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South Korea's Kospi opened at a fresh record on Thursday for the second day running, just shy of the 8,000-point mark. After a 0.38 percent opening pop, the index was up 71.25 points or 0.91 percent at 7,915.26 by 9:15 a.m. local time. The Korean won was at 1,489.9 per dollar, up 0.7 won on the session.
Wall Street set the tone overnight. The Nasdaq closed 1.2 percent higher, the S&P 500 added 0.58 percent, and the Dow gave up 0.14 percent. Yonhap noted that the rally was driven less by a faster-than-expected April jump in US producer prices and more by the optics of the Beijing summit, where Nvidia's Jensen Huang, Tesla's Elon Musk and Apple's Tim Cook joined Trump's delegation.
The tech engine
The day's leaders look familiar. Samsung Electronics climbed 1.76 percent at the open and SK hynix added 0.2 percent. Hyundai Motor rose 1.27 percent, with auto-parts maker Hyundai Mobis up 4.78 percent. LG Energy Solution gained 1.63 percent and Samsung SDI 0.32 percent. Hanwha Aerospace, the defense heavyweight, was up 0.86 percent.
The momentum has been building. On Wednesday the Kospi rebounded 2.63 percent to close at 7,844.01, a fresh peak, on the back of semiconductor and auto buying ahead of the Xi-Trump summit. Trade volume was heavy at 49.7 trillion won (about $33.4 billion), with locals and institutions buying while foreigners sold a net 3.7 trillion won.
Defense talks in Washington
The market story is running alongside a security story. South Korea and the US wrapped two days of Korea-US Integrated Defense Dialogue (KIDD) talks in Washington on Wednesday US time. The joint statement said both sides 'looked forward to further deepening cooperation to achieve shared security goals on the Korean Peninsula and across the Indo-Pacific region.' Kim Hong-cheol, deputy defense minister for policy, led for Seoul, John Noh for Washington.
Two open items shape the next steps. Seoul is pushing to take back wartime operational control within President Lee Jae Myung's term that ends in 2030, with 2028 a working target. US Forces Korea commander Gen. Xavier Brunson told Congress last month the conditions should be met no later than the first quarter of 2029. Acquisition of nuclear-powered submarines, listed in last year's summit fact sheet, was likely discussed but is not in the readout.
Sources: Yonhap News

China's Xpeng is in talks with Volkswagen and other automakers about buying a factory in Europe, according to a Financial Times report. Elvis Cheng, Xpeng's managing director for northeastern Europe, said the Hong Kong-listed EV maker is exploring sites in collaboration with Volkswagen. Options on the table include buying an existing plant or building a new one. Volkswagen declined to comment to Reuters on the FT report.
The Details
Volkswagen already holds a stake in Xpeng, the spine of an existing partnership between the two companies. According to the FT, the German group is open to sharing factory capacity in Europe with Chinese partners. CEO Oliver Blume has previously said he wants to bring cars developed in China to the European market, and the plant talks fit that line.
Xpeng's push into Europe runs into stricter rules on foreign investment from China, which apply across the bloc to deals involving sensitive industries. A factory acquisition or greenfield build with a German partner is one of the few structures that can move forward without triggering the tariff regime that the EU imposed on Chinese-made EVs.
Localisation, not export, is the new playbook
The story is bigger than one factory. Chinese EV makers spent the last cycle trying to export their way into Europe and ran straight into the EU's anti-subsidy duties on China-built electric cars. Building locally, ideally inside an existing plant footprint, is the workaround.
For Volkswagen, the calculation is different. Its own European plants are running below capacity, and Northvolt's collapse left a hole in the European EV supply chain. Selling or sharing a plant with a Chinese partner that already sits inside the VW orbit puts spare capacity to work and gives Wolfsburg a hedge inside its own home market. For Xpeng, it converts a minority shareholder into a manufacturing partner on the ground in Europe.
Sources: DealStreet Asia, Financial Times

