5G launches as Party plenary ends

Access Archive

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If youโ€™re in New York in November, check out these two The China Project events:

  • November 4: Come listen to Michael Yamashita talk about and show photographs from his more than three decades on the Silk Road from Europe to China as an award-winning lensman for National Geographic. Access members get in free; email events@thechinaproject.com to reserve your spot.ย 

  • November 21: Our NEXT China conference will feature breakout sessions on industries and topics like healthcare and life science, supply chains, corporate philanthropy, legal services, and digital marketing. Click here to learn more, and be sure to use the code NCAccess for $150 off your ticket.ย 

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn and team


The flag of the Communist Party of China. One of the key messages of the fourth plenary session in Beijing this week was a reaffirmation that the โ€œCommunist Party leads everythingโ€ in Chinese society.ย 

1. China launches 5G mobile ahead of schedule

Around the time weโ€™re sending this email, Chinese mobile operators will begin selling their first 5G accounts to consumers, ahead of schedule. The launch was originally scheduled for 2020. Reuters reports:ย 

China Mobileโ€™s, China Unicom and China Telecomโ€™s said on their websites and online stores that 5G plans, which start from as low as 128 yuan a month, will be available from Friday, allowing Chinese consumers nationwide to use the ultra-fast mobile internet serviceโ€ฆ

Authorities have said that they plan to install over 50,000 5G base stations across 50 Chinese cities in the country by the end of this year, and that big cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Hangzhou, are already covered by the 5G network.

Reuters connects the accelerated launch to โ€œtensions with the United States, especially over its boycott of telecom giant Huawei Technologies.โ€ The timing does indeed seem to be a message. This is how nationalist rag Global Times sees it:ย 

U.S. lags behind 5G race because of mind-set

[Americaโ€™s] narrow-minded zero sum thinking conflicts with the inherent open nature of 5G technology. As a result, China is leading in 5G development. If the U.S. always opts for dirty tricks against China instead of how to conduct healthy competition with China and develop its own 5G based on the technological achievements China has made, this will lead to nothing but a larger gap between China and the U.S.ย ย 

The Wall Street Journal notes that the U.S. and South Korea were first to operate 5G telecom networks on small commercial scales, but that China will very soon have over 10 times as many cell towers capable of beaming 5G signals than the U.S.:

China already has more than 80,000 5G macro base stations, typically cellular towers with antennas and other hardware that beam wireless signals over wide areas, government officials said. They said China will end the year with about 130,000, while Bernstein Research estimates South Korea will be in second place with 75,000, followed by the U.S. with 10,000.

2. Party plenary closes with a vague message on Hong Kongย 

Xinhua reports: โ€œThe 19th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) concluded its fourth plenary session in Beijing on Thursday with the release of a communiquรฉโ€ (in Chinese).ย 

These plenary sessions are โ€œfour-day meeting of the partyโ€™s Central Committee, which brings together about 370 senior officials to decide the direction of party policy around once a year,โ€ according to Chris Buckley of the New York Times (porous paywall). Aside from the communiquรฉ, we know almost nothing about what was said and decided in Beijing this week. However, Buckley is one of the more perspicacious observers of senior Party leadership, and this is how he reads the document (in summary):ย 

Hints of a new plan to quell the Hong Kong protests.

The most eye-catching language was about Hong Kongโ€ฆ China would โ€œbuild and improve a legal system and enforcement mechanism to defend national security in the special administrative regions,โ€ the meeting summary saidโ€ฆ

The vague language leaves plenty of guesswork about what the Chinese leaders may have in mind.ย 

A fresh focus on โ€˜clearly increasingโ€™ risks.

Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ and his Party see growing risks both abroad and at home and are preparing to deal with them.ย 

Extending the Communist Partyโ€™s leadership even further.

The Central Committee echoed Mr. Xiโ€™s frequent demands that the โ€œCommunist Party leads everything,โ€ and that the authority of central leaders, like himself, be fiercely protected. And it hinted that there may be more changes to bolster Mr. Xi and the party, while also trying to improve coordination in policymaking.

