Trump is expected to sign a bill that could prevent some Chinese companies from listing their shares on US exchanges unless they adhere to US auditing standards, the White House said
All the top five smartphone vendors - Xiaomi, Samsung, Vivo, Realme and Oppo- saw their shipment grow in the third quarter compared to the year-ago period
Indian actions violate the legal interests of Chinese investors and services providers and China asks India to correct its mistakes, commerce ministry spokesman Gao Feng said
Trump has been piling pressure on Chinese-owned companies, such as by vowing to ban short-video app TikTok from the United States
Roshan Mishra joined the company in April
The most serious border tension in decades between the two countries has already hurt their economic ties and Indian officials expect the damage to get worse
Articles from partner media outlets that were perceived as critical of the Chinese government would either not be republished on the BaBe app or would be taken down from the app
The issue of Chinese stock listings has attracted the attention of President Donald Trump, who has ratcheted up his attacks on China over the coronavirus pandemic
The project costing Rs 125-crore was awarded by RECPDCL, an arm of Rural Electrification Corporation under the ministry of power, in September 2019
The latest move of Trump Administration is part of its effort to crackdown on Chinese companies
A formal announcement from ByteDance's founders on setting up shop in London is expected soon, said the report
Numbers beat analysts' forecasts for a more modest improvement of 51.3
Clones or lite versions of 59 apps banned earlier, say sources
After a record slump early in the year, China's economy rebounded more than expected in the second quarter
The work was to be executed on a 417-km section of the corridor between Kanpur and Mughalsarai
The survey conducted by LocalCircles also says that action should be taken against the Indian companies with higher Chinese ownership and the Chinese directors must resign.
Velchamy Sankarlingam who is President of Engineering and Products at Zoom said India is and will continue to be an important market for Zoom
Not just for cost-effectiveness, public sector firms turn to China for lack of domestic qualified bidders, technology
He further said state discoms should not give orders for supply of equipment to Chinese firms
These vendors have even covered the signboards of Chinese brands in their shopping complex with banners saying "Made In India"