China's capital rolled out the red carpet for Donald Trump on May 13. Air Force One touched down at Beijing Capital International Airport shortly before 8 pm, with Vice-President Han Zheng, a military honor guard and hundreds of flag-waving children on the tarmac. It is the first state visit by a US president in nine years.
The headline event begins Thursday morning at the Great Hall of the People. The 36-hour program also includes a state banquet, a visit to the Temple of Heaven and tea inside the Zhongnanhai compound. Trump leaves on Friday after a working lunch with Xi.
The CEO plane
The business delegation includes Tesla's Elon Musk, Apple's Tim Cook and Boeing's Kelly Ortberg. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was a last-minute addition to Air Force One, which pushed AI and semiconductors onto the agenda. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth are also on the trip. Senator Steve Daines summed up the expected deliverables as 'Boeing, beef, and beans.'
Iran, the unwelcome guest at the table
Trump wants Beijing's help winding down the Iran war. China is the biggest buyer of Iranian oil and one of the few governments with real sway in Tehran. But Iran is Beijing's most important Middle East partner and a useful counterweight to the US, and Washington's focus on the Gulf has pulled US military assets out of the Indo-Pacific. Analysts expect Xi to nudge Iran toward talks at most, not cut off economic support. Chinese embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu told reporters Beijing opposes 'illicit unilateral sanctions.'
Taiwan on the table
Trump confirmed he will discuss US arms sales to Taiwan with Xi and has so far held back a roughly $14 billion weapons package for the island. A bipartisan group of senators urged him in a letter to notify Congress that the sales have been approved. Hours before the summit, the Senate Armed Services Committee held a hearing on China's 'unprecedented nuclear expansion,' with chairman Roger Wicker pointing to hundreds of new missile silos and expanded submarine forces.
Sources: The Straits Times, CNBC, CNN, SCMP

China's official non-performing loan ratio has barely moved from 1.5 percent for years, through a property collapse and the slowest nominal growth since the 1970s outside Covid. Most economists do not believe the number. Absolute Strategy Research in London puts the real bad-loan ratio closer to 10 percent, which on China's loan book works out to roughly $3 trillion of credit that should be classified as past due but is not. Other estimates run to twice that.
The Details
About 10 percent of listed non-financial firms in China have failed to cover their interest payments from operating earnings for three consecutive years, according to Absolute Strategy Research. A Dallas Fed study counted zombie firms at 16 percent of assets at non-financial companies in 2024, up from 5 percent in 2018. An anonymous government estimate cited by the EU Institute for Security Studies puts the true NPL ratio at 15 to 20 percent.
Beijing has chosen forbearance over recognition. Roughly 40 percent of loans are eligible for or already in some form of forbearance program, with banks discouraged from calling repayment or marking losses. A small-business leniency policy introduced during Covid covers 9.4 trillion yuan (S$1.8 trillion) of loans and runs into late next year. Regulators have told the big banks to keep reported NPL ratios under 2 percent. Banks collectively concealed more than 800 billion yuan of bad assets in the five years to 2024, based on Bloomberg calculations from National Audit Office reports. To shore up the system, officials have injected more than $100 billion of fresh capital into the six biggest banks.
Why this prolongs the slowdown, instead of ending it
The forbearance approach has kept China out of an open banking crisis, but the bill shows up in growth. As Victor Shih at UC San Diego put it, 'there's no financial crisis, but there's no free lunch in economics. The price is just growth, inefficiency and low productivity.' Capital that should fund healthy firms keeps recycling into zombies. Beijing cut its 2026 growth target to 4.5 to 5 percent, the least ambitious goal since 1991.
Hong Kong already shows what the next phase can look like. The city's distressed-loan ratio hit 2.01 percent at the end of 2025, the highest since 2004. Lenders including Bank of East Asia, UOB's HK branch, Bank of China and Hang Seng have built up their special-asset teams and are now pushing fire sales and liquidations of commercial real estate, including a HK$5.5 billion loan tied to the 25-floor HK NEO building in Kowloon. The mainland version of that cleanup has not started.
Sources: Business Times SG

