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Hyundai's China Reset: Ioniq Lands as Beijing Hyundai Becomes an EV Brand
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Hyundai's China Reset: Ioniq Lands as Beijing Hyundai Becomes an EV Brand
27 APR 2026

While Skoda quit, while Honda canceled three EVs and shut down Sony Afeela, while every German brand rethinks its China strategy, South Korea's Hyundai Motor Group is doing the opposite. At Auto China 2026 this week, Hyundai will formally launch its Ioniq EV brand in China and reposition Beijing Hyundai, its 50-50 joint venture with BAIC, as a new-energy vehicle brand.

This is Hyundai's biggest China bet since 2002, when the JV first opened.

The numbers behind the bet

Hyundai entered China two decades ago with affordable, gasoline-powered sedans. Volumes peaked in 2016 at over 1.7 million vehicles. By 2024, sales had collapsed below 250,000. The story matched what almost every foreign automaker has lived through: domestic Chinese brands took the EV transition, and the foreigners who could not pivot lost the customer.

Hyundai's reset is structural. The Beijing JV will be rebranded as a new-energy company. The first major launch is the Venus Ioniq concept developed specifically for China. Hyundai and Kia will run a parallel lineup of China-tailored EVs and software-defined vehicles built on a localized version of Hyundai's E-GMP platform.

What is different this time

Three things. First, local development. Hyundai is building a China R&D center to design vehicles for Chinese customers from the ground up, not localize global models. Second, supply chain. The Ioniq for China will use CATL batteries, not Korean cells, cutting cost and meeting Beijing's local-content thresholds. Third, software. Beijing Hyundai is partnering with a Chinese AI company on the smart-cabin and ADAS stack, the area where European and Japanese OEMs have failed hardest in China.

The pricing strategy is aggressive. The China Ioniq lineup is positioned in the 150,000 to 250,000 yuan band, where the volume market sits and where BYD, Li Auto and Xiaomi compete most fiercely. Hyundai is not chasing the premium tier where Mercedes and BMW still hold ground.

The split with Japan and Europe

While Hyundai goes all in, Honda has just canceled three China EVs and ended its Sony Afeela JV. Skoda has effectively retreated. Mitsubishi already exited in 2025. Jeep left in 2022.

Korea is testing a strategy nobody else is willing to fund: rebuild as a Chinese EV company on Chinese soil, with Chinese batteries, Chinese software, and Chinese pricing. If it works at Auto China this week, the European industry has a serious problem on the playbook side. If it fails, Hyundai will write down a structurally important market and join the queue of foreigners on the way out.

Sources: Korea Herald, The Investor Korea

Hong Kong: $17.9 Billion in IPOs Already in 2026, Plus a Gold Push
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Hong Kong: $17.9 Billion in IPOs Already in 2026, Plus a Gold Push
27 APR 2026

Hong Kong's IPO market has raised more than HK$140 billion ($17.9 billion) by the end of April, ahead of every other listing venue in the world. That is more than the entire 2025 total, in four months.

Average daily turnover on the exchange: HK$280 billion (since March)

Q1 listings: 37 companies, $13.26 billion raised (LSEG)

Year-to-date through April: $17.9 billion

The Details

Financial Secretary Paul Chan made the announcement on Sunday, framing the print as a vote of confidence from global investors. Hong Kong is the world's top IPO fundraising hub for the first time in five years.

The deal mix

Victory Giant: $2.6 billion, biggest deal of the year, Nvidia PCB supplier (April)

Muyuan Foods: HK$10.7 billion, China's largest pig breeder (April)

Biren Technology: HK$5.58 billion, GPU developer (April)

Huaqin Technology: $581 million, AI hardware (April)

Lightelligence: HK IPO at top of range (this week, photonic chips)

Cornerstone investors include Charoen Pokphand from Thailand, Wilmar from Singapore, UBS, Eastspring, and Mitsubishi UFJ. The buyer base is genuinely global, not just mainland-driven.

