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Japan's Tungsten Break: Sumitomo Spends $100 Million to Cut China Out of Its Supply Chain
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Japan's Tungsten Break: Sumitomo Spends $100 Million to Cut China Out of Its Supply Chain
10 APR 2026

Sumitomo Electric Industries is investing 15.9 billion yen ($100 million) in a new tungsten production plant in Toyama, Japan. The goal: cut China out of one of the most critical materials in semiconductor and tool manufacturing.

The dependency

Today, roughly 30% of the tungsten powder that Sumitomo processes comes from China. Tungsten is not optional. It goes into cemented carbide cutting tools, semiconductor devices, and electronic components. Without it, factories stop.

China controls the global tungsten market and has already added the material to its dual-use export control list, alongside molybdenum, specialty alloys, and carbon fiber. For Japan's manufacturers, the message from Beijing is clear: supply can be weaponized at any time.

What Sumitomo is building

The new facility will sit next to the existing Toyama Works plant operated by ALMT, Sumitomo's tungsten subsidiary. Once operational, it will boost the company's tungsten supply capacity by 50%. Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) is covering nearly half the cost with a 7.5 billion yen subsidy.

Sumitomo is also expanding domestic recycling, reclaiming tungsten from used cutting tools and industrial waste. The strategy is two-pronged: produce more locally and recover what already exists in the system.

The bigger picture

This is not an isolated move. Japan has been systematically reducing its exposure to Chinese critical materials since Beijing tightened export controls in 2024. Rare earths, gallium, germanium, and now tungsten. Each restriction accelerates a Japanese investment in domestic alternatives.

The catch: none of these substitution programs are cheap or fast. Sumitomo's plant will take years to reach full capacity. In the meantime, 30% of its tungsten still comes from the country it is trying to decouple from.

Sources: Nikkei Asia, TradingView/Reuters

Mitsubishi's Record Bet: $7.5 Billion for a U.S. Gas Empire, Backed by Tokyo
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Mitsubishi's Record Bet: $7.5 Billion for a U.S. Gas Empire, Backed by Tokyo
10 APR 2026

Mitsubishi Corp. is acquiring Aethon Energy, a U.S. natural gas developer, for 1.2 trillion yen ($7.53 billion). It is the largest acquisition in the trading house's 72-year history.

The deal structure

The Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) is providing a $2.38 billion state-backed loan, arranged through a syndicated agreement with MUFG Bank and other private lenders. When a government bank puts up nearly a third of the deal value, this is industrial policy, not just corporate M&A.

What Mitsubishi gets

Aethon's shale gas operations in the southern United States produce the equivalent of roughly 15 million metric tons of LNG per year. That covers about a quarter of Japan's entire annual LNG demand. Most output will continue to be sold domestically in the U.S., but portions will be exported to Japan, Asia, and Europe.

Why now

The Iran war has laid bare Japan's energy vulnerability. The country imports virtually all its fossil fuels, with the Middle East accounting for the largest share. Securing upstream assets in a stable jurisdiction like the U.S. is the most direct hedge available.

Mitsubishi is not alone in this logic. Tokyo Gas and JERA have both made similar acquisitions in recent months. JBIC's annual investment finance typically totals 1 to 2 trillion yen. Financing for Mitsubishi and Nippon Steel's U.S. deals now exceeds 900 billion yen combined, showing just how aggressively Tokyo is pushing capital into American energy and industrial assets.

Sources: Nikkei Asia

Sky Grab: Chinese Airlines Add 2,350 Europe Flights While Rivals Burn Cash on Detours
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Sky Grab: Chinese Airlines Add 2,350 Europe Flights While Rivals Burn Cash on Detours
9 APR 2026

While European carriers reroute around Iran and bleed money on fuel, Chinese airlines are flooding the market with cheap seats to Europe. Air China, China Eastern, and China Southern have added a combined 2,350 flights to Western Europe for the spring-summer season, compared to last year.

The unfair advantage

The math is simple. Chinese carriers can still fly over Russia on great-circle paths between Asia and Europe. European airlines cannot. Since the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in late February, the detour around Iranian and Russian airspace costs European airlines between $15,000 and $30,000 per flight in extra fuel and operating expenses alone.

That gap shows up directly at the checkout. A Frankfurt-to-Shanghai return in June costs €870 on Air China. On Lufthansa, it costs €1,008. Same route, same month, 16% more expensive.

New routes, fast

Air China leads the expansion with 969 additional flights. China Eastern follows with 697, China Southern with 410. Beijing's Daxing International Airport is getting direct connections to Frankfurt, Helsinki, and Milan for the first time, with over 100 flights serving these new routes.

