đŹ China Update â End of Week Newsletter
Added 2025-08-30 23:42:17 +0000 UTCDate: August 31, 2025
Your essential wrap-up on Chinese Political, Economic & Geostrategic developments
Letâs Jump In!
đś Top Story: Evergrandeâs Delisting â A Gravestone for the Bubble Era
The Evergrande saga ended on Monday this week with a whimper: the developerâs shares were struck from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The silence is fitting. What remains is a debris field of unfinished projects (â1,300 across 280+ cities), stranded homebuyers, and a creditor queue that stretches from Guangzhou to Greenwich.
Founded in 1996, Evergrande surfed the great urban migration, at one point worth $50B with liabilities that ultimately swelled past $300B â the most indebted developer on earth. Its default shattered the âtoo-big-to-failâ illusion and revealed how much of Chinaâs growth had been mortgaged to tomorrow.
Liquidation (ordered in 2024) is being executed Lehman-style: liquidators are seizing assets entity by entity from a tangle of thousands of subs. So far: control of 100 companies worth $3.5B, versus $45B in overseas claims and only $255M recovered. Investigators are pursuing clawbacks from founder Hui Ka Yan (detained; fined for fraud) and former CEO Xia Haijun (alleged hidden US assets).
Zoom out: real estate â once a quarter of GDP and the core household asset â is still sliding. Mortgage stress is rising, prices keep drifting, and the wealth effect has flipped into reverse. Evergrandeâs delisting isnât just corporate demise; itâs the tombstone for a development model built on presales, leverage, and faith that prices only go up.
đ Why it matters: Without a credible mechanism to complete homes, restructure developer balance sheets, and rebuild buyer confidence, property will remain a persistent drag on growth, local-government finances, and consumption.
đĄď¸ Microsoft Tightens Zero-Day Access for China Vendors
Microsoft has cut Chinese companies out of early vulnerability sharing (MAPP) where local law forces firms to hand zero-days to the state within 48 hours. The move follows âToolShellâ intrusions exploiting SharePoint, attributed to three PRC-linked groups, and growing concern that pre-disclosure fed offensive stockpiles via the CNNVD/MSS ecosystem.
This decision closes an obvious loophole â but raises awkward questions about why it existed at scale. It also adds to Microsoftâs Washington headwinds after reporting lapses around China-based engineers touching US gov systems.
đ Signal: Expect more Western firms to revisit any program that effectively pipelines zero-days into state arsenals.
đď¸ September 3 Parade: Power, Optics, and âIntelligentizedâ War
Beijingâs 80th-anniversary WWII parade will spotlight new services (Aerospace, Information Support, Cyberspace Forces) and systems aligned with networked, survivable, multi-domain ops. Watch for FH-97 âloyal wingmanâ drones, fresh âEagle Strikeâ anti-ship missiles, hypersonics, directed-energy, and expanded EW.
As ever, the parade is message as much as metal: the Party frames historical sacrifice and future deterrence as one continuous narrative, with Xi personally reviewing a 70-minute show of force. (more on the leaders in attendance below)
đ§ The Decline of the Guangdong Powerhouse (expanded)
Guangdong â once shorthand for Chinaâs private-sector dynamism â is losing altitude. The FTâs on-the-ground reporting from Houjie (Dongguan) reads like a time-lapse in reverse: silent workshops, shuttered restaurants, residents stuck between weak factories and immovable mortgages. The causes stack:
Offshoring + tariffs: Low-end manufacturing has migrated to Vietnam/Indonesia; new US tariffs (and end of de minimis) hit precisely the mid-tier exporters that anchor Pearl River Delta supply chains.
Property hangover: The wealth effect that fuelled spending has faded; household confidence is fragile.
Margin asymmetry: Appliance, electronics, and auto suppliers are squeezed by both upstream input volatility and downstream price wars.
Data underline the shift: Guangdongâs growth (3.5%) lagged the national 5% last year; Guangzhou/Foshan barely cleared 2%. Shenzhen remains the outlier, buoyed by venture pools and tech incumbents â but it canât carry a province of 127M alone.
Why this matters nationally: Guangdong is Beijingâs biggest net fiscal contributor; its slowdown crimps central transfers that backfill weaker inland budgets. Internationally, the PRDâs export machine is the interface with global demand; its erosion amplifies the case for partner âde-risking.â
đ Outlook: Expect further producer migration, more âgo-abroadâ footprints (autos/electronics), and a policy pivot toward higher-value services in core metros â while many legacy towns wrestle with a slow-bleed equilibrium.
đŁď¸ Zelensky: China Not a Security Guarantor
Kyiv ruled Beijing out as a postwar security guarantor, citing lack of support and indirect aid to Russia (components in drones, market access). Ukraine will anchor guarantees to states that have already provided hard support since 2022. Beijing may angle for reconstruction roles, but not the security architecture.
đ Undersea Cables: FCC Shifts the Guardrails
The FCC rolled out the first big update since 2001: adversary-linked firms (China/Russia/Iran, etc.) are effectively barred across the cable life-cycle; trusted vendors get streamlined approvals but heavier supply-chain attestations and cybersecurity plans. With >95% of global data on seabed glass, this tilt formalizes âclean cablesâ to match 5G-era network hygiene.