Chan also flagged a renewed push to develop gold trading in Hong Kong as global demand for risk diversification rises. The framing is direct: amid Iran conflict volatility and US dollar uncertainty, Asia wants a regional gold trading center, and Hong Kong wants the franchise.

Why this is different from the 2018 boom

The last time Hong Kong was the world's top IPO market, the deal pipeline was driven by Chinese consumer and internet plays such as Xiaomi and Meituan. This cycle is structural. The biggest deals are AI supply chain (Victory Giant, Lightelligence, Biren), industrial restructuring (Muyuan Foods, ZTE spinouts), and clean energy (Sigenergy).

After three years of underweighting China, global funds have rotated back. The catalyst was the Hang Seng tech rally that started in late January 2026 after the DeepSeek R1 release, and the index has held its gains since.

The pipeline staying lined up matters. Several Chinese AI hardware names are reportedly preparing dual-listings in Hong Kong, including Cambricon and Hygon. If the window stays open through Q3, 2026 will easily clear $30 billion in Hong Kong IPO volume, double 2024.

Sources: Bloomberg, SCMP, LSEG Data and Analytics

DeepSeek V4: First Chinese Frontier Model Built for Huawei Chips
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DeepSeek V4: First Chinese Frontier Model Built for Huawei Chips
24 APR 2026

China's DeepSeek released a preview of its V4 model on Friday, and the headline is not the benchmarks. It is what the model runs on. V4 was co-developed with Huawei from the beginning. Parts of the training ran on Huawei's Ascend chips. The full inference stack now runs on Chinese hardware, end to end.

For the first time, a top-tier Chinese AI model is fully decoupled from Nvidia silicon.

The model

V4-Pro outperforms every other open-source model on world-knowledge benchmarks and trails only Google's closed-source Gemini-Pro-3.1, DeepSeek said. SCMP described the architecture as "world-leading" on efficiency. Bloomberg, citing CCTV, reported that the V4 release was held back by months specifically to complete the migration onto Huawei chips, not for capability tuning.

He Hui, semiconductor research director at Omdia, summed up the read in plain terms.

"This is a big deal for China's AI industry. Huawei's Ascend chips are the country's best homegrown alternative to Nvidia, and supporting DeepSeek V4 shows that top Chinese AI models can now run on Chinese hardware."

The technical bet

Most leading AI models, including OpenAI's, Anthropic's and DeepSeek's own previous releases, were trained primarily on Nvidia GPUs. V4 changes that contract. Huawei contributed compute on its Ascend platform during training. The deployment stack is fully native to Ascend. Chinese cloud providers, the central buyers of these models, can now run V4 on domestic chips without any Nvidia in the loop.

That matters because the latest US House export-control bills, advanced on April 22, would tighten chip flows to China further. If the bills pass, Chinese AI infrastructure that depends on Nvidia hardware becomes an open vulnerability. Models that run native on Ascend are insulated.

The market read

Tencent and Alibaba are in talks to invest in DeepSeek at over $20 billion this week. Chinese chip stocks rallied on the V4 news, with investors rotating into Cambricon, Hygon and Huawei suppliers. Bloomberg's frame from a Friday note was harsher: "DeepSeek's long-awaited new model fails to narrow US lead in AI." The benchmarks back that view on raw capability. Gemini-Pro-3.1 still leads on world knowledge, and frontier reasoning still belongs to closed US labs.

But the framing misses the strategic point. V4 was never about closing the benchmark gap to Google. It was about closing the hardware gap to Nvidia. On that front, the work is shipping.

Sources: SCMP, DealStreet Asia, Nikkei, Bloomberg

Pudu Robotics: $150M at $1.5B Valuation, Embodied AI Wave Continues
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Pudu Robotics: $150M at $1.5B Valuation, Embodied AI Wave Continues
24 APR 2026

China's Pudu Robotics, the Shenzhen-based commercial service robot maker, raised nearly $150 million in a fresh round on Thursday, lifting its post-money valuation above $1.5 billion. Cumulative funding now exceeds $300 million.

