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asiabits

By: Michael Broza & Thomas Derksen
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What the world will talk about tomorrow, you’ll listen to here today. Innovation & Technology from Asia in <5 mins.© 2025 asiabits Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Louis Vuitton faces rising China rivals | asiabits Nov 19th
    Nov 19 2025

    What's in this episode:

    • TOP BIT: LVMH Boss Shops for Chinese Brands
      • Bernard Arnault purchased items from local Chinese brands during his latest Shanghai trip, a symbolic shift.
      • The Chinese luxury market is slowing (down 20%), prompting consumers to turn to homegrown labels with sharper pricing and stronger local aesthetics.
      • Domestic brands like Songmont, Laopu Gold (1,000%+ online sales surge), and Mao Geping are growing at double and triple-digit rates, challenging Western houses.
    • NUMBER OF THE DAY: 313.3 Billion RMB (~$42 Billion USD)
      • The size of China's coffee market in 2024.
      • Consumption has jumped from 6 to 22.24 cups per person in seven years (+15% avg. growth).
      • The market is driven by cheap, convenient brews from Luckin and Cotti, pressuring high-end specialty coffee.
    • MARKET BIT: Manner Coffee Starts Billion IPO Run in Hong Kong
      • Shanghai's Manner Coffee, backed by ByteDance and Temasek, is planning a Hong Kong IPO at up to $3 billion USD valuation.
      • Manner serves as ByteDance's "offline behavior lab," using digital tracking for optimization.
      • The IPO reflects Hong Kong's revitalized consumer-focused listing market.
    • HEAD OF THE DAY: Kwon Young-soo (권영수)
      • Former LG veteran who guided four affiliates as CEO, known for his "Attitude over intelligence" management style.
      • He emphasizes that CEOs must take risks and execute the vision set by owners, and that investment in AI cannot be delayed.
    • Partner Highlights:
      • China pivots its foreign lending to US tech (semiconductors, AI) with over $200 billion USD flowing into US projects.
      • Apple hit 25% smartphone market share in China in October, a temporary high before the Huawei Mate 80 launch.
      • Singapore's transport authority confirmed its Chinese Yutong e-buses lack remote control functions, addressing cybersecurity concerns.
    • Country Reads: Strong reforms boost M&A activity; Singapore leads Southeast Asian IPOs; Nvidia's HBM demand hikes chip prices.

    For more, subscribe to our newsletter at asiabits.com

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    8 mins
  • US sanctions crown China’s new chip billionaire | asiabits Nov 18th
    Nov 18 2025

    What's in this episode:

    • TOP BIT: US Sanctions Turn China’s AI Chip Star into a Billionaire
      • Cambricon's founder Chen Tianshi has seen his fortune surge to $23 billion USD.
      • Stock Surge: Share price up over 765% in 24 months after being pushed onto the US Entity List in 2022.
      • Revenue Boom: Q3 revenue hit $240 million USD and net profit reached $78 million USD (a 500%+ increase year-over-year).
      • The US chip ban and Beijing’s "buy local" policy redirect orders to domestic suppliers like Cambricon, despite a technology gap with Nvidia's ecosystem.
    • NUMBER OF THE DAY: 491.000
      • The percentage of China-Japan flight bookings canceled since the start of the diplomatic dispute.
      • This cancellation wave risks shaving up to 0.5 percentage points off Japan’s GDP and is pushing tourism back to Covid-era levels.
    • MARKET BIT: L’Oréal Buys into China’s Skincare Boom
      • L’Oréal takes a minority stake in "clean-beauty" label LAN (following an earlier $62 million USD stake in Chando).
      • This shortcut strategy counters the $75 billion USD "C-Beauty Boom," where local brands are rapidly gaining market share against foreign competitors.
      • The goal is to stabilize L’Oréal China's business, which grew 3% in Q3, by tapping into local speed and mass-market access without cannibalizing core brands.
    • HEAD OF THE DAY: Chen Tianshi
      • The Cambricon founder whose net worth is now $23 billion USD, a visible leader of the new generation of Chinese chipmakers.
      • His early AI chip vision was once rejected for funding and called "fantasy."
    • Highlights:
      • Goldman Sachs is in exclusive talks to buy Burger King Japan for about $452 million USD.
      • European PE firm EQT plans to triple its Asia investments to $110 billion USD over five years, challenging KKR and Blackstone.
      • Luckin Coffee reports Q3 revenue growth of 50% to €1.8 billion and record 110 million monthly active customers, but downplays US relisting plans.
    • Country Reads: AirAsia X uses Istanbul to reach Europe; Samsung hikes memory chip prices by up to 60%; Vietnam and Germany deepen high-tech alliance.

    For more news, subscribe at asiabits.com

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    8 mins
  • China–Japan conflict escalates – asiabits Nov 17th 2025
    Nov 17 2025

    What's in this episode:

    • TOP BIT: Travel Warnings, Warships, and Sharp Words
      • Japan's PM Sanae Takaichi states a Chinese attack on Taiwan poses an "existential threat" to Japan, sparking a diplomatic storm.
      • Beijing responds with harsh rhetoric (a diplomat suggesting Japan's "dirty neck" be "severed") and summons ambassadors.
      • China issues travel warnings for Japan, leading to free rebookings/refunds for flights.
      • Increased military presence: China's Coast Guard patrols near disputed islands; Taiwan reports more military aircraft/vessels.
      • Beijing advises Chinese students to "carefully reconsider" studying in Japan, while simultaneously courting Taiwanese travelers with visa-on-arrival.
      • Historical context: Tensions fueled by past disputes (2012 Senkaku crisis), China's military buildup, and Japan's strategic shift in defense policy.
    • NUMBER OF THE DAY: $11.2 Billion
      • The amount Chinese tourists spent in Japan in 2024, making them Japan’s strongest spending group (one-fifth of all foreign tourist spending).
      • Early slowdown signs: Hotel cancellations and paused marketing activities in China due to political tensions.
    • MARKET BIT: Samsung’s $310 Billion Mega Plan
      • Samsung plans a $310 billion investment in South Korea over five years to lead the global AI race.
      • Key projects include Pyeongtaek Plant 5 (chip fab, 2028 launch) and new AI data centers by Samsung SDS for proprietary AI models and GPU capacity.
      • Part of a national re-industrialization push, with Hyundai also investing $86.5 billion in AI, autonomous tech, and EVs.
      • Samsung creates its first dedicated M&A team for AI, semiconductors, and automotive tech.
    • WORD OF THE WEEK: Nunchi (눈치)
      • A crucial Korean soft skill meaning "eye measure"—the ability to read the room and unspoken cues.
      • Essential for navigating strict hierarchies in Korean companies, influencing behavior and feedback.
    • Partner Highlights:
      • China approves foreign in-car AI (Tesla, Volvo, Mercedes-Benz) for the first time.
      • Alibaba adopts digital bank tokens (JPMorgan partnership) for faster global payments.
      • Marathon madness in Seoul disrupts daily life, with events jumping from 19 to 254 in four years.
    • Country Reads: Japan split on collective self-defense if China attacks Taiwan; Thailand's king visits China; Malaysia's 2025 growth forecast.

    Read more at asiabits.com

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    9 mins
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