Processing aluminum from bauxite is a highly energy intensive process. No surprise that they are picking up the slack from lack of capacity elsewhere around the world.huge PMI in March in China's Aluminum industry
huge divergence on Tungsten pricing inside and outside of China as export controls start to bite
The US and Israel’s war on Iran is expected to help China’s exporters gain global market share from rivals in countries hit harder by high energy prices and supply chain shocks, according to economists. Chinese factories should be able to maintain steady production thanks to the country’s large oil reserves and domestic energy supplies, they said, while the war’s disruption to oil and gas markets could spur a longer term shift to green energy that would benefit Chinese industry. “One could certainly see China take more market share globally as a result of the energy shock,” said Fred Neumann, chief Asia economist at HSBC.
Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics, said the country was “quite well placed to gain global market export share”, adding that “energy costs are probably not going to rise as much as in other countries”.
“Barring a protracted full-fledged oil crisis, China’s supply-side resilience may even allow it to expand export market share — echoing the dynamic seen during the Covid shock in 2020,” Citi economist Xiangrong Yu said in a research note. He added that “China’s long-term energy strategy — focused on investing in renewables, diversifying import sources, and building strategic reserves — leaves it better cushioned than industrial peers”.
I think if China wants to succeed in their new five year plan. (increasing wages and consumption etc) they need to fix their labor market. Way too much control by companies and employers and lacking worker rights. They can control and pay little to no overtime wages etc without major penalties. This leads to a lack of jobs that should be filled with more workers instead of pressing the employees to work overtime.
Not long ago, Western policymakers were writing the of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). That verdict is now dangerously obsolete. The stark reality of 2025 has shattered the narrative of a Chinese retreat. Far from a quiet dissolution, BRI project values have now rebounded and eclipsed their . New data that in a staggering show of fiscal and geopolitical resilience, BRI projects reached $213.5 billion across regions and a wide array of sectors last year. This resurgence occurred alongside a tectonic shift in China’s commercial standing; in 2025, total surpassed $6.3 trillion, yielding a record-breaking trade surplus of near $1.2 trillion.
Ironically, the escalation of U.S.-China trade tensions since April 2025 and have only accelerated this transformation of Beijing’s expansive export campaign. Squeezed by mounting trade walls, Chinese firms are leveraging targeted BRI investments to systematically reroute their supply chains through lower-tariff jurisdictions, preserving indirect access to Western markets. Simultaneously, Beijing is deploying this capital surge to capture emerging, non-U.S. markets to absorb its massive production. The BRI is back, it is bigger, and it is being built on the very walls that Washington intended to keep it out.
Yes, Huawei is a behemoth and they are very meticulous at everything they do(usually aiming to be the best/at forefront ).
Huawei's R&D for 2025 reached 192B RMB. It pays a lot more per R&D employee than BYD.
At this stage abit of inflation is not such a bad thing for China after having such a long period of deflationWonder if rising fuel prices will cause inflation. Looks like neolibs won’t even have deflation cope by then…
China definitely has a Marxist political economy and a political leadership that use a materialist framework to determine their form of governance, Marx never disputed that capitalism in the short term would lead to the rapid development of productive forces of an economy, even if the mode of production was based of off capitalist exploitation, and Chinese leadership definitely seem to understand this as well. And still the most foundational parts of the Chinese economy are owned and managed by the state in a way which doesn't mainly prioritize perpetually increasing profits, e.g.I am not the first person to note that China is marxist in name only. Its economic system is very cutthroat. It's more akin to a nationalist-capitalist system without any elections rather than genuine communism. You don't have hundreds of billionaires in a Marxist system.