Pudu joins three other Chinese robotics unicorns that have raised mega-rounds in the past four weeks alone.

The Details

Pudu was founded in 2016 and builds commercial service robots for indoor delivery, cleaning, disinfection and industrial logistics. Its bestseller, the BellaBot food delivery robot, runs in restaurants in 60 countries. The fast-growing line is commercial cleaning, which now accounts for over 70% of total revenue.

Revenue 2025: +100% year on year (company-reported, not audited)

Cumulative funding to date: $300 million plus

2025 revenue: not disclosed

Investors in this round: undisclosed

Use of proceeds: accelerating embodied AI development, scaling manufacturing, building out global sales offices, and expanding the product line into the next generation of mobile manipulation robots.

The competitive set

Pudu is one of three commercial service robot leaders in China alongside Keenon Robotics and Orionstar. The category was once dominated by hospitality and food service. The growth, and the funding logic now, is industrial cleaning and logistics, where labor shortages and minimum wage pressure have made automation a clear ROI case.

This is the third Chinese robotics mega-round in less than a month. EngineAI raised $200 million in early April, backed by Apple supplier Luxshare. Galaxea AI raised $291 million at a $2.9 billion valuation. Beijing's X Square Robot just closed a Series B with Xiaomi and HongShan. Add Pudu's $150 million and the total is approaching $800 million in fresh capital across four deals in 30 days.

Why the money is moving

The shift in Chinese venture capital is sharp. Yicai Global reported this week that hard-tech is now the only growing segment of Chinese PE while consumer rounds collapse. Robotics is the highest-conviction theme inside hard-tech because it combines three things investors can underwrite: real revenue today (Pudu, Orionstar), a clear roadmap to embodied AI tomorrow (the next-gen humanoid platforms), and a domestic supply chain that does not need US chips to scale.

Pudu's $1.5 billion mark is below where AGIBOT, EngineAI or Unitree are valued in private markets. The growth profile is also different. Pudu is a revenue story scaling into embodied AI. The humanoid-first names are a research story trying to scale into revenue. Investors are now backing both bets.

Sources: DealStreet Asia

Lee's Asia Sweep: 20 MOUs With India, Nuclear Deal With Vietnam
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Lee's Asia Sweep: 20 MOUs With India, Nuclear Deal With Vietnam
23 APR 2026

In one week, South Korea's President Lee Jae Myung built two strategic axes for Seoul's Asia policy. In Delhi, 20 memorandums of understanding spanning steel, shipbuilding, energy and critical minerals. In Hanoi the next day, a dozen agreements covering nuclear power plants, semiconductors, AI data centers and smart cities.

The pattern is clear. Korea is buying optionality away from China, and India and Vietnam are the two anchors.

The Delhi leg

Lee opened the week at a bilateral summit with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, then moved to a Korea-India business forum attended by Samsung Electronics, Hyundai Motor Group, LG, POSCO, and HD Hyundai. The 20 MOUs cover steel JVs, EV development, wind power, shipbuilding cooperation, and technology transfer. A separate session signed export deals worth $48 million on the spot.

The bigger goal Lee laid out in Delhi: more than double bilateral trade between the two countries from current levels. India is the world's fourth-largest economy. Korea-India trade today is roughly $30 billion. Lee wants $70 billion or more.

The two governments also issued a joint statement on stabilizing energy and resource supply chains while the Iran conflict continues. Industry minister Kim Jung-kwan and his Indian counterpart Piyush Goyal agreed to a regular ministerial channel, the first since 2022.

The Hanoi leg

In Vietnam, Lee met with party leader To Lam at the presidential palace. The headline is the entry into Vietnam's nuclear program. Korea is one of the few countries with operating, exporting nuclear plant technology, after building units in the UAE. Vietnam is restarting its long-delayed nuclear program and Lam said publicly that Hanoi welcomes Korean investment in semiconductors, AI data centers, and smart seaports alongside the reactors.

