Tag Archives: manufacturing

Focus on moving up services value chain rather than manufacturing to propel India into ‘Amrit Kaal’: Form – timesofindia.com

  1. Focus on moving up services value chain rather than manufacturing to propel India into ‘Amrit Kaal’: Form timesofindia.com
  2. ‘India will remain lower middle income till 2047…’: Raghuram Rajan Mint
  3. At Bangalore International Centre, Raghuram Rajan and Rohit Lamba look at the trajectory of India’s economic future The Indian Express
  4. Afternoon briefing: Raghuram Rajan on Noida & Gurugram; Oman Sultan-PM Modi meeting, and all the latest news Hindustan Times
  5. Infra spending, good performance by large economies push sharp uptick in GDP in H1FY24: Rajan Press Trust of India

Read original article here

Justice Department Announces Charges Against China-Based Chemical Manufacturing Companies and Arrests of Executives in Fentanyl Manufacturing – Department of Justice

  1. Justice Department Announces Charges Against China-Based Chemical Manufacturing Companies and Arrests of Executives in Fentanyl Manufacturing Department of Justice
  2. US files first-ever charges against Chinese fentanyl manufacturers Yahoo News
  3. 1st US charges against China-based companies accused of selling fentanyl chemicals filed WKMG News 6 & ClickOrlando
  4. US launches prosecutions of Chinese companies on charges of trafficking fentanyl ingredients The Hill
  5. DEA seizes over 200 kilos of fentanyl-related chemicals from China in an undercover operation, Justice Dept announces CBS News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Treasury Department Releases Guidance to Boost American Clean Energy Manufacturing – Treasury

  1. Treasury Department Releases Guidance to Boost American Clean Energy Manufacturing Treasury
  2. US Treasury takes middle road on solar panels ‘Made in the USA’ Reuters
  3. Tax credit for clean energy raises concern from some U.S. industries The Washington Post
  4. Made-in-USA trackers, solar panels, inverters and more can claim 10% ‘domestic content’ adder under certain rules Solar panels must have domestic solar cells to receive the full credit. Solar Power World
  5. Treasury Department releases guidance on solar domestic content pv magazine USA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Not So Fast! After 2 Southern States Claim Foxconn Is Coming To Them, Taiwanese Manufacturing Giant Denies Any ‘Definitive’ Agreement — Yet – Swarajya

  1. Not So Fast! After 2 Southern States Claim Foxconn Is Coming To Them, Taiwanese Manufacturing Giant Denies Any ‘Definitive’ Agreement — Yet Swarajya
  2. India roundup: Apple suppliers embark on massive investments in India DIGITIMES
  3. iPhone-Maker Foxconn Says No ‘Definitive Agreements’ For New India Investment Times Now
  4. Foxconn’s ‘no definitive pact’ statement stirs row in Telangana, Karnataka The Siasat Daily
  5. India’s iPhone economy: Where it stands, where it’s headed Economic Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

S.F. explosion: Man arrested on drug manufacturing, manslaughter charges – San Francisco Chronicle

  1. S.F. explosion: Man arrested on drug manufacturing, manslaughter charges San Francisco Chronicle
  2. Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing cha KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  3. SF house fire: Mysterious liquid-filled tanks recovered from wreckage San Francisco Chronicle
  4. San Francisco fire: 5 homes still evacuated after deadly SF house explosion and fire, investigation into cause underway KGO-TV
  5. Fire investigators search for clues behind San Francisco home explosion KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

PM Modi to inaugurate India’s largest chopper manufacturing unit in Karnataka – Hindustan Times

  1. PM Modi to inaugurate India’s largest chopper manufacturing unit in Karnataka Hindustan Times
  2. PM Modi to open India’s largest copter-making plant in Karnataka Times of India
  3. PM To Inaugurate India’s Largest Helicopter Production Facility In Karnataka On Monday NDTV
  4. PM Modi to inaugurate India’s largest helicopter production facility in Karnataka’s Tumakuru on Monday The Tribune India
  5. PM Modi to inaugurate Asia’s largest helicopter manufacturing factory of HAL in Karnataka on 6 Feb. Details here | Mint Mint
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Billionaire Gautam Adani Loses $26 Billion

Last year, Gautam Adani, 60, was the star of all the rankings of the biggest fortunes in the world. 

He was one of the few billionaires to see his net worth rise sharply as the global economic downturn rattled the fortunes of tech tycoons. 

Adani, an unknown in the West, saw his fortune increase by $40 billion, according to the calculations of the Bloomberg Billionaires Index during a year when Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla  (TSLA) – Get Free Report, and Jeff Bezos the founder and chairman of Amazon  (AMZN) – Get Free Report have suffered some of the biggest losses. 

Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of the social networking giant Meta Platforms  (META) – Get Free Report had been ejected from the top 20 billionaires.

Adani, the new richest man in Asia, then saw his rise in the billionaires elite club as an opportunity for him to develop his empire globally and make a name for himself on the international stage. This year should therefore be the year of this strategy. But instead of the coronation he had planned, Adani has been caught in a real nightmare since Jan. 24. This nightmare could have important consequences on his ambitions of global expansion.

Serious Allegations

The New York investment firm Hindenburg Research has announced, on Jan. 24, that it shorted stocks of the Andani conglomerate through U.S.-traded bonds and non-Indian-traded derivative instruments. 

This means that Hindenburg Research, a well-known short-seller, is betting on a short-term drop in the prices of these equities. 

The short-seller explained that the bet stems from alleged illegal practices on the part of the Indian tycoon’s conglomerate.

“We have uncovered evidence of brazen accounting fraud, stock manipulation and money laundering at Adani, taking place over the course of decades,” Hindenburg wrote in a report. 

“Adani has pulled off this gargantuan feat with the help of enablers in government and a cottage industry of international companies that facilitate these activities.”

The report describes a galaxy of shell entities based in tax havens — the Caribbean, Mauritius and the United Arab Emirates — controlled by the Adani family.

The Adani Empire has rejected all these accusations and threatened to resort to the legal process to defend itself. 

“The maliciously mischievous, unresearched report published by Hindenburg Research on 24 Jan 2023 has adversely affected the Adani Group, our shareholders and investors,” said Adani Group’s head of legal, Jatin Jalundhwala, in a statement on Jan. 26. 

“We are evaluating the relevant provisions under US and Indian laws for remedial and punitive action against Hindenburg Research,” he continued.

Adani Drops in the Rankings

But Hindenburg, which is credited with bringing down Trevor Milton, the founder of electric-truck maker Nikola, doubled down.

“Regarding the company’s threats of legal action, to be clear, we would welcome it,” the short-seller reacted. “We fully stand by our report and believe any legal action taken against us would be meritless.”

Investors so far seem to believe Hindenburg more than Adani Group’s denials.

The Adani empire has lost a total of $51 billion in market capitalization during the last two trading sessions following the allegations. Adani Enterprises, the flagship of this empire, for example, lost nearly a fifth (more than 19%) of its value on Jan. 27. Units like Adani Green Energy and Adani Total Gas plunged 20%, the daily limit allowed. Adani Power lost 5%. Adani Port’s share price dropped 13.8% and Adani Transmission fell 19.47%.

As Adani’s net worth is primarily tied to his holdings in these various entities, his fortune too has shrunk by more than a fifth in just three days. He was worth $119 billion on Jan. 24, according to Bloomberg Billionaires Index. But as of Jan. 27, the Indian tycoon was worth just $92.7 billion. He thus lost $26.3 billion in three days, or 22% of his fortune melted in 72 hours.

Adani has fallen down the rankings and now finds himself the seventh richest person in the world after starting the year fourth. If he fails to convince investors very quickly that Hindenburg’s accusations are unfounded, he risks finding himself outside the top 10 in the coming days. 

The group has promised a detailed response to the accusations of the short-seller. But no release date has been officially announced.



Read original article here

China manufacturing contracts sharply as Covid infections soar

A textile factory on December 30, 2022 in Jiangxi Province. Chinese manufacturing activity contracted at its sharpest pace in nearly 3 years in December.

Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

China’s factory activity shrank for the third straight month in December and at the sharpest pace in nearly three years as Covid infections swept through production lines across the country after Beijing’s abrupt reversal of anti-virus measures.

The official purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to 47.0 from 48.0 in November, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Saturday. Economists in a Reuters poll had expected the PMI to come in at 48.0. The 50-point mark separates contraction from growth on a monthly basis.

The drop was the biggest since the early days of the pandemic in February 2020.

The data offered the first official snapshot of the manufacturing sector after China removed the world’s strictest Covid restrictions in early December. Cumulative infections likely reached 18.6 million in December, UK-based health data firm Airfinity estimated.

Analysts said surging infections could cause temporary labour shortages and increased supply chain disruptions. Reuters reported on Wednesday that Tesla plans to run a reduced production schedule at its Shanghai plant in January, extending the reduced output it began this month into next year.

Weakening external demand on the back of growing global recession fears amid rising interest rates, inflation and the war in Ukraine may further slow China’s exports, hurting its massive manufacturing sector and hampering an economic recovery.

