, Applied Digital announced two long-term lease agreements with CoreWeave for 250 megawatts of capacity. The company said it expects $7 billion in rental revenue over 15 years, and the shares soared 48% on that news.
Applied Digital also secured $5 billion in infrastructure funding from Macquarie Asset Management earlier this month.
“We believe Polaris Forge 2 builds on that momentum, reflecting the strength of our partnerships and the speed at which we’re reshaping the AI infrastructure landscape,” Cummins said in Wednesday’s release.