Korea was already Vietnam's largest source of foreign direct investment, with two-way trade at $90 billion in 2025. The new deals push that further.

The signal to Beijing

Lee did not name China once on either leg. He did not have to. Korea's two biggest economic exposures are still Beijing and Washington. Building a Delhi-Hanoi axis with nuclear, energy and AI data centers gives Seoul a third lever and a hedge against US tariff policy and Chinese supply concentration.

For Hyundai, POSCO, Samsung and HD Hyundai, the message is direct. The Korean state will help finance Asia diversification, and the customers are India and Vietnam.

Sources: Yonhap News, Korea Herald, The Straits Times, VietnamNet

DeepSeek: Tencent and Alibaba Talks at $20 Billion Valuation
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DeepSeek: Tencent and Alibaba Talks at $20 Billion Valuation
23 APR 2026

China's DeepSeek, the AI lab that stunned the world last year with a low-cost model that matched the US frontier, is in talks to raise outside capital for the first time, with Tencent Holdings and Alibaba Group leading the discussions, according to The Information.

Target valuation: more than $20 billion

Initial raise size: at least $300 million

The Details

DeepSeek is owned by Chinese hedge fund High-Flyer Capital Management. It has built and shipped models on a fraction of US lab budgets, including V3 (released last year), R1 (the reasoning model that briefly knocked $1 trillion off Nvidia's market cap in January 2026), and now V4, which is launching this week.

DeepSeek has been profitable since inception, funded entirely from High-Flyer's trading book. The team is small, the compute setup is unconventional, and until now there was no need for outside money.

That has changed. Training V4 and the agentic systems DeepSeek is now planning requires order-of-magnitude more compute than its earlier models. Initial discussions started at a $10 billion valuation and a $300 million raise. Investor demand pushed the number to over $20 billion in days.

Bidders: Tencent and Alibaba lead the table. Both are large existing AI investors, both run their own foundation models (Hunyuan and Qwen), and both have data center capacity that DeepSeek can use. Neither company has commented on the talks. Reuters has not independently verified the report. Alibaba's US-listed shares rose 1.3% in premarket trading on the news.

Why $20 billion in 18 months

DeepSeek raised zero outside capital before this round. Now it is in talks at a valuation that puts it ahead of every Western AI startup outside OpenAI and Anthropic. The math is simple. R1 demonstrated that frontier-quality models can be trained at single-digit percentages of the cost OpenAI and Google reported. V4, which ships this week, is the first major model designed from the start to run on Huawei Ascend chips. Both points reduce the strategic dependency on US compute and US capital.

For Tencent and Alibaba, an early stake at $20 billion is cheap insurance. If DeepSeek becomes the dominant Chinese open-weight provider, the BAT players want to be inside the cap table, not buying seats from secondaries later. For DeepSeek, the cash buys compute and team scaling without giving up control.

The talks are still live. The amount and the valuation could move further before signing.

Sources: DealStreet Asia, The Information, Reuters

Japan's Arms Doors Open: Biggest Export Reform Since World War II
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Japan's Arms Doors Open: Biggest Export Reform Since World War II
22 APR 2026

For 70 years, Japan has been one of the world's largest defense industries with one of the smallest export markets. That changed on Tuesday in Tokyo. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi unveiled a sweeping rewrite of the country's arms export rules, the biggest overhaul since the postwar pacifist framework was put in place.

Warships, missiles, ammunition and integrated weapons systems can now be sold abroad under a regular licensing process, not as exceptions.

What the reform changes

Until now, Japanese defense companies could mostly export only components, parts and dual-use technologies. Finished weapons systems were case-by-case, politically fraught, and rare. The new rules drop that distinction. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Kawasaki Heavy Industries and IHI, the three core defense primes, can now bid into open international tenders for warships, fighter jets and missile systems.

