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Chinese Factory Adapts to Tariffs, Keeps Core in China

A Chinese electronics manufacturer has demonstrated how firms are adapting to geopolitical shocks, showing resilience despite tariffs introduced during the Donald Trump administration.

Agilian Technology, a mid-sized exporter based in Dongguan, faced severe disruption in 2025 when U.S. tariffs caused clients—many of whom account for over half its revenue—to freeze orders and push for production relocation outside China. At the peak of tensions, tariffs between the U.S. and China exceeded 100%, effectively halting trade flows.

Despite this, the company ultimately reaffirmed China as its core manufacturing base. Executives cited the country’s unmatched supply chain integration, production speed and component availability as factors that are difficult to replicate elsewhere.

Attempts to diversify production revealed structural challenges. Expansion efforts in India were slowed by regulatory delays and operational inefficiencies, while Malaysia offered a more viable alternative but still lagged behind China in execution speed. Even relocating to the U.S. proved impractical due to higher labor costs and reliance on Chinese-made components.

Meanwhile, China’s countermeasures—including export controls on critical minerals—highlighted Western dependence on its industrial ecosystem. Combined with partial tariff rollbacks following negotiations between Washington and Beijing, these factors helped revive manufacturing activity.

By the second half of 2025, Agilian reported a 29% increase in production hours, marking its busiest period on record. Orders resumed as clients adjusted to a “new normal” of elevated but manageable tariffs.

The case reflects a broader trend: rather than fully exiting China, companies are adopting a “China-plus-one” strategy—maintaining core operations domestically while building secondary capacity abroad as a hedge against future disruptions.

Economists note that tariffs have reshaped global supply chains but have not fundamentally weakened China’s manufacturing dominance. Instead, they have accelerated diversification while reinforcing the country’s central role in global production networks.

Nvidia CEO Huang Plans China Visit to Reopen Market, Report Says

Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang is planning a trip to China in late January as he looks to revive a key market for the company’s artificial intelligence chips, Bloomberg News reported, citing a person familiar with the matter.

According to the report, Huang is expected to attend company events ahead of the Lunar New Year holidays in February and may also visit Beijing. It remains unclear whether he will meet senior Chinese officials, and the plans could change depending on whether meetings are confirmed. Nvidia declined to comment, and Reuters could not independently verify the report.

The potential visit follows recent uncertainty over Nvidia’s ability to sell advanced AI chips in China. Last week, the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump formally approved sales of Nvidia’s H200 AI chips to China under certain conditions, raising expectations that shipments could resume. However, Chinese customs authorities said shortly afterward that the chips were not permitted to enter the country, casting doubt on near-term access.

China has been a crucial market for Nvidia, and the outcome of Huang’s planned visit could signal whether progress is possible amid ongoing geopolitical and regulatory tensions surrounding advanced semiconductor exports.

Brazil’s Lula Announces Social Media Regulation Proposal Ready for Congress

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva stated on Tuesday that a proposal to regulate social media platforms in Brazil is finalized and will be sent to Congress shortly.

KEY DETAILS

  • Lula told BandNews the proposal will be on his desk on Wednesday afternoon, enabling the government to forward it to lawmakers.

  • The initiative comes amid ongoing global discussions on digital regulation and content moderation.

TRADE AND DIPLOMACY CONTEXT

  • Earlier this month, U.S. President Donald Trump imposed 50% tariffs on Brazilian imports, citing “unfair trade practices” in digital trade and political tensions related to former President Jair Bolsonaro.

  • Lula expressed willingness to meet Trump, emphasizing a civilized dialogue between heads of state.

  • The Brazilian leader also confirmed sending an invitation to Trump for COP30, the global climate summit to be hosted in Brazil later this year.

  • Lula plans to call leaders from France, Germany, and the EU next week to discuss ongoing negotiations between the EU and the South American Mercosur bloc.

CONCLUSION
The proposal marks a significant step in Brazil’s efforts to regulate digital platforms, amid rising international attention on social media governance and trade relations with the United States.