đ§ž Industrial Profits: Less Bad, Not Good
NBS reported July profits down 1.5% y/y (best since Mayâs slide), helped by a 6.8% pop in manufacturing and swings to profit for steel/refiners on price stabilization. High-tech earnings jumped (semis +ICs +aerospace), but PPI deflation, soft retail, and weaker new export orders linger. Mining is still a drag (coal oversupply). Translation: anti-âprice warâ measures help margins at the edges; demand is the missing piece.
đŤ Li Chenggangâs âPop-Inâ to Washington
Chinaâs vice commerce minister is dropping by DC between Mexico/Canada stops â not a formal round, more a âkeep the lines warmâ session. Agenda: soy purchases (conditional), fentanyl-linked tariff relief (unlikely without real enforcement moves), and nudging on tech restrictions (Commerce not on the calendar). The atmospherics are frosty: Ambassador Xie just blasted US protectionism; Trump claimed the US holds âcards that would destroy Chinaâ if played.
đ˝ US-China Tech War: Domestic Chip Ramp
Three Huawei-serving AI fabs are rumored to spin up 2025â26, with combined capacity potentially exceeding SMIC today. SMIC is doubling output; CXMT is testing HBM3; Cambricon/Biren/MetaX are scaling around DeepSeekâs FP8-first software stack. If the hardware catches up enough, Chinaâs ecosystem gains resilience â not parity â but a tighter âgood enoughâ loop.
đ 600k Chinese Students? And a NYC Politics ExposĂŠ
Trump floated doubling PRC student numbers in the US to ~600k â a sharp pivot from earlier cutback talk â arguing universities need the influx. Base backlash followed; Commerce framed it as essential to US higher-ed. Meanwhile, a NYT probe outlined PRC-aligned âhometown associationsâ shaping NYC campaigns via endorsements and pressure â spotlighting the blurred line between diaspora civic life and foreign influence.
𧨠Nvidia, China & The Price of Geopolitics (expanded)
Another blowout quarter â and a China caveat. Nvidia posted $46.7B revenue (+56% y/y) and guided ~$54B for Q3, but revealed zero H20 sales to China last quarter and none assumed next. CFO: if âgeopolitical issuesâ clear, Q3 could include $2â$5B of H20 â but the base case is zero. Shares dipped.
Why zero? Beijing reportedly branded H20 a âsecurity risk,â quietly steering BAT (and others) away, while regulators push indigenous stacks. The politics hardened after US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnickâs July line about giving China ânot our best, not our second best⌠just enough to get developers addictedâ â a soundbite tailor-made for PRC hawks arguing to rip off the Nvidia band-aid.
Under the hood: Nvidia freed up $180M by releasing H20 reserves and sold ~$650M of H20 to a single non-China buyer. Jensen Huang still pegs China as a $50B opportunity if products can clear rules, and heâs lobbying for Blackwell approvals â but the trend is clear. Cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Guiyang) are setting domestic-chip usage mandates (up to 100% in DCs), DeepSeek is optimizing around FP8 on homegrown silicon, and supply chains are aligning to a good-enough local stack.
đ Bottom line: Nvidiaâs global demand remains torrid, but China is shifting from âconstrained customerâ to âmotivated substitute-builder.â Even partial success in FP8-capable domestic chips would lock in a structural, not cyclical, loss of Chinese share.
đď¸ SCO Summit in Tianjin
Leaders from 20+ countries (incl. Putin; UNâs Guterres) gather SunâMon. Expect Xi to pitch SCO as the platform for âpost-Americanâ order narratives, fold GSI talking points into agenda language, and roll out âhigh-quality developmentâ packages. Optics matter: simultaneous friction with the West + visible Global South convening.
⥠Taiwan Rhetoric: âNazificationâ Line
Peopleâs Daily ran a commentary accusing the DPP of âNazificationâ â invoking paramilitary âBlack Bear/Bluebirdâ groups and legal changes. The framing mirrors Moscowâs âde-Nazificationâ trope; it hardens domestic narratives and further toxifies cross-Strait political space as Laiâs approval softens.
đĽ Kim & Putin to Join Xi at Beijing Parade
Next weekâs parade will feature Kim Jong Un and Vladimir Putin alongside Xi â visuals of an emerging counter-order. Each leader still runs bilateral channels with Washington, but the tableau signals deeper strategic alignment even as interests diverge (e.g., DPRK troops aiding Russia; PRCâs risk calculus on escalation).
On a lighter note: It was wonderful to chat with subscribers at a meet-up in Auckland this week. I look forward to the next meet-up somewhere else in the world.
Until next week,
â Tony
Comments
"Data underline the shift: Guangdongâs growth (3.5%) lagged the national 5% last year; Guangzhou/Foshan barely cleared 2%. Shenzhen remains the outlier, buoyed by venture pools and tech incumbents â but it canât carry a province of 127M alone." I'm still trying to wrap my head around those numbers. Given the videos we see of graduates looking for jobs, empty streets with boarded up shops, people sleeping under bridges, Factories locked up and empty, how can those numbers (3.5% GDP increase) be anything but smoke and mirrors? The 5% is even more difficult to grasp. Add in the endless floods, major drought and sand storms, how can China even post a gain?
SabreKai
2025-08-31 16:43:05 +0000 UTCThanks for writing these up. Can't always watch videos, so text form is a great addition.
Andrew Lindner
2025-08-31 01:02:55 +0000 UTC