Three forces drove the change. The war in Ukraine has stressed US weapons production beyond its current capacity. The Iran conflict has pulled American assets toward the Persian Gulf. And second-term Trump's reluctance to underwrite long-standing security commitments has pushed allies in Europe and the Indo-Pacific to look for second sources.

Takaichi: "No single country can now protect its own peace and security alone. Partner countries that support each other on defense equipment are necessary."

The industrial base reads

Japan's defense industry has been quietly preparing for this moment since the 2014 partial liberalization, but the volumes were always small. The largest deals to date have been Mogami-class frigates discussed with Australia and components for European missile programs. The new framework opens the gate for full-system exports across the buyer base.

For Mitsubishi Heavy in particular, this is a structural shift. The company already builds Aegis-equipped destroyers, the Type-12 anti-ship missile, and is the lead Japanese partner in the GCAP next-generation fighter program with the UK and Italy. Until now, all of that had a Japan-only customer. From this week, it does not.

The geopolitical signal

Beijing will read this as a clear move. Japan stops being just a host for US bases and becomes a defense supplier in its own right, plugged into European and Asian buyer demand. Seoul, Manila and Canberra are likely partners. Brussels and London are already in talks on co-development.

The 80-year taboo has not just been bent. It has been replaced.

Sources: CNN, Japan Today, The Straits Times

SK Hynix: 37.6 Trillion Won Q1 Profit, Five Times Last Year
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SK Hynix: 37.6 Trillion Won Q1 Profit, Five Times Last Year
22 APR 2026

South Korea's SK hynix posted operating profit of 37.6 trillion won ($27.8 billion) for the first quarter, up 405% year on year and the highest quarterly profit in the company's history.

Quarterly revenue: 52.6 trillion won (+198%)

Net profit: 40.3 trillion won (+398%)

Operating margin: 72%

The Details

It is the fourth straight quarter of record results, and the first time any Korean chipmaker has cleared 50 trillion won in single-quarter sales.

The driver is high-bandwidth memory (HBM). SK hynix is Nvidia's primary HBM supplier, the stacked memory that sits inside every H100 and B200 GPU and will be inside the upcoming Vera Rubin systems. Big Tech buyers are taking everything SK hynix can produce.

DRAM contract prices: +83% in Q1.

NAND flash prices: +160% in Q1.

2026 capacity: fully sold out.

The numbers smashed analyst estimates. Yonhap Infomax had pegged consensus net profit at 31.95 trillion won. SK hynix beat that by more than 8 trillion won.

Operating margin nearly doubled in a single quarter, from 58% in Q4 2025 to 72%, on the same revenue base. That kind of margin expansion only happens when pricing is running well ahead of cost, and that is exactly what the AI memory cycle has delivered. The company has already started construction of a new memory plant in South Korea to meet 2026 to 2027 demand.

Why the print matters beyond Korea

SK hynix shares are up roughly 90% year to date. The market cap is now around $590 billion, which puts it ahead of ASML and within reach of TSMC's tier of equipment-and-supply leaders. Memory used to be the cyclical, commodity end of the chip industry. The AI cycle has flipped that.

For Samsung, the comparison is uncomfortable. Samsung is still the larger memory company by revenue, but it has been slower to qualify HBM3E with Nvidia, and its Q1 numbers will arrive next week against this benchmark. For Micron, the read is similar.

Some analysts now expect price increases to ease after Q2 as new capacity comes online. SK hynix says demand is strong enough that the favorable pricing environment continues. The 2026 order book is already booked.

Sources: Yonhap News, Korea Herald, Business Times Singapore, Reuters

CATL Answers BYD: Six-Minute Charging, Sodium-Ion in Mass Production by Q4
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CATL Answers BYD: Six-Minute Charging, Sodium-Ion in Mass Production by Q4
21 APR 2026

The fast-charging race in China has a new headline number. At its 2026 Super Tech Day in Ningde on Monday, CATL unveiled a third-generation Shenxing battery that recharges from 10% to 98% in six minutes, and the next Qilin pack that delivers more than 1,000 kilometers of range from a single charge.