Ford's 3 billion US dollar BlueOval Battery Park in Marshall, Michigan, is about to come online with 1,700 employees and lithium iron phosphate cells produced under license from CATL. Business Times Singapore reports that crews were still installing equipment in April, days before President Donald Trump's scheduled summit with Xi Jinping in Beijing on May 13 to 15.
The structure is the point. Ford owns the land, the buildings, the equipment and the workforce. CATL holds no equity. It licenses its battery chemistry, sends Chinese engineers to train Ford employees, and collects fees. CATL CEO Robin Zeng has joked that his cells are "dumb as bricks." The setup has echoes of the TikTok arrangement, in which ByteDance licenses its algorithm to a US-based entity rather than owning the operation.
Why Washington is paying attention
Chinese investment into the US has slowed to a trickle since Trump's first term, and BYD and Xiaomi are effectively frozen out of the consumer market by 100 percent tariffs. Trump has said he is open to Chinese car plants in the US. Ford CEO Jim Farley told Fox News, "We should not let them into our country," while expressing openness to expanded Chinese partnerships.
CATL's European pivot, as the comparison
The Korea Herald reports that CATL raised 5 billion US dollars in Hong Kong and plans to direct about 90 percent of the proceeds to its plant in Debrecen, Hungary. That facility starts production this year with around 40 gigawatt-hours of capacity, scaling toward 100, behind a German plant as CATL's second European base. The pattern: licensing in the US, full ownership at scale in Europe.
What is on the table in Beijing
The Straits Times reports that Trump arrives in Beijing on the evening of May 13. Scott Kennedy at CSIS describes the US agenda as "five Bs," Boeing, beef, beans, the Board of Trade and the Board of Investment, while China is focused on "three Ts," Taiwan, tariffs and technology. Trump told reporters on May 11 he plans to discuss arms sales to Taiwan with Xi, alongside energy security and Iran. Both sides are also expected to discuss extending the rare-earth truce reached at Busan in October 2025.
Sources: Business Times Singapore, The Korea Herald, The Straits Times

DeepSeek said for the first time that its latest model has been optimized to run on Huawei chips for inference, a measurable break from Nvidia hardware. Business Times Singapore reports that the announcement came days before Trump and Xi were due to meet in Beijing. DeepSeek still relied on Nvidia chips to train its current model, according to two semiconductor industry sources cited by BT. Huawei has said it plans to release a training chip this year, while flagging that catching up to Nvidia's current generation will take another year.
The shift is not happening in isolation. Wei Sun, principal AI analyst at Counterpoint Research in Beijing, told BT that US export controls "are not freezing China's AI development. They are forcing China to build an alternative stack." Firms including DeepSeek and Moonshot AI are designing systems around US restrictions rather than waiting for them to lift.
The Details
Model: DeepSeek's latest, optimized for Huawei chips on inference
Training stack: still Nvidia-based, per two semiconductor industry sources cited by BT
Huawei roadmap: training chip this year, parity with Nvidia's current chips still a year out
Manufacturing constraint: SMIC, which produces some Huawei chips, has struggled to scale yield. Chips are more defect-prone and power-hungry than foreign equivalents
Huawei workaround: stringing together large numbers of weaker chips to match more advanced processors
Policy backdrop: Trump granted Nvidia permission to sell the H200 to China after Busan, but Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told a Senate Appropriations Committee no H200s have shipped, and Nvidia said in regulatory filings it has yet to generate H200 revenue from China
Source: Business Times Singapore
Embodied AI funding adds a parallel data point
On the same day, Yicai reported that three Chinese embodied AI firms closed new rounds together worth hundreds of millions of US dollars. Lumos Robotics raised several hundred million yuan across Series A1 and A2 led by Mitsubishi Electric, lifting total funding to nearly 1 billion yuan (about 137.2 million US dollars). Vbot raised nearly 500 million yuan in a pre-Series A for a home-use robot dog. Uncharted Dynamics raised several million dollars in a seed round led by K2VC.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has warned for years that strict export controls would split the global AI market into Chinese chips for Chinese systems and American chips for the rest. The DeepSeek-Huawei pairing is the clearest product-level signal yet that the split is moving from rhetoric into shipped code.
Sources: Business Times Singapore, Yicai Global