While (the factory PMI) was lower than expected, it is actually hard for analysts to provide a reasonable forecast given the virus uncertainties over the past month.”

Zhou Hao

chief economist, Guotai Junan International

“Most factories I know are way below where they could be this time of year for orders next year. A lot of factories I’ve talked to are at 50%, some are below 20%,” said Cameron Johnson, a partner at Tidalwave Solutions, a supply chain consulting firm.

“So even though China is opening up, manufacturing is still going to slow down because the rest of the world’s economy is slowing down. Factories will have workers, but they will have no orders.”

NBS said 56.3% of surveyed manufacturers reported that they were greatly affected by the epidemic in December, up 15.5 percentage points from the previous month, although most also said they expected the situation will gradually improve.

Recovery hopes?

“While (the factory PMI) was lower than expected, it is actually hard for analysts to provide a reasonable forecast given the virus uncertainties over the past month,” said Zhou Hao, chief economist at brokerage house Guotai Junan International.

“In general, we believe that the worst for the Chinese economy is behind us, and a strong economic recovery is ahead.”

The country’s banking and insurance regulator pledged this week to step up financial support to small and private businesses in the catering and tourism sectors that were hit hard by the Covid-19 epidemic, stressing a consumption recovery will be a priority.

The non-manufacturing PMI, which looks at services sector activity, fell to 41.6 from 46.7 in November, the NBS data showed, also marking the lowest reading since February 2020.

The official composite PMI, which combines manufacturing and services, declined to 42.6 from 47.1.

“The weeks before Chinese New Year are going to remain challenging for the service sector as people won’t want to go out and spend more than necessary for fear of catching an infection,” said Mark Williams, Chief Asia Economist at Capital Economics.

“But the outlook should brighten around the time that people return from the Chinese New Year holiday – infections will have dropped back and a large share of people will have recently had Covid and feel they have a degree of immunity.”

Read original article here

South Korea GDP, Caixin Manufacturing PMI, Japan Consumer Confidence

Japanese yen strengthens after Powell commentary on smaller hikes

Temasek’s $245 million FTX loss ’caused reputational damage’ to Singapore, says deputy prime minister

Singapore’s Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said the state sovereign wealth fund’s investment loss of $275 million in collapsed crypto exchange FTX is “disappointing and has caused reputational damage” to the city-state.

But the investment loss does not mean the governance system is not working, Wong said, adding that an internal review is being conducted.

“Rather, it is the nature of investment and risk-taking,” he said.

The FTX loss will not impact the net investment returns of Singapore’s reserves, which are “tied to the overall expected long term returns of our investment entities and not to individual investments,” he said.

Going forward, Singapore plans to require crypto service providers to implement basic investor protection measures, but “no amount of regulation can remove this risk,” he warned.

– Sheila Chiang

China’s Caixin manufacturing PMI marks fourth straight month of contraction

China’s Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index for November came in at 49.4, higher than expectations of 48.9 in a Reuters survey of economists.

The reading marks a fourth consecutive month of contraction, after a reading of 49.2 from October and dipping to 48.1 in September — below the 50-point mark which separates growth from contraction.

Separately, the official PMI print from China’s National Bureau of Statistics reported Wednesday came in at 48, showing a second consecutive month of contraction in factory activity.

– Jihye Lee

Oil prices little changed as White House weighs additional oil reserves

The White House is considering building additional oil reserves against the backdrop of the upcoming winter and uncertainty surrounding the market, sources familiar with the matter told CNBC.

The Biden administration is weighing whether to call on Congress to raise the storage limit, potentially doubling it, to build additional reserves the administration could release if supply tightens or prices rise again, the people said.

The U.S. currently holds about 1 million barrels of heating oil in New York and Connecticut.

The White House is bracing for a potential price spike, as Europe’s oil embargo and G-7’s price cap on Russian oil looms ahead, potentially disrupting supply.

Oil prices are little changed in early Asia hours. The West Texas Intermediate futures dipped fractionally to stand at $80.53 per barrel, while the Brent crude futures shed 0.06% to stand at $86.92 per barrel.

— Kayla Tausche, Lee Ying Shan

CNBC Pro: Forget Amazon. Here’s what top tech investor Paul Meeks is buying

Investor confidence in the tech sector has been shaken this year amid a flight to safety, but top tech investor Paul Meeks said he is now “more bullish” on the sector than in recent months, though he remains selective within the sector.

He tells CNBC the stocks he favors.