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn

3. Hong Kong falls into a recession as protests continue

CNN reports:ย 

Hong Kong plunged into recession in the third quarter, according to official data released Thursday. The economy shrank 3.2 percent during the three months to September, compared to the previous quarter. That’s a sharp slowdown from the 0.5 percent contraction recorded in the second quarter, and much worse than economists had expectedโ€ฆEconomists are now predicting that for the whole year, Hong Kong will miss its earlier target of between 0 and 1 percent growth.

However, the โ€œcityโ€™s financial markets are largely holding upโ€ despite the protests.ย 

The Hang Seng Index (HSI) is still up 4 percent for the year, and the political crisis hasn’t been a deal breaker for investors yet, many of whom still see the city as an important gateway to Asia.

The IPO market is also proving resilient: In September Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) listed its Asia business on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKXCF) raising $5 billion in the second biggest IPO of the year after Uber (UBER).

Alibaba could be the next big listing, perhaps as soon as November. The ecommerce giant has been considering, and repeatedly delaying, a dual listing in Hong Kong for many months now, but Reuters reports that the company โ€œeyeing a listing in Hong Kong as early as November to raise up to $15 billion, after political unrest put the move on ice earlier this year.โ€

Meanwhile, the protests and political turmoil in the city continue. Hereโ€™s the latest:

โ€œMore than 70 people have been arrested in Tuen Mun on Wednesday night following a protest over an irritating tear gas smell emanating from a police base,โ€ according to the Hong Kong Free Press.ย 

โ€œJustice Russell Coleman of the High Court issued [an] order to restrain members of the public from โ€˜wilfully disseminating, circulating, publishing or republishingโ€™ any material on platforms online such as popular Reddit-like forum LIHKG and messaging app Telegram that โ€˜promotes, encourages or incites the use or threat of violence,โ€™โ€ the South China Morning Post reports.

โ€œOcean Park has canceled its annual Halloween Fest โ€” one of its key tourist events โ€” citing safety concerns. Meanwhile, police have warned that an unauthorized march is set to take place in the Central area on Thursday,โ€ per the HKFP.ย 

One pro-Beijing lawmaker, Abraham Shek, criticized Chief Executive Carrie Lamโ€™s focus on housing as a solution to the protests. โ€œYou cannot buy dignity. Their five demands did not mention that they want a house. The five demands of young people are that they want justice, fairness and transparency,โ€ he said, per the Hong Kong Free Press.ย 

A group of lawmakers are challenging the mask ban, and are raising $5 million Hong Kong dollars ($638,000) to do so. A legal sector lawmaker โ€œsaid the costs were high because the case is expected to go to the Court of Appeal or even the Court of Final Appeal,โ€ per the HKFP.

Former Chief Executive CY Leung is offering more bounties for anyone who reports โ€œsightings of โ€˜offensive weaponsโ€™ and โ€˜defensive gearโ€™ including petrol bombs, slingshots, batons, helmets, gas masks and goggles in their residences,โ€ the HKFP says. He had earlier in August offered cash prizes for information leading to the arrest of certain Hong Kong protesters.ย 

4. U.S. government grounds Chinese drones. Trade talks arenโ€™t exactly taking off, either.

The U.S. Interior Department, which uses drones for a variety of purposes like fighting wildfires, search and rescue operations, and geological surveys, has said that โ€œall drones in its fleet that were manufactured in China or contained Chinese-made parts would be grounded as part of a review of the departmentโ€™s drone program,โ€ per the New York Times.ย 

It is unknown what percentage of the departmentโ€™s drone fleet is affected. The NYT points out that because โ€œthe Interior Department uses drones to survey a variety of critical infrastructure, including mines and dams, as well as to study rapid response situations and emergency routes, the information they collect has at least some potential for abuse.โ€

China called on the U.S. to โ€œstop abusing the concept of national securityโ€ after the ban, and โ€œChinese drone maker DJI said it was aware of the reports but could not confirm them,โ€ according to Reuters.ย 

Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has started โ€œa series of speechesโ€ฆon the competing ideologies and values, including on global influence campaigns by the Chinese Communist Partyโ€™s intelligence agencies and โ€˜unfair and predatoryโ€™ economic practices by Beijing,โ€ Reuters says. The full text of his first speech, which confronted the Chinese Communist Party on its โ€œtruly hostileโ€ values and said it seeks โ€œinternational domination,โ€ but also claimed, โ€œWe donโ€™t want a confrontation with the Peopleโ€™s Republic of China,โ€ can be read here.ย 

