The on-and-off saga involving Nvidia and China appears to be back on again, after a report that China’s government has given the go-ahead to big companies including Alibaba to buy the U.S.
Some of the biggest Chinese firms listed in Hong Kong are busy buying back their own shares, seeking to shore up investor confidence in their cooling stock prices.
The iShares MSCI China ETF (NYSEARCA:MCHI) has climbed 45% over the past year, crushing the S&P 500’s 19% gain by more than ...
Ubisoft has lost one of its key creative talents as The Division executive producer Julian Gerighty leaves the company to ...
Stellar Blade studio, Shift Up has once again showered their employees with gifts such as apple watches, airpods and bonus.
Security researchers warn Android TV streaming boxes promising free channels may secretly hijack home internet connections ...
Following a thirtyfold increase in international streaming audiences, the Tour secures multi-platform renewals with Migu and ...
Alibaba dominates China’s e-commerce and cloud markets. Tencent owns the country’s top “super app” and gaming business. One of these tech titans has a brighter future. Both stocks might appear to be ...
Tencent Holdings has secured access to high-end Nvidia artificial-intelligence chips that remain restricted to Chinese buyers even after President Donald Trump’s recent semiconductor agreement with ...
Tencent is accessing Nvidia's most advanced Blackwell AI processors through a cloud computing arrangement in Japan, even as U.S. policy restricts the sale of such chips to China, the Financial Times ...
Earlier this year Sony sued Tencent for copyright infringement over its Light of Motiram game, calling it a "slavish clone" of Horizon Zero Dawn. Then, earlier this month, Tencent agreed to stop ...