Wall Street News Breakfast FM-Radio | January 22, 2026

Wall Street News Breakfast FM-Radio | January 22, 2026

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Voice of Morning, Huajian

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Market Overview

Trump's "TACO," claims a framework agreement on Greenland with NATO.

S&P 500 rose 1.2%, recovering the previous day’s loss and marking its biggest one-day gain since last November. Small caps led again, with the Russell 2000 up 2% to a new high, outperforming the S&P 500 for 13 consecutive trading days. Microsoft fell 2.3% (the only decline among the “Tech Seven”), Oracle dropped over 3%, and Netflix slid more than 2% post-earnings. Moderna soared 16%. Kraft Heinz dropped 5.7% as Berkshire Hathaway plans a “full exit” reduction.

Japanese bonds stabilized. U.S. 10-year Treasury yield fell 4.7bps. Dollar rebounded by 0.2%.

After Trump softened his stance, Bitcoin rebounded 3.5% from an intraday low set in December, and Ethereum surged over 5% from a daily bottom, crossing $3,000.

Spot gold briefly neared $4,900, but gains narrowed as risk aversion faded. After Trump's TACO announcement, silver futures briefly fell almost 5%, then pared losses. Oil up 2%. U.S. natural gas soared another 28%.

During Asia hours, the Shanghai Composite fluctuated, while the SSE 50 ETF hit a historic trading volume. The AI computing power sector surged, gold stocks hit limit-up, 30-year bonds rallied, and Shanghai gold briefly topped 1,100 yuan.

Top News

Shanghai Tax Bureau fined Pinduoduo 100,000 yuan.

Trump’s Davos speech: Greenland is a core security interest for the U.S., but the U.S. will not use force and seeks immediate negotiations. Later, Trump claimed to have reached a ‘framework’ agreement on Greenland with NATO and temporarily postponed U.S.-EU/Canada tariffs. U.S. stocks and crypto surged, while silver plunged.

Beisent pressed at Davos: Europe’s reinforcement in Greenland is “fantastical,” Denmark’s investment in U.S. debt “irrelevant.” At the Davos closed-door dinner, the U.S. Commerce Secretary criticized Europe for “lack of competitiveness,” causing Lagarde to walk out angrily.

Canadian PM Carney’s major speech: rules-based order is dead, mid-sized powers should unite against big-power coercion.

Macron’s call: Europe prefers respect, not bullying; key sectors should welcome Chinese investment.

The European Parliament announced indefinite suspension of EU-U.S. trade agreement review.

Trump about to lose? Supreme Court cautious on removing Fed Governor Cook, justices warn against “demolishing” central bank independence.

Trump said he may have decided on a candidate for Fed chair, wants someone “like Greenspan,” again implying Hassett is “out.”

U.S. aircraft carrier turned off transponder, jets depart from UK.

GPU rental prices surge with demand. Jensen Huang: AI needs trillions in infrastructure. Reports: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang may visit China before Lunar New Year.

Google TPU catches up, inference cost down 70%, price-performance now matches Nvidia.

Apple plans to upgrade SIRI to its first chatbot in the second half of the year. Also reportedly developing an AI wearable PIN.

Meta’s super lab delivered the first batch of core AI models this month.

“Yizhongtian” first profit forecase: Tianfu Communication expects full-year net profit to grow 40%-60%, with stable growth in high-speed optical components.

Moore Threads: 2025 revenue expected to jump 230%-247%, losses narrowing by 34.50%-41.30%.

AI storage demand explodes, Demingli expects Q4 net profit to soar 1051.59%-1262.41% year-on-year.

Market Closing Reports

Europe/US Stocks: S&P 500 rose 1.16% to 6875.62. Dow up 1.21% to 49077.23. Nasdaq up 1.18% to 23224.825. Europe’s STOXX 600 ended down 0.02% at 602.67.

A-shares: Shanghai Composite closed at 4116.94, up 0.08%. Shenzhen Component at 14255.12, up 0.70%. ChiNext at 3295.52, up 0.54%.

Bonds: U.S. 10-year Treasury yield down 3.98bps to 4.2528%. 2-year yield down 0.64bps to 3.5908%.

Commodities: WTI March crude up 0.43% to $60.62/barrel. Brent March crude up 0.49% to $65.24/barrel. COMEX gold futures up 1.60% to $4841.90/oz. COMEX silver down 1.57% to $93.150/oz.