Despite the cancellation of the APEC summit in Chile, both Washington and Beijing are making positive noises about the โ€œPhase Oneโ€ trade deal being signed. Those noises come from the commerce ministry in China, and the treasury secretary in the U.S. Donald Trump also tweeted that a โ€œnew location will be announced soonโ€ for signing a deal.ย 

However, โ€œChinese officials have warned they wonโ€™t budge on the thorniest issues,โ€ per Bloomberg, and they โ€œremain concerned about President Donald Trumpโ€™s impulsive nature and the risk he may back out of even the limited deal both sides say they want to sign in the coming weeks.โ€ย 

โ€”Lucas Niewenhuis


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

Britain is set to delay a decision on the role of Huawei Technologies in the UKโ€™s fifth-generation mobile network until after the general election, according to two people familiar with the plans.

With a national vote due on December 12, and the possibility of coalition negotiations before a government is formed, a decision on the Chinese technology company is now unlikely before 2020, according to the people, who were speaking on condition of anonymity because the plans are private.

  • ChemChina-Sinochem merger off?
    China close to abandoning ChemChina and Sinochem merger / FT (paywall)
    โ€œThe merger process, which has been years in the making, has been beset by challenges in bringing the two management teams together, including clashes between senior executives, according to two people close to the matter.โ€

  • Auto industry gloom: Conventional and electric markets affected
    China’s auto market could shrink about 8% this year: industry official / Reuters
    โ€œAuto sales in China may skid to 26 million this year, a drop of around 8%, a senior industry executive warnedโ€ฆThe latest prediction, by Fu Bingfeng, executive vice chairman of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM), is lower than the groupโ€™s previous forecast for a 5% drop, issued in July.โ€
    Chinaโ€™s electric-vehicle manufacturers fight for their lives after subsidies slashed / Bloomberg via Caixin
    โ€œWarren Buffett-backed BYD, the countryโ€™s biggest maker of new energy vehicles โ€” all-electric, fuel-cell and plugin hybrid cars โ€” just reported an 89% slump in third-quarter earnings and warned profit could fall as much as 43% this year. BAIC BluePark New Energy Technology, Chinaโ€™s biggest maker of all-electric automobiles, also forecast a 2019 loss in a grim earnings update.โ€
    Mercedes-Benzโ€™s first made-in-China EV to hit market next month / TechNode
    Mercedes picked a bad time to get into Chinaโ€™s EV market, but will nonetheless begin to sell its EQC electric vehicle model starting on November 8.ย 

  • Biotech IPOs
    Biopharma firm SinoMab BioScience files $223 million IPO in Hong Kong / Caixin Live
    โ€œHong Kong-based biopharmaceutical company SinoMab BioScience Ltd. plans to raise as much as HK$1.75 billion ($223 million) in an initial public offering (IPO) on the Hong Kong Stock Exchangeโ€ฆ SinoMab develops therapies for immunological diseases, primarily monoclonal antibody-based biologics, or those that use the body’s immune system to attack disease-causing cells.โ€
    Shanghai biotech I-Mab plans US IPO as part of China drug strategy / TechNode
    โ€œShanghai-based I-Mab Biopharma filed for an initial public offering (IPO) on the Nasdaq stock exchange as it looks to accelerate its China-based drug commercialization process, Endpoints News reportedโ€ฆ Founded in 2016, I-Mab Biopharma develops treatments for cancers and autoimmune diseases.โ€ย ย 

  • Stock inflation for company that advised Xi on blockchain
    Xi connection makes China property developer a blockchain winner / Bloomberg (porous paywall)

Xinhu Zhongbao Co. holds nearly half of a firm whose chairman briefed Xi and other top officials about the technology last week. The property developer has risen the 10% daily limit four straight days after ending last week near 2019โ€™s multi-year low. This weekโ€™s jump, which has added $1.7 billion to Xinhuโ€™s market value, has shares again up 46% for the year and near 2019โ€™s high. Volume on Thursday was nearly triple the daily average of the past three months.

