Vietnam’s Law on Artificial Intelligence Comes into Force: New Dividends and Deep-Water Zones for Chinese AI Enterprises Going Global (1)
WeRide and Uber Launch Fully Driverless Robotaxi Commercial Operations in Dubai
XPeng Launches G6 and G9 in Mexico, First Authorized Stores to Open April 6

Unpacking China | Key Chinese Firms to Watch This Week (22/03/2026-28/03/2026)

Cainiao Announces Plans for Specialized European Warehouses, with Mannheim Battery Facility Now Operational

You're Invited: China's Innovation, Up Close
China is no longer just a manufacturing hub or a consumer market to watch from a distance. It has become the world's most dynamic innovaton laboratory where AI applications scale faster, humanoid robots roll off production lines at mass-market prices, smart factories rewrite the rules of manufacturing, and internet platforms evolve their business models quicker than anywhere else.
CES 2026 in Numbers | From Shenzhen to Las Vegas: Huaqiangbei’s Year-End Report
CES 2026 features nearly equal numbers of exhibitors from China and the United States, underscoring its increasingly balanced global landscape. China’s growing influence—driven by highly concentrated regional clusters such as the Pearl River Delta—highlights that competition now revolves around systems, scenarios, and industrial ecosystems rather than individual products.
Chassis Supply Chain's "iPhone Moment": China's Tier 1 Shift as LeeKr Emerges
Over the past decade, China's electric vehicle (EV) industry has evolved from a niche experiment into a leading force in the global automotive landscape. In the first ten months of 2025, China exported over 2 million EVs, nearly double the year-earlier figure. From European city streets to Southeast Asian highways and Latin American urban centers, Chinese EVs have emerged as one of the most prominent symbols of a new era of “Made in China.”
How Malaysia Became Southeast Asia’s “Computing Power Hub”
Leveraging geographic security, low costs, and strong policy incentives, Malaysia has rapidly risen as a computing power hub in Southeast Asia. Johor has absorbed spillover demand from Singapore and moved decisively into the AI high-compute track, becoming a key transit hub for Chinese companies’ overseas computing expansion.