 

Top News Details

Global Headlines

Shanghai Tax Bureau fined Pinduoduo 100,000 yuan. According to Xinhua, "Pinduoduo" failed to submit required tax data on platform operators/employees for Q3 2025. The tax authority issued a correction order in November 2025, but Pinduoduo did not comply on time. Thus, Changning District tax bureau fined it 100,000 yuan in accordance with regulations.

Trump’s Davos speech: Greenland is a U.S. core security interest, but U.S. won't use force, seeks quick negotiations. Trump said the U.S. has been treated unfairly by NATO; Europe’s green transition and immigration policies have “strayed,” some areas now “unrecognizable”; U.S. needs “strong, not weakened allies”; will nominate the next Fed chair “soon,” future moves may differ but must be right; U.S. has beaten inflation, Q4 GDP expected at 5.4%; recent stock decline “insignificant,” market could double soon; U.S. investing heavily in nuclear; U.S. won’t be a “tenant nation,” will lower credit card rates; Hamas will be “quickly destroyed” unless they agree peace. After the speech, Trump again addressed Greenland, reinforcing “no use of force.” Denmark refused immediate talks on U.S. annexation.

Trump claims 'framework' agreement on Greenland with NATO, suspends planned tariffs for EU/Canada; stocks, crypto surge, silver dives. Trump said he had a productive meeting with NATO’s Sec. Gen. Rutte; a future agreement framework for Greenland/Arctic has been formed so U.S. won’t activate planned tariffs on Feb 1 for now; details pending, duration “permanent,” unclear if it involves U.S. ownership of Greenland. Media reports suggest U.S. may gain base territory. Silver futures fell nearly 5% at one point; gold turned briefly lower.

Beisent presses: Europe’s Greenland troop buildup is “fantastical”, Denmark’s U.S. bond investment is “irrelevant”. Treasury Secretary Beisent took a firm stance on Greenland, warning European countries against expanding military deployments, and criticized French-backed NATO exercises as “unrealistic.” Concerns about Europe possibly dumping U.S. debt as retaliation were dismissed; Denmark holds less than $100 million in U.S. Treasuries, he said – “trivial.”

At Davos closed-door dinner, U.S. Commerce Sec. lambasted Europe for “lack of competitiveness,” Lagarde stormed out. U.S. Commerce Secretary Lutnik strongly criticized Europe’s economic prowess compared to the U.S. at the dinner, angering attendees. Lagarde then got up and left. Lagarde warned a “new world order” is beginning, called for Europe to reconsider alliances and defend its interests.

Canadian PM Carney’s major speech: rules-based order is dead, mid-sized powers should unite against big-power coercion. Carney declared the “rules-based international order is dead,” hinting at major powers weaponizing economic integration as a means of coercion. Facing U.S. tariffs and geopolitical pressure, he urged mid-sized nations to form diverse alliances and increase hard power to resist hegemony. Canada will pursue “values-based realism,” increasing defense and trade diversification to avoid being “food on the table” for superpowers.

Macron: Europe likes respect, not bullying. China should invest in key sectors in Europe. Macron said, “This is not an age of new imperialism or colonialism, but a time for cooperative solutions to global challenges” and reiterated, “We prefer rule of law, not violence.” He also alluded to Trump, noting that despite some claims “war is over,” in reality 2025 is still plagued by dozens of wars. “China is welcome, but we want more FDI in key European sectors to spur growth.”

EU Parliament announces indefinite freeze on EU-US trade agreement review. According to CCTV news, Chair Lange announced the review of the EU/U.S. trade agreement will be suspended indefinitely. He said the EU’s sovereignty/integrity is threatened and thus normal review work cannot proceed.

Trump at risk of losing? U.S. Supreme Court cautious about removing Fed Governor Cook; justices warn against undermining central bank independence. During a two-hour hearing, no justice backed arguments for Cook’s removal. They cautioned against rashly settling constitutional issues and said it could shake the Fed’s independence and spark market turmoil. Trump-appointed Justice Kavanaugh worried that firing Cook without due process could authorize future presidents to dismiss Fed officials for any reason. The government argued Trump can dismiss Cook for “good cause.” Cook’s lawyer insisted the key is not letting markets think the Fed will cut rates under political pressure. Cook said she’ll defend independence as long as in office. Nasdaq and crypto dived after court signaled its lean.