Taylor Swift has been big in China for years, but she’s never commanded a stage as large as the one she’ll have on Nov. 10 in Shanghai. That night she’ll headline a gala countdown to Singles Day, a decade-old manufactured holiday that’s now the world’s biggest single-day shopping spreeโ€ฆย 

For Swift, it promises to be a massive Chinese payday. That’s perhaps not surprising for a superstar of her stature. But it wasn’t that long ago that foreign recording artists of all kinds struggled to make money in China, thanks to rampant piracy and an official unwillingness to tackle it. Fortunately, that’s changed in recent years, and recording artists are finally getting their due from Chinese audiences.

  • Soho China considering major sale
    Soho China considers $8 billion office tower sales / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
    โ€œSoho China Ltd. is considering selling a majority of its commercial property holdings in deals that may fetch as much as $8 billion, people familiar with the matter said, sending the shares up the most on record. At least eight office towers in Beijing and Shanghai are being discussed as part of the planned sales.โ€

  • Facial recognition and profiling
    Beijing to use facial recognition technology in metro security checks โ€“ state media / AFP
    โ€œBeijing will use facial recognition tools to speed up security checks in the cityโ€™s overcrowded metro, using a โ€˜credit systemโ€™ to sort passengers into different channels, state-run media reported on Wednesday.โ€

SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย 

Young European eels โ€” called โ€œglass eelsโ€ because of their transparent bodies โ€” can fetch around โ‚ฌ5,000 (US$5,600) a kilogram in China and a local prosecutor said the case was part of a โ€œnew form of trafficking that is explodingโ€…ย 

The court in Bobigny near Paris sentenced the pair to a 10-month suspended prison sentence and a fine of โ‚ฌ7,000 (US$7,800) each for smuggling and crimes against biodiversity.

POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

India engaged in a diplomatic war of words with China over Kashmir on Thursday as it formally revoked the disputed stateโ€™s constitutional autonomy and split it into two federal territories in a bid to integrate it fully into Indiaโ€ฆย 

โ€œThe Indian government officially announced the establishment of so called Jammu Kashmir territory and Ladakh Union territory which included some of Chinaโ€™s territory into its administrative jurisdiction,โ€ [the Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said].

โ€œChina deplores and firmly opposed that. India unilaterally changes its domestic law and administrative divisions, challenging Chinaโ€™s sovereignty and interests. This is awful and void, and this is not effective in any way and will not change the fact that the area is under Chinaโ€™s actual control.โ€…ย 

โ€œWe do not expect other countries, including China, to comment on the matters which are internal to India, just as India refrains from commenting on internal issues of other countries,โ€ [the Indian foreign ministry spokesperson said].

Police in Mongolia arrested some 800 Chinese men during an anti-money laundering operation, authorities said on Thursday.

The operation targeted four locations across the Mongolian capital Ulan Bator. More than 10,000 mobile phone SIM cards were confiscated along with over 1,000 computers.

Authorities said the suspects were part of a cybercrime ring that likely revolved around online gambling.

SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

For many young Chinese, October is filled with Halloween celebrations such as dress-up parties โ€” even as anti-Western holiday rhetoric crops up every year, with some saying dressing up as ghosts is โ€œinauspiciousโ€ and some subway stations banning Halloween make-upโ€ฆย 

However, partygoers may have to watch their behavior in public, because the Guangzhou police issued a statement on Wednesday night, banning those dressed up as ghosts or โ€œwearing scary make-upโ€ from the subway and from doing performance arts.

  • Two artist obituaries
    Huang Yong Ping, 65, dies; his art saw a world of power struggles / NYT (porous paywall)
    โ€œHuang Yong Ping, a Conceptual artist and pioneering figure of Chinaโ€™s post-Cultural Revolution avant-garde, whose controversial work often depicted the world as a Darwinian power struggle, died on Oct. 19 at his home in Paris. He was 65.โ€
    Chou Wen-chung, composer and calligrapher in sound, dies at 96 / NYT (porous paywall)
    โ€œChou Wen-chung, a composer, teacher and cultural diplomat who taught a coterie of celebrated and award-winning Chinese composers and who tended to the legacy of Edgard Varรจse, the linchpin of American modernism, died on Friday at his home in Manhattan. He was 96.โ€


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