9 resultsfor “impact of China's export controls on US firms”
firms. The list of companies includes rare-earth mine operator MP Materials Corp, rare-earth magnet maker USA Rare Earths, and US defence contractors specialising in fields such as aerospace, drones, synthetic-aperture radar
China ($336bn), Russia ($190bn), Germany ($114bn) and India ($92bn), accounting for more than half (58 percent) of world military spending. The US is by far the biggest spender, as it has been every year since
controls, marking a win for Trump. He also said he got China to start immediately buying US agricultural goods and other farm products - a backbone of the American economy. In return, Washington dropped part
China has made big strides in the AI in recent years, with Chinese AI firm DeepSeek releasing generative AI models DeepSeek-V3 and DeepSeek-R1 using a fraction of cost compared to its American counterparts
firms to disregard the US sanctions on its oil refineries. “Beijing wants predictability and certainty for the remainder of Trump’s term through January 2029, because Beijing needs to be able to plan
control of Iran while the US has a [naval blockade](/news/2026/4/24/how-long-can-iran-survive-the-uss-hormuz-blockade) of Iranian ports in place. All this has caused major disruptions to energy supplies worldwide and caused the price of oil to rise
firm, prompting the US to place tariffs of 30% on imports Rwandan clothing, where there had previously been none. Rwanda insists that the country has benefitted from hiking its second-hand clothing taxes from
impact on the US economy. Trump had also angered China by accepting a congratulatory phone call from then-Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, breaking decades of diplomatic precedent set in 1979 when Washington
exports of pharmaceuticals, machinery and consumer goods like textiles to the Nordic nations are expected to figure in the talks. India’s trade with Nordic nations collectively stood at $19bn in 2024. Several companies from