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

South Korea’s revised GDP confirms growth in the third quarter

South Korea’s revised gross domestic product for the third quarter confirmed growth of 3.1% compared to the same period a year ago – higher than a 2.9% expansion seen in the second quarter.

The economy saw slower quarterly growth of 0.3% in the third quarter, following a growth of 0.7% in the previous period.

Separately, South Korea reported a trade deficit of $7.01 billion for November, exceeding expectations of $4.42 billion — marking the third consecutive month of rising trade deficit driven by sluggish exports.

Exports shrank by 14%, lower than forecasts of a drop of 11% — while imports grew more than expected by 2.7%, according to preliminary data from the customs agency.

– Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: UBS reveals 15 global stocks sensitive to China’s reopening plans

Chinese stocks have risen this week after the nation’s health authorities reported a recent uptick in vaccination rates, which experts regard as crucial to reopening the country.

The impact of Beijing’s change in tack toward dealing with the outbreak of Covid-19 is being felt not only in China but also around the world.

The Swiss bank UBS has identified 15 stocks in the MSCI Europe index that will outperform “in an environment where China’s growth rebounds and the country reopens its borders.”

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

Powell continues to believe in a path to a soft-ish landing

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell says he continues to believe in a path to a “soft-ish” landing — even if the path has narrowed over the past year.

“I would like to continue to believe that there’s a path to a soft or soft-ish landing” Powell said at the Brookings Institution.

“Our job is to try to achieve that, and I think it’s still achievable,” Powell said. “If you look at the history, it’s not a likely outcome, but I would just say this is a different set of circumstances.”

— Sarah Min

Indexes jump on Powell comments

Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s comments indicating the central bank will slow future interest rate hikes as soon as December put upward pressure on the three major indexes.

The S&P 500 jumped up 0.6% from the red on the news.

The Dow was near flat after trading down for most of the day.

The Nasdaq Composite gained steam to 1.3% up.

— Alex Harring

Powell says Fed can “moderate the pace” of future rate increases due to lagged effect of past hikes

Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell told an audience at the Brookings Institution Wednesday that the central bank can afford to ease back on its tighter monetary policy at its December meeting (due to wrap up Dec. 14).

The lagged effect of higher rates already taken in 2022, plus the drawing down of the size of the Fed’s balance sheet through quantitative tightening, mean “it makes sense to moderate the pace of our rate increases as we approach the level of restraint that will be sufficient to bring inflation down,” Powell said.

“The time for moderating the pace of rate increases may come as soon as the December meeting,” said the 69-year-old Fed chair.

In response to Powell’s remarks, the S&P 500 quickly gained to about 3970 vs about 3950 before the address.

— Scott Schnipper, Jeff Cox

Read original article here

Google Moves Ahead With Providing No-Cost Open-Source Silicon Manufacturing From GlobalFoundries

Google announced funding for silicon manufacturing for participating open-source projects using the process design kit with GlobalFoundries.

As part of Google’s effort to allow open-source projects easier access to silicon design and chip fabrication, they had opened up resources and covered costs for open-source projects to fabricate their early chips on a SkyWater 130nm process followed by an upgrade to SkyWater’s 90nm process. Back in August it was announced Google and GlobalFoundries created an open-source Process Design Kit (PDK) to target GloFo’s 180nm “180MCU” technology platform.

During the original announcement it was implied that Google would continue to offer its “no-cost silicon realization program” for covering initial batches of chip fabrication for those completing a successful, open-source chip design. With the SkyWater program, Google covered costs for six shuttle runs that allowed 350 unique silicon designs to be realized and around 240 of them were successfully manufactured.


Google

Google now formally announced their funding for open-source silicon manufacturing using that GlobalFoundries 180nm PDK. There will be a series of no-cost shuttle runs using the GF180MCU over the coming months. As with prior runs, the silicon designs must be fully open-source, must be reproducible from source designs, must be submitted within the given timelines, and must pass pre-manufacturing checks. While 180nm isn’t interesting for leading-edge PC components, 180nm still has plenty of real-world applications out there and is used in a wide variety of areas like IoT, automotive, and other more basic electronics.


180nm manufacturing for CPUs was used back during the days of some Intel Celeron CPUs for Socket 478 (pictured) as well as AMD Athlon Thunderbird and Duron processors, among others. GlobalFoundries’ 180nm manufacturing is still useful for other ASICs — especially for start-up open-source projects where the costs are covered by Google.

The first test shuttle is running now through 5 December for submissions. Those wishing to learn more can see this Google blog post from their Open-Source Blog with this shuttle sponsorship having been announced on 31 October but only appearing on their RSS feed this weekend.

Read original article here