China's smart-driving sector is being pulled into a new arena. Algorithm providers that built their business around hardware sales and development fees are now being measured on whether they can deliver foundation models for the physical world. KrAsia reports that Zhuoyu Technology, an independent DJI spinoff, unveiled a native multimodal foundation model for mobile physical AI at the latest Beijing Auto Show.
Yu Beibei, vice president of Zhuoyu, put it bluntly to 36Kr: "If you don't get on this technology path, you might not be able to break through in the future." The pressure comes not from autonomous-driving peers but from larger AI players moving in from embodied intelligence, where vision, language, action and reasoning are trained together.
From expert models to foundation models
Yu describes the industry as sitting at an inflection point: continue with specialized expert models or switch to a large-model approach where vision, audio, action, rules and reasoning are all treated as modalities during pretraining. Zhuoyu's training mix today is roughly 30 percent vehicle data, 30 percent robot data and 40 percent first-person-view video from the internet. The commercial model shifts too. The first growth curve sells hardware and dev fees. The second extends the stack into Level 4 robotaxis and robovans, with revenue from profit sharing and subscriptions.
The macro frame
Humanoid Daily, citing the new Capgemini Research Institute report, places this inside a larger industrial pivot. The survey of 1,678 senior executives across 15 industries found nearly 80 percent of organizations already engaging with physical AI. The addressable sectors represent an estimated 50 to 80 trillion US dollars of global GDP. Labor shortages were cited by 74 percent as the top driver. Capgemini's view: growth over the next three to five years will be led by intelligence embedded into proven form factors like autonomous mobile robots, not general-purpose humanoids, where average scaling timelines now sit at about seven years.
Sources: KrAsia, Humanoid Daily

South Korea and the United States signed a memorandum of understanding on Friday, May 8, to advance bilateral shipbuilding cooperation, setting up a new platform called the Korea-US Shipbuilding Partnership Initiative (KUSPI). Park Jung-sung, deputy minister for trade at Seoul's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources, and US Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade William Kimmitt signed the MOU in Washington, overseen by Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
The deal sits inside a much larger commitment. South Korea has pledged to invest 150 billion US dollars in the US shipbuilding sector as part of last year's bilateral trade agreement, which committed Seoul to a total of 350 billion in the US with an annual cap of 20 billion.
The Details
Platform: Korea-US Shipbuilding Partnership Initiative (KUSPI)
Anchor: Korea-US Shipbuilding Partnership Center in Washington, expected later this year
Activities: foreign direct investment into the US maritime industrial base, workforce training, shipyard productivity projects, and technical exchanges
US lead: Commerce Department. Korean lead: MOTIR, providing personnel and funding
Sources: Yonhap News, The Korea Herald
Filling a gap China currently owns
The MOU lands against a backdrop where China is pulling further ahead in commercial shipbuilding. Chinese shipyards received 59.53 million deadweight tonnes in new orders in the first quarter of 2026, a 195.2 percent jump year on year, according to the China Association of the National Shipbuilding Industry. That gave China an 84.9 percent share of global new orders, with South Korea second at 12.8 percent and Japan third at 1.4 percent, per SCMP.
The political backdrop softened on the same day. After Seoul and Washington signed the MOU, President Donald Trump said at the White House, "I love South Korea." Yonhap noted the shift in tone, coming after Trump had earlier criticized Seoul for not supporting US naval operations linked to the conflict with Iran.
For Hanwha Ocean, HD Hyundai and Samsung Heavy, the partnership is the first formal structure inviting them to help rebuild a US civilian shipyard base. The next data point: the first concrete investment projects under the trade deal can be announced after a relevant law takes effect in June.
Sources: Yonhap News, The Korea Herald, SCMP