Trump says has probably chosen a Fed chair candidate, wants Greenspan-type, hints Hassett “out again”. Trump said the shortlist is down to three – no, two, maybe just one in mind. BlackRock's Riedel and ex-Fed governor Walsh are strong candidates; Powell will not be happy as a governor; again signals preference for Hassett to stay as White House economic adviser.

U.S. aircraft carrier turned off transponders, jets depart from UK. U.S. building up aerial power in the Middle East as U.S.-Iran tension peaks. Reportedly, over a dozen F-15E “Strike Eagles” left UK for the Middle East; C-17 “Globemaster III” transporters also deployed. U.S. CENTCOM confirmed the deployments.

GPU rental prices surge as demand spikes; Jensen Huang: AI needs trillions in infrastructure. Davos: AI triggers “platform-level revolution,” with huge infrastructure investments needed. Huang described AI’s five-layer stack, from energy to applications, all needing strong support. He highlighted three breakthroughs: agent-style AI, DeepSeek’s open source inference model, and physical AI. Open source and agent-style AI are spurring wider adoption. He believes AI will automate jobs to create higher-value employment, making blue-collar roles like plumbers and electricians six-figure jobs. Calls for countries to build independent AI infrastructure.

Reports: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang may visit China before Lunar New Year. Jensen Huang is reportedly arriving before Lunar New Year for company events; he has previously celebrated in China.

Google TPU catching up – inference cost falls 70%, matches Nvidia’s price-perf. Goldman: Google/Broadcom’s TPU slashes inference costs – token cost per inference fell ~70% with TPU v7 vs v6, now as cheap as Nvidia GB200 NVL72. While not dethroning Nvidia, it’s shifting the AI chip focus from speed to cost/sustainability.

Apple plans to convert SIRI to its first chatbot in H2. Report: Apple to announce “Campos” chatbot at June WWDC, fully launch in September. SIRI will remain voice-accessible, but new features will far surpass current SIRI. Apple stock rose nearly 2% after the report; Alphabet, which provides underlying tech, gained 2%. Also, Apple is developing an AI wearable PIN.

Zuckerberg fights back? Meta Super Lab delivers first key AI models in January. Meta CTO says the Super Lab delivered the first key AI models internally this month, showing "great promise" and "outstanding performance." The tech is unfinished, but Meta is already seeing favorable returns on its 2025 investment ramp-up.

"Yizhongtian" releases first guidance: Tianfu Communication expects net profit to grow 40%-60% YoY, driven by stable high-speed optical device demand. Tianfu sees strong net profit driven by AI and data center expansion fueling optical device sales. Smart manufacturing reduces costs, counters FX headwinds. Net profit for 2025 expected at 1.881 to 2.15 billion RMB.

Moore Threads: 2025 revenue expected +230%-247%, net loss narrows by 34.5%-41.3%. Chinese GPU firm Moore Threads sees explosive AI growth driving 2025 revenue higher by 230%-247%. Still unprofitable, but net losses shrink sharply, showing rising competitiveness and market recognition is healing finances.

AI storage demand explodes: Demingli expects Q4 net up 1051.59%-1262.41% YoY. 2025 forecast: annual net profit up 85%-128%, revenue to break 10 billion RMB for first time. Core driver is AI-induced recovery in storage sector, especially in Q4, with single-quarter profit up over 10x YoY; shows profits releasing as storage enters an upcycle.

Node.js creator announces: The era of hand-written code is really over! Node.js founder Ryan Dahl says “the age of human handwritten code is over.” At the same time, Stability AI’s Emad Mostaque made several key predictions: “thought token” costs for AI coding will collapse, with code generated from a few prompts instead of heavy inference; top AI coding now costs $200/month, dropping below $1 in two years. This means a “reflective” era is coming, cutting software development barriers sharply.

Research Selections

Gold hasn’t broken $5,000 yet, but market already talking $6,000, $7,000, $10,000! Gold price is surging toward $5,000, with geopolitical tensions and tariff fears heating up, turning gold into the ultimate haven. Institutions are aggressively forecasting $7,000 to the mythical “$10,000 gold era.” As private capital replaces central banks as major buyers, analysts say this non-speculative secular bull market has just begun.

