Miscellaneous News

Randomuser

Major
Registered Member

Korea really took a huge L to their soft power and image here.

All this talk about Japan and Korea doing this and that in football. But in the end in terms of the football caste, they are near the bottom.

Maybe this is why they keep bringing them up to shame China. Coz those guys will be good in Asia but never good enough to be the top globally. Its a way of keeping the pecking order.
 
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Sardaukar20

Major
Registered Member
BBC admits that North Korea's economy is booming.

But the BBC argues that:
1) Pyongyang is a giant Potemkin.
2) North Korea is making big money from its arms trade with Russia.
3) North Korea is stealing money from the crypto market. Then using that money to fund it's military and nuclear program.

Hmm, #3 sounds familiar. Where have I heard of that before?

Screenshot_2026-06-30-19-16-05-41_40deb401b9ffe8e1df2f1cc5ba480b12.jpg
"Nobody will notice their money is missing!"
 

FriedButter

Brigadier
Registered Member
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US retailers frontload China orders for holiday season, shipping firms say​

June 30 (Reuters) - U.S. retailers have brought forward orders from China by four-to-six weeks to secure their inventories for Black Friday and Christmas holiday sales before expected tariff hikes later this year, shipping executives said.

U.S. President Donald Trump's visit to China last month ‌has preserved the detente between the world's two largest powers, but uncertainty remains high.

A universal 10% U.S. tariff imposed by Washington in February, after the Supreme Court declared some earlier tariffs illegal, expires on July 24, but it is widely expected to be replaced with higher levies.

The U.S. Trade Representative has proposed a 12.5% tariff on imports from China and elsewhere following an investigation into forced labour, which Beijing denies, with a final decision expected in coming months.

"There is an expectation that tariffs could be raised again, or restored to previous levels, so everyone is rushing to get goods in before that happens," ⁠said Tony Meng, a China-based senior sales manager at shipping firm XPD Global.

U.S. EXPORTS EXPECTED TO STAY STRONG IN JUNE

Usually such orders peak in July-September but shipping firms said volumes in May and June were higher than expected, contributing to a spike in shipping prices.

The frontloading means that the 35% growth in U.S. imports from China in May, which overshadowed April's 11% growth and March's contraction, could be sustained in June but may fade later in the summer.

Exports have been a key growth driver this year for China, compensating for structural weakness in domestic demand and building on a strong 2025 when the world's second-largest economy posted a record $1.2 trillion trade surplus.
SHIPPING COSTS RISE

Maritime consultancy Drewry's World Container Index showed spot shipping rates from Shanghai to New York on June 25 were $7,149 per 40-foot container, ⁠6% higher than a week before and 25% up on the year. On the Shanghai to Los Angeles route the cost was $5,750, 12% up on the week and 54% higher on the year.

"Importers continue frontloading shipments ahead of potential tariff changes and higher bunker-related costs," a Drewry report said.

Outdoor furniture maker Jin Chaofeng said it would be hard to pass ⁠the entire cost of shipping fees on to customers, pointing to thin pricing power and profit margins for Chinese manufacturers in less technologically advanced sectors.

Kyle Henderson, CEO and co-founder of container-tracking software provider Vizion, warned however that tariffs still weigh on overall U.S. demand which remains below its three-year average and should only be ⁠described as "normal-to-soft."

The higher shipping costs reflect capacity management by transport firms more than surging U.S. demand, Henderson said, citing some cancelled sailings in recent weeks.

Henderson expects volumes to drop after July and into the third quarter due to a "combination of inventory already landed and a tariff environment that structurally raises the cost of China-origin goods."
U.S. retailers have brought forward orders from China by four-to-six weeks to secure their inventories for Black Friday and Christmas holiday sales before expected tariff hikes later this year, shipping executives said.

Corporate America with their political connections wouldn’t be spending money overstocking if they didn’t believe trade war 3.0 could happen. I had expected they would wait until after Christmas to restart hostilities.

But it looks like they intend to visit China and extend the trade truce for the mid terms. Then immediately attack China if they win the mid terms for the Christmas price hikes.
 

Thecore

Junior Member
Registered Member

Korea really took a huge L to their soft power and image here.

All this talk about Japan and Korea doing this and that in football. But in the end in terms of the football caste, they are near the bottom.

Maybe this is why they keep bringing them up to shame China. Coz those guys will be good in Asia but never good enough to be the top globally. Its a way of keeping the pecking order.
I think the fact that Korean and Japanese fans reacted like they were shoo-ins for the finals and had super cringey breakdowns after getting bounced so early compounds to the loss of image. They were talking like Mexico and Brazil were just minor speed bumps on the way to winning the cup and embarrassingly lost their minds when things didn’t go the way they expected. Delulu.
 
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