How Chinese tech companies navigate geopolitical tensions: TikTok and Manus adopted a “China shedding” strategy, while Shein and Meituan seek non-US growth
Meaghan Tobin /New York Times:
How Chinese tech companies navigate geopolitical tensions: TikTok and Manus adopted a “China shedding” strategy, while Shein and Meituan seek non-US growth
Meaghan Tobin /New York Times:
How Chinese tech companies navigate geopolitical tensions: TikTok and Manus adopted a “China shedding” strategy, while Shein and Meituan seek non-US growth
Chinese firms must contend with geopolitical tensions and mistrust to do business in the United States.
China launches a probe into competition among online food delivery platforms, aiming to curb price wars that have contributed to deflationary economic pressures
China will investigate cutthroat competition among food delivery platforms operated by tech firms such as Meituan and Alibaba …
Report: China's market regulator drafts rules to curb “coercive competition” in the online food delivery market, spurring a rally in Meituan and JD.com's shares
Bloomberg :
Meituan, Alibaba, and JD.com vow to curb “disorderly competition” and end their price war in China's food delivery space after warnings from government agencies
Meituan, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., and JD.com Inc. vowed Friday to curb “disorderly competition” …
How Meituan used Hong Kong as a trial market for global food delivery expansion, with its Keeta service driving out Deliveroo before moving to Saudi Arabia
Meituan, the Chinese food delivery giant, tested its global expansion in Hong Kong, where its Keeta service displaced a rival before moving to other markets.
A look at Temu, Shein, Meituan, and other Chinese companies' expansion plans in Brazil, as they face slowing domestic demand and hurdles in the US and Europe
Confronted with tariffs and scrutiny in the United States and Europe, Chinese consumer brands are betting that they can become household names …
Meituan, Alibaba, Tencent, and other Chinese tech companies are working to expand in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, where they would face less political scrutiny
Companies would face less political scrutiny in a region where ties are mainly centred around economic interests
Chinese Premier Li Qiang met with executives from Alibaba, ByteDance, Meituan, and Xiaohongshu, pledging to reduce compliance costs as China's economy weakens
Bloomberg :