Time to bottom-fish Apple? Goldman: Upgrade super-cycle + SIRI re-invented, iPhone remains the top hardware portal in the AI era. Goldman is bullish on Apple’s coming F1Q26 earnings, expecting iPhone revenue to grow 13%. They cite upgrade cycles, upcoming foldable phones, and AI features. Focus on Apple’s pricing power and resilient services, not short-term worries. Despite concerns about storage chip costs, Goldman sees Apple managing with supply chain, redesigns, and price hikes.

Storage chip “gap” widens – how to pick winners and losers? Morgan Stanley says AI is splitting the semiconductor sector, creating a “K-shaped” recovery. AI storage chips (e.g., HBM) are in short supply, benefiting upstream suppliers like Samsung and SK Hynix. Downstream PC/phone makers can’t pass on rising costs. The AI “capacity squeeze” is leading even DDR4 to shortages — the key line between winners/losers.

Goldman: AI is igniting a global PCB boom cycle. Goldman says AI infrastructure is driving a PCB/CCL supercycle. AI servers need much faster speeds (800G/1.6T) and much larger volume, so by 2026, AI server PCB/CCL markets will grow by 113% and 142% respectively. Fast tech iterations create high barriers; leaders get the orders and keep winning.

“DRAM Storm” sweeping into auto sector? UBS warns generative AI is eating up fab capacity, HBM is taking over DRAM supply, so auto-grade memory now faces both price hikes and shortages, starting Q2 2026. If so, auto parts makers’ EBIT drops 5%-6%; worst case, down 24%. Carmakers with centralized computing or high electronics/ADAS content are most at risk, with a “tech break” possible by 2026-27.

Domestic Macro

PBOC cooperation: MOF launches five policies – supporting, not stimulating; interest subsidies deeply tied to industrial policy. The five policies on Jan 20 do not signal a major macro easing, but do show the growth “toolkit” is still open and more structured/coordinated. Industrial investment is still a key area for policy synergy, reflecting the focus on manufacturing upgrades and long-term productivity growth.

MIIT: Phase II 6G trials underway, AI now used in over 70% of ‘lighthouse’ smart factories. MIIT reports 6G R&D has finished phase I trials, reserves 300+ key technologies, and started phase II. China’s AI companies will top 6,000 in 2025, with core industry over 1.2 trillion RMB. AI now covers steel, nonferrous, power, telecom – next step is to crack chips and heterogeneous computing tech.

Ni Hong: Orderly "good housing" construction, building a new model for real estate. Ministry of Housing & Urban-Rural Development says high-quality real estate needs transformation/upgrade. Focus: 1) Orderly "good housing" construction, 2) Build new real estate model, ensuring housing stability for the people, supporting policy and reform, creating a "person, house, land, money" interactive mechanism for stable transition.

Slow bull is hard – How much did SOEs sell? Recent market cool-off driven by major ETF redemptions, mainly due to Huijin’s selling. Nearly 294.8 billion yuan exited in 4 days (8.6% of holdings), mainly from Science/Tech 50 ETF. Even so, small/micro-cap stocks rallied (e.g., CSI 500), showing trends are stronger than central intervention; funds may spill over into smaller caps. “Slow bull” remains challenging for A shares.

Domestic Firms

Vanke passed a hurdle, 1.1 billion bond rollover approved.

“AI portal battle” – ByteDance becoming a "compelling force," Alibaba/Tencent can't afford to lose. ByteDance is pushing hard on both AI cloud infrastructure and consumer apps, now accounting for nearly 13% of China AI cloud revenues (Alibaba 23%). Doubao app DAUs broke 100 million, highest token consumption in China. Goldman predicts 2026 is not a “model race” but a “default portal life-and-death battle.” Whoever controls the default portal rewrites traffic, ad budgets, ecommerce, and profit pools. ByteDance controls users’ time – the reason why Tencent and Alibaba can’t afford to lose.

“Sky, Ground, End, Rocket, App”: Five-layer framework for commercial space sector. China’s commercial aerospace is moving from engineering-driven to industry-driven. Debang Securities sees “sky, ground, end, rocket, app” as five dimensions remodeling the chain: satellites enter mass-production; ground stations become network hubs; “end” is revenue key; rockets cut costs by reuse; “app” is the final output/value engine. All five together reshape investment landscape.

Bridgewater China posts 45% YTD return, best in five years; manages 60 billion RMB, leads foreign PE. Bridgewater’s China fund returned 45% in 2025, its best in five years. Bridgewater says China equities remain attractive thanks to policy and AI sentiment, and is now “mildly optimistic,” slightly increasing risk asset exposure. Their all-weather strategy grows AUM to 60 billion RMB, still leading foreign PE market.