What it means

Aviation consultants call this "a reshaping of competitive economics on Europe-Asia routes." European carriers are not losing money yet. KLM and British Airways report no fuel shortages, and Finnair has raised Asia ticket prices by 15% to absorb higher costs. British Airways added flights to Bangkok and Singapore in mid-March.

But the structural problem is clear. As long as Russia keeps its airspace open to Chinese carriers, the cost advantage will persist. One analyst put it bluntly: "European carriers are on the back foot." The longer the Iran war drags on, the deeper Chinese airlines dig into what used to be European home turf.

Sources: Nikkei Asia

EngineAI Raises $200 Million as Apple Supplier Luxshare Bets on Humanoids
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EngineAI Raises $200 Million as Apple Supplier Luxshare Bets on Humanoids
9 APR 2026

Chinese humanoid robotics maker EngineAI has closed a $200 million Series B round, valuing the company at $1.4 billion. The round was led by Henan Investment Group's Huirong Fund, with manufacturing titan Luxshare Precision joining the cap table.

Why Luxshare matters

Luxshare is Apple's most important Chinese supplier, assembling iPhones, AirPods, and Apple Watch units at massive scale. Its entry into humanoid robotics signals something specific: the industry's bottleneck is shifting from R&D to manufacturing. Building one humanoid is engineering. Building 5,000 is supply chain management, and that is Luxshare's core skill.

EngineAI's CEO Zhao Tongyang confirmed the company has prepared for delivery of 4,000 to 5,000 units in 2026, scaling to 30,000 to 50,000 annually by 2027.

The products

The flagship T800 stands 173 centimeters tall, delivers 450 N·m peak joint torque, and starts at $25,000. The lighter PM01 targets commercial applications. Together, the two models have generated over 500 million yuan ($70 million) in framework orders across three sectors: factory floor collaboration, automated security patrols, and retail service (what EngineAI calls "Cyber Staff").

Context

EngineAI is the latest in a wave of Chinese humanoid companies raising large rounds. UBTech reported $119 million in robot revenue last week. Unitree filed for a $580 million IPO. The sector is moving from demos to delivery, and investors are rewarding companies that can prove manufacturing readiness. Having Luxshare on the cap table is the strongest signal yet that EngineAI intends to compete on volume, not just prototypes.

Sources: Humanoid Daily

Honda's $15.7 Billion Retreat: Three EVs Canceled, Sony Afeela Dead, No New Models Left
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Honda's $15.7 Billion Retreat: Three EVs Canceled, Sony Afeela Dead, No New Models Left
8 APR 2026

On March 12, Honda Motor announced it would cancel three electric vehicles that had been planned for production in North America. Two weeks later, the Afeela sedan, Honda's high-profile joint venture with Sony, was killed too.

The restructuring costs: up to $15.7 billion.

What happened to Afeela

Sony Honda Mobility (SHM) said on March 25 that it was discontinuing development of both the Afeela 1 sedan and a planned SUV follow-up. The reason was blunt: Honda withdrew the technologies and production assets that SHM had been counting on. Without those, SHM said it "does not have a viable path forward to bring the models to market as originally planned."

The Afeela 1 had been positioned as a tech showcase, blending Sony's entertainment software with Honda's engineering. It was supposed to start deliveries in North America in 2026. Instead, it joins a growing list of EV projects that burned through capital without reaching customers.

The pipeline problem

Honda's decision to cancel three North American EV models leaves the company with almost nothing new for its largest profit market. The automaker cited "recent changes in the business environment," a vague explanation for a retreat that touches every part of its electrification roadmap.

Nikkei reports that speculation about a dividend cut is growing, though Honda has so far maintained its payout by pointing to its DOE (dividend on equity ratio) policy.

What it means for Japan's auto industry

Honda's pivot away from EVs runs counter to the direction of nearly every major competitor. Toyota is expanding its EV lineup. Hyundai is building humanoid robot factories. BYD is shipping 300,000 vehicles a month.

Honda bet on electrification, spent billions, and pulled back. The $15.7 billion in restructuring costs is the price tag. The harder question: what does Honda sell in 2027?

Sources: Nikkei Asia, Honda Global Newsroom, InsideEVs, Autonews

Sigenergy: $562 Million HK IPO for the Ex-Huawei Solar Chief's Energy Storage Startup
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Sigenergy: $562 Million HK IPO for the Ex-Huawei Solar Chief's Energy Storage Startup
8 APR 2026

Sigenergy Technology, a Shanghai-based energy storage company, filed to raise HK$4.40 billion ($562 million) in a Hong Kong IPO. Trading begins April 16 under stock code 6656.

Offer price: HK$324.20 per share. CLSA and CITIC Securities are among the sponsors.

The Details

Sigenergy was founded in 2022 by Xu Yingtong, who spent 23 years at Huawei and built the company into the world's largest solar inverter supplier. He left to start his own energy storage business, and the growth since then has been extreme.