Thailand's AI ambitions just collided with the biggest chip smuggling case the US has opened since it first restricted Nvidia sales to China in 2022. Bangkok-based OBON Corp is suspected by US prosecutors of helping move at least $2.5 billion worth of Super Micro servers containing restricted Nvidia AI chips into China, with Alibaba named by people familiar with the matter as one of the end customers.
OBON is the unnamed 'Company-1' in a March indictment from the US Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, Bloomberg first reported. The indictment charges Super Micro co-founder Yih-Shyan 'Wally' Liaw with working with OBON and a 'rotating cast' of third-party brokers to divert the chips. Liaw, who has stepped down from the board and is on administrative leave, has pleaded not guilty.
The Thailand connection
OBON Thailand is an affiliate of One Belt One Network Holdings Limited, registered in the British Virgin Islands. Its paths have crossed with Siam.AI, Thailand's national AI initiative and the country's first official Nvidia Cloud Partner. Siam.AI CEO Ratanaphon Wongnapachant, the nephew of former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was also OBON's CEO through at least May 2024. In December 2024, Ratanaphon hosted Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang at a Bangkok gala that Thaksin also attended.
Ratanaphon told Bloomberg he left OBON when he founded Siam.AI and cannot comment on the smuggling allegations. He says Siam.AI imports GPUs only for its own use and is not involved.
The numbers behind the case
OBON was at one point Super Micro's 11th most profitable customer. Sales to OBON accounted for roughly $100 million of Super Micro's revenue in the quarter ending June 2024, enough that Super Micro audited the relationship and temporarily paused shipments in October 2024. Imports picked up again in 2025 and climbed sharply in April and May, just before the US was set to require permits for AI chip sales to Thailand under an export controls framework that the Trump team scrapped before it took effect. More than $500 million of the alleged diversions happened between April and mid-May 2025 alone.
Alibaba denies involvement, saying it has no relationship with Super Micro, OBON, or any third-party brokers, and that banned Nvidia chips have never been used in its data centers. Nvidia points to its compliance expectations for ecosystem partners.
What it triggers
The case could force Washington's hand on something it has flirted with three times: export controls on chip shipments into Thailand. The Bureau of Industry and Security has already requested a hold on all shipments to OBON, and that hold remains in effect.
Sources: Bangkok Post, Business Times Singapore

China's Baidu is pushing its in-house AI chip unit Kunlunxin toward a dual listing in Hong Kong and on Shanghai's STAR Board, with a Hong Kong valuation target of at least 100 billion yuan ($14.69 billion), according to two people who spoke with the South China Morning Post.
The Details
Hong Kong valuation target: at least 100 billion yuan ($14.69 billion)
Prior reference point: at least $3 billion market value, Bloomberg in December
Baidu stake in Kunlunxin: 58 percent
Shanghai listing path: STAR Board (Sci-Tech Innovation Board)
Shanghai sponsor and tutor: China International Capital Corp (CICC)
Hong Kong status: confidentially filed earlier in 2026, listing expected Q3 (Jefferies)
Tape on the day: Baidu Hong Kong shares up as much as 4.1 percent on Friday
Shanghai backdrop: STAR 50 Index up more than 20 percent in 2026, all-time high Thursday
Why Beijing wants this listing to work
Kunlunxin is the most prominent name in a wave of AI chip spinouts that Beijing is funneling toward domestic markets to fund its self-reliance push against US chip restrictions. Shanghai Biren Technology, Metax Integrated Circuits, and Moore Threads have all listed since 2025, and all have rallied since their debuts. Baidu rival Alibaba is reported to be preparing a similar carve-out of its own chip arm.
The Hong Kong tape is also doing its part. STAR Board appetite is running hot, and Chinese AI developers like DeepSeek and ByteDance keep releasing models that pull demand toward domestic chip suppliers such as Huawei and Cambricon, on top of what is already a tight market.
The five times jump in valuation, from Bloomberg's $3 billion December reference to today's $14.7 billion target, mirrors what is happening across the rest of China's chip listings. For Baidu, a successful Kunlunxin spinout means a separately funded chip business and a higher group sum-of-parts. For Beijing, it is another champion priced and ring-fenced inside Chinese capital markets.
Sources: Business Times Singapore, South China Morning Post
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