First big-share bank releases 2025 annual results; Industrial Bank posts higher revenue and profit, with liability cost cuts proving effective.

Global Macro

Fed likely to "stand pat" next week; Economists: Rate cuts wait for Powell’s departure. Strong economy and sticky inflation are delaying Fed rate cuts. Markets mostly expect the Fed to hold rates next week, and see low chance for Q1 cuts, with easing window likely pushed to May after Powell’s term ends. Robust growth underpins this move; political probes into Powell add policy uncertainty.

JPMorgan’s Dimon: Trump’s credit card rate cap would be “economic disaster,” could force mass bank lending cut. JPM CEO Dimon warned at Davos: Trump’s 10% APR cap could spark disaster – banks would pull back lending, hurting consumer access, especially for less creditworthy clients, and hitting spending. Banks are preparing impact reports for policymakers. Dimon also said Europe’s destiny must be self-determined.

U.S. housing lead indicator dims – Dec pending home sales drop biggest since pandemic. U.S. Dec pending home sales index fell 1.3% YoY (prior -0.3%); MoM plunge 9.3% to 71.8 (expected -0.3%, prior +3.3%). This drop is striking after prior signs of housing recovery.

Politicians call for intervention, big banks get ready to buy – Japanese bonds surge on Wednesday! As Japan’s big banks signal plans to buy heavily, and politicians call to stabilize markets, JGBs rallied, long yields skidded across the curve.

Korean President rebuffs chip tariff threat: If taxed 100%, Americans will bear the cost! Lee Jae-myung said Korea/Taiwan chip makers control 80%-90% of global supply; a 100% U.S. import tariff would jack up U.S. prices, with most cost passed to Americans.

“Canary” cheers: Korea Jan exports up 14.9%, chips surge 70%. Korea, seen as the “world’s canary,” posted “red-hot” Jan exports — up 14.9% YoY in the first 20 days. Semiconductors jumped 70.2%, offsetting weakness in autos from U.S. tariffs and other headwinds.

Jordan, UAE et al. announce joining so-called “Peace Committee”. Each country will join as per relevant laws and procedures. Egypt, Pakistan, and UAE have already signed up.

Global Firms

OpenAI CFO defends adding ads to ChatGPT, calls it "robust business model". CFO Sarah Friar said at Davos, the company needs a “robust business model” to provide AI tech inclusively: “Our mission is to benefit all humanity with AGI, not just those who can pay.”

OpenAI promises: Will pay for $500B AI infrastructure power upgrades. OpenAI said, “In all Stargate community projects, we promise to pay our own energy bills so our operations don’t raise your electricity price.” This pledge follows Microsoft’s similar plan and Trump’s push for tech firms to pay power plant costs.

Capitalwatch again blasts: AppLovin is only the tip of the money laundering iceberg, over a dozen companies, ‘nuclear evidence’ sent to regulators. Shorting AppLovin is “just appetizers.” Capitalwatch says illegal funds from Chinese “Tuandaiwang” have been injected into over a dozen U.S.-listed companies; “nuclear-level” evidence has been submitted to U.S. agencies, hinting more companies face short selling attacks.

Berkshire to “fully exit” Kraft Heinz, registers to sell 325 million shares, stock plunges. Berkshire Hathaway will sell 325.4 million Kraft Heinz shares, nearly a full exit, and ends an iconic Buffett-era investment. Kraft Heinz shares tumbled 4.9% post-market. This comes as the company tries to reverse the 2015 mega-merger and push for a split, while Berkshire management repeatedly voiced opposition.

Sector/Concepts

1. Power | According to Shanghai Securities Journal, the cold wave pushed grid loads to record highs this week. From Jan 19-21, State Grid area loads hit new winter highs for three straight days, peaking at 1.168 billion kW (up by 122 million kW, +12.2% vs last year’s record). With warming expected over the weekend, demand is expected to ease.

Commentary: First Startup Securities says State Grid’s “15th Five-Year” investments focus on self-driven emissions goals. Key is building new power systems, targeting new wind/solar installations at +200 million kW/year. R&D funding to surpass 240 billion yuan; digital tech to deeply integrate with grid planning, construction, operation, service. All segments — ultra-high voltage, main trunk, distribution, smart equipment, storage — should see continued industry prosperity.