Revenue as of September 2024: roughly 700 million yuan, a 16-fold increase year-on-year. Gross margin: 44.24%.

The company makes all-in-one energy storage systems under the SigenStor brand: battery packs, inverters, and energy management software bundled into a single product. Customers are residential and commercial users looking for clean energy solutions, a market that has expanded sharply since the Iran war pushed electricity costs higher across Asia and Europe.

From Huawei's playbook

Xu's background matters. At Huawei, he took the solar inverter business from zero to global market leader in four years. Sigenergy is following a similar script: aggressive pricing, vertical integration, and speed to market. The company went from founding to IPO filing in under three years.

IPO proceeds will go toward expanding production capacity, R&D, and building out sales networks.

The listing climate

Sigenergy's IPO arrives as Beijing tightens scrutiny of offshore-incorporated listings in Hong Kong. Regulators are pushing some China-linked firms to reorganize before going public, which is expected to slow the overall HK IPO pipeline this year.

For Sigenergy, the timing is deliberate. Energy storage is one of the sectors Beijing actively supports, and the company is listing as an H-share, not through an offshore vehicle. That structure sidesteps the regulatory bottleneck that is tripping up tech and biotech candidates. At $562 million, it would be one of the largest clean energy IPOs in Hong Kong this year.

Sources: DealStreet Asia, Pandaily, Bamboo Works

The Robot Iron Curtain: US Moves to Ban Chinese Humanoids from Government Use
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The Robot Iron Curtain: US Moves to Ban Chinese Humanoids from Government Use
7 APR 2026

Senators Tom Cotton and Chuck Schumer have introduced the American Security Robotics Act, a bipartisan bill that would bar federal agencies from purchasing humanoid robots and unmanned ground vehicles made by foreign adversaries. The primary target: China.

Rep. Elise Stefanik is introducing the House companion bill.

What the bill covers

The legislation blocks federal funds from being used to buy, lease or operate "unmanned ground vehicle systems" produced by companies under the jurisdiction of foreign adversaries. That includes humanoid robots, wheeled and tracked vehicles used by law enforcement and emergency services.

The concern is specific: Chinese-built robots require constant environmental mapping and continuous data transmission. US intelligence officials worry these machines could function as roaming data harvesters, transmitting geospatial and operational intelligence to servers in mainland China. Backdoors, remote hijacking, unauthorized data access.

The bill includes a carve-out for counterterrorism and intelligence operations, but only if the systems are modified to block data transfers to the manufacturer.

The Hyundai window

For Hyundai Motor, the timing is useful. The company is planning a US-based humanoid robot production plant with an annual capacity of 30,000 units by 2028. Its subsidiary Boston Dynamics is already embedded in US policy circles: VP Brandon Schulman sits on the National Commission on Advanced Manufacturing Robotics.

With Chinese rivals like Unitree, UBTech and Galaxea AI locked out of federal procurement, Hyundai and Boston Dynamics would face a smaller competitive field in the US government market.

The open question: components

The bill targets finished robots, not parts. That's the gap. Chinese companies dominate production of key robotics components: actuators, reducers, sensors, rare earth magnets. A ban on finished products without restrictions on components leaves the supply chain intact.

Whether Washington extends the curbs deeper into the supply chain will determine if this is a symbolic gesture or a structural shift. The DJI drone precedent suggests escalation is likely: that ban started with federal procurement and eventually expanded to a full import restriction.

Sources: Korea Herald, The Hill, Foundation for Defense of Democracies, Humanoid Daily

Samsung Posts Record $37.9 Billion Q1 Profit: The Chip Rebound in One Number
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Samsung Posts Record $37.9 Billion Q1 Profit: The Chip Rebound in One Number
7 APR 2026

Samsung Electronics reported preliminary first-quarter operating profit of 57.2 trillion won ($37.9 billion), a 755% surge from a year earlier. Revenue hit 133 trillion won, up 68%.

Both numbers are all-time records for the company.

The Details

The engine behind the jump: memory chips. Samsung's Device Solutions division, which makes DRAM and NAND flash, has been riding an AI-driven supercycle that shows no signs of cooling.

  • HBM revenue: tripled in Q1, driven by shipments of HBM3E and HBM4 to Nvidia, Google and AMD
  • DRAM prices: up 30%+ sequentially
  • NAND prices: up ~20% sequentially
  • HBM4: Samsung is the first to begin mass production of sixth-generation high-bandwidth memory

The 755% figure looks extreme because the baseline was weak. Q1 2025 was still in the tail end of the memory downturn, with operating profit around 6.7 trillion won. The rebound has been vertical.

Beyond memory

Samsung's smartphone and consumer electronics divisions contributed steady revenue, but memory is where the margin expansion happens. AI servers need enormous amounts of HBM, and the shortage is pushing prices higher quarter after quarter.