It is the direct answer to BYD, which last month claimed a nine-minute, 10-to-97% charge for its second-generation Blade Battery. The Chinese battery race is now running on minutes, not kilowatt-hours.

The technology stack

CATL stacked four announcements on top of each other. The third-gen Qilin (NCM chemistry) lifts charging to 15C peak with 600 Wh/L volumetric energy density and 280 Wh/kg gravimetric, both industry highs. A 125 kWh pack delivers more than 1,000 km of range. The new Shenxing LFP battery hits 10% to 35% charge in roughly one minute. The Freevoy hybrid pack is rated at 600 km of pure-electric range. And the sodium-ion battery, after years of testing, is now verified for mass production from Q4.

CTO Gao Huan: "Verification is complete. Sodium-ion will start in passenger battery-swap systems and energy storage."

The market math

CATL holds 42.1% of the global EV battery market in early 2026. BYD sits at 13.4%. Robin Zeng, CATL's chairman, has said sodium-ion could eventually take 30% to 40% of the battery market because it is cheaper, safer in cold weather, and uses no lithium. The roll-out plan: passenger swap stations and grid storage first, then broader auto adoption from 2027.

Charging infrastructure is the tieback. CATL plans 4,000 supercharging-and-swap stations by end of 2026, scaling to 20,000 by 2028. The pitch to drivers is closing the convenience gap with petrol stations.

The pressure point

For BYD, the response has to come fast. Chery and Li Auto are also building their own batteries to reduce CATL dependency. Sinopec read the moment differently and used the rally to sell 5.5% of CATL for $770 million on Tuesday morning, the same day the announcements went live.

Sources: CnEVPost, Caixin, Yicai Global, Business Times Singapore

Victory Giant: $2.6 Billion Hong Kong Listing, +60% on Day One
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Victory Giant: $2.6 Billion Hong Kong Listing, +60% on Day One
21 APR 2026

China's Victory Giant Technology jumped 60% on its Hong Kong debut on Tuesday after raising HK$20.1 billion ($2.6 billion), the city's biggest IPO in seven months and the largest of 2026 so far.

Stock closed near HK$330 versus an offer price of HK$209.88. The retail tranche was 431 times oversubscribed.

The Details

Guangdong-based Victory Giant makes high-end printed circuit boards (PCBs) for AI servers and data center hardware. Its biggest customer reference: Nvidia.

Offer price: HK$209.88

Day-one open: HK$330 (+57.2%)

Intraday high: HK$336.20

Issue size: 95.85 million shares (offer-size adjustment fully exercised)

Retail oversubscription: 431.15x

International oversubscription: 18.5x

Cornerstone investors took roughly 40% of the deal at pricing. The book was led by CICC, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan, and the listing raises Victory Giant's market cap to over HK$280 billion, putting it in the same league as listed PCB rivals like Shennan Circuits and Wus Printed Circuit.

The hook for global money: Victory Giant is one of the few public ways to play the AI server build-out without buying chip companies directly. PCBs sit between the GPU and the rest of the rack. Every AI accelerator that ships needs them, and the boards required for next-gen Blackwell and Vera Rubin systems are denser, multi-layer, more expensive.

Why this listing matters

Hong Kong's IPO market raised HK$140 billion ($17.9 billion) by end of April, more than the entire 2025 total and good for the global top spot. Victory Giant is the marquee deal of that wave. After two years of underweighting, global funds are rebuilding China exposure, and the cleanest entry points are AI-supply-chain names with hard customer references and Hong Kong listings.

The signal for issuers waiting in the queue is straightforward. If a PCB maker can clear $2.6 billion at a 60% pop, the window is open. Lightelligence is reportedly pricing its Hong Kong float at the top of the range this week. Huaqin already raised $581 million on Tuesday at maximum price.

Hong Kong is back as Asia's number-one listing venue, and the AI supply chain is what is bringing the buyers in.

Sources: DealStreet Asia, Bloomberg, Business Times Singapore, CNBC

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