2. Digital RMB | PBOC said that on Jan 15, 2026, it convened a payments settlement meeting. The work should align closely to the “15th Five-Year” plan and financial superpower goals; accelerate modern payment system development, expand cross-border RMB payments, and push multi-layered, diversified cross-border payment systems.

Commentary: Guotai Haitong notes previous policies called for using digital RMB’s instant settlement, low cost and programmability to create innovative solutions, exploring its use for channel payments, financing, tax rebates, etc. It could be key to expanding RMB’s cross-border use. Watch banking IT, payment ecosystem, hardware wallets, and related equipment chains.

3. CPU | IT Home reports Intel’s CFO said datacenter and client CPU demand far exceeded expectations, and inventories are falling rapidly; Q1 2026 may see max supply strain and possible shortages. Plus, KeyBanc data suggests Intel and AMD will hike server CPU prices by 10%-15% to balance supply/demand.

Commentary: Analysts say rising datacenter CPU demand is distorting balance and driving up prices. Generative AI is reshaping spending, crowding out regular servers. Cloud giants’ generic server purchases are now due for renewal amidst architecture upgrades. This has fueled server CPU price hikes.

4. Heterogeneous Computing Power | On Jan 21, MIIT vice minister Zhang Yunming said next, China will drive innovation and break through training chip/heterogeneous computing tech. Heterogeneous computing means integrating different types of hardware (CPU, GPU, FPGA, ASIC, NPU, etc.) for higher efficiency/density. Key is allocating optimum resources for parallel, logical, low-latency, etc. tasks, breaking through single-architecture bottlenecks.

Commentary: China Securities Journal sees heterogeneous computing as the base for “East Data West Computing.” AI, HPC, big data demand complex tasks, making traditional CPU inefficient for parallel/rendering/AI inference. Combining CPU, GPU, FPGA, NPU, etc., enables specialization and boosts performance and efficiency.

5. Solid-State Battery | Jilin reports FAW has finished its first Hongqi prototype car using its in-house solid-state battery, entering real car testing stage. After 470 days of R&D, tech breakthroughs include sulfide electrolyte, 10Ah cell performance, and 60Ah cell process. The 66Ah cell passed a 200°C abuse test, and sulfide electrolyte conduction hit industry-high 10mS/cm.

Commentary: China Securities Journal says solid-state batteries are next-gen power batteries, offering higher energy density, safety, and ultra-long life (8,000–10,000 cycles), set to replace conventional lithium-ion. Thanks to policy/tech/industry chain, China may take 40% of the global market. Experts forecast 614.1 GWh shipped by 2030, over 10% penetration, 250+ billion yuan market; China’s share could hit 116.3 billion and 42% CAGR.

6. 6G | Jan 21, MIIT official Xie said China has 42% of the world’s essential 5G patents; phase I 6G trials done, 300+ key techs reserved, phase II launched. 5G/thousand-gig networks cover 91/97 major industrial categories; industrial internet covers 41 of them, powering economic growth.

7. Autonomous Driving | Jan 21, Guangdong provincial gov released AI-powered transport development policies. Focusing on intelligent vehicles, smart logistics, and vehicle-road-cloud integration. Six cities designated pilots — Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Foshan, Dongguan, Zhongshan — to break cross-region barriers, fast-track commercial deployment.

Commentary: Securities Times notes Guangdong supports companies innovating in remote driving cockpits, AI decision-making, precise prediction/control, raising R&D on key techs. Supports full-stack smart car ecosystem and cross-city licenses/recognition, cutting repeat testing and costs, accelerating L3/L4 deployment. Pushes auto-driving “big models” paired with top datasets/tools, lifting decision/prediction power. The province aims to build a leading national smart vehicle ecosystem, leveraging local compute/networks/scenes.

Upcoming Key News

China’s December Swift RMB global payment share.

U.S. Q3 real GDP.

U.S. November core PCE price index, personal income, and spending.

U.S. weekly initial jobless claims.

ECB releases December monetary policy minutes.

P&G and Intel to announce results.

U.S. weekly EIA crude inventories.

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Risk Reminder and DisclaimerMarkets have risks, invest cautiously. This article does not constitute personal investment advice, nor does it take into account any user's individual investment objectives, financial circumstances, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, views, or conclusions therein fit their specific situation. Investing on this basis is at your own risk.

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