The cycle question

Samsung's closest competitor SK Hynix has been posting similar results, but Samsung's scale is larger. The company supplies roughly 40% of the global DRAM market and 33% of NAND.

The Iran war has added energy cost pressure and supply chain uncertainty, but data center buildouts from Microsoft, Google and Amazon continue at full speed. As long as AI training and inference demand keeps growing, the memory cycle has room to run.

Full results are due later this month. The number to watch: how much of the profit came from HBM versus legacy memory.

Sources: Nikkei Asia, SamMobile, Seoul Economic Daily, CNBC

Changan's Robot Pivot: China's Sixth-Largest Carmaker Targets Humanoid Mass Production by 2028
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Changan's Robot Pivot: China's Sixth-Largest Carmaker Targets Humanoid Mass Production by 2028
6 APR 2026

Changan Automobile, one of China's largest state-owned automakers, has formally registered a robotics subsidiary. Changan Tianshu Intelligent Robot (Chongqing) Co., Ltd. was established on March 31 with 450 million yuan ($62 million) in registered capital.

The company published a timeline that leaves little room for ambiguity:

  • Q1 2026: First specialized vehicle-component robot
  • 2027: General-purpose humanoid debut
  • 2028: Mass production
  • 2030: Family service robots
  • 2035: Low-altitude industrial ecosystem, 100 billion yuan target

From cars to robots

The new entity is a joint venture. China Changan Automobile Group and Changan Automobile hold 50%, Chongqing Changan Technology takes 10%, and Chenzhi Automobile Technology rounds out the ownership.

Changan calls its approach "1+N+X": the humanoid robot is the core thread (1), vehicle components and mobility ecosystems are the extensions (N), specialized service applications fill the gaps (X). The "Tianshu" brand, previously an automotive intelligence platform inside Changan, now stands on its own as a robotics company.

The automaker-to-robot pipeline

Changan is not the first. BYD, Xpeng, GAC and Geely have all announced robotics programs in the past twelve months. The logic is identical across the board: automakers already run supply chains for motors, sensors, batteries and precision manufacturing. The same components power humanoid robots.

What separates Changan is the specificity. A 2028 target for humanoid mass production is aggressive, even by Chinese standards. Most competitors are still showing prototypes at trade fairs.

The $62 million in registered capital looks modest. But Changan's real backing comes from its parent: state-owned China Changan Automobile Group, headquartered in Chongqing, a city that is spending heavily to position itself as a robotics manufacturing hub.

Sources: Humanoid Daily, Gasgoo, South China Morning Post

Foxconn: 29.7% Revenue Surge to $66.6 Billion as AI Servers Drive Record Quarter
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Foxconn: 29.7% Revenue Surge to $66.6 Billion as AI Servers Drive Record Quarter
6 APR 2026

Taiwan's Foxconn, the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer, posted first-quarter revenue of NT$2.13 trillion ($66.6 billion). That's a 29.7% jump year-on-year.

March alone: NT$803.7 billion, up 45.6% from a year earlier. A record for the month.

The Details

The growth engine is clear: cloud and networking products. Foxconn is Nvidia's primary server manufacturer, and demand for AI racks has been relentless. The AI server business now drives the company's trajectory more than its traditional role as Apple's largest iPhone assembler.

Smart consumer electronics, including iPhones, also posted "significant" growth from new product launches. But the AI division is where the momentum sits.

  • Q1 revenue: NT$2.13 trillion ($66.6 billion), +29.7% YoY
  • March revenue: NT$803.7 billion, +45.6% YoY (monthly record)
  • Growth driver: Cloud and networking (AI servers for Nvidia)
  • iPhone segment: "Significant" growth from new launches

Revenue slightly missed the NT$2.148 trillion SmartEstimate, but the trend is consistent.

Beyond assembly

Foxconn is expanding on multiple fronts. This week, it announced a tie-up with Mitsubishi Fuso to develop and export electric buses from Japan to Southeast Asia and Australia. The partnership pairs Foxconn's EV platform expertise with Fuso's Japanese manufacturing base, targeting markets where Chinese EV competitors are gaining ground fast.

Chairman Young Liu expects continued growth in Q2, particularly in AI racks. But he flagged the Middle East conflict as a "major challenge" for global supply chains and energy costs.

The stock puzzle

Despite the strong numbers, Foxconn shares have dropped 16% this year. Taiwan's broader market is up 12% over the same period. The gap reflects investor anxiety about geopolitical risk, not business fundamentals.

Full first-quarter earnings land May 14. The real number to watch: AI server margins, and whether the Mitsubishi Fuso deal signals a broader diversification push beyond electronics assembly.

Sources: Nikkei Asia, Bloomberg, Investing.com

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