U.S. public pensions have poured over $60 billion into China. But some states are rolling out laws to buck the trend.
Some Chinese companies are putting on American shells after U.S. regulators accused them of aiding Beijing. Experts say one goal is to keep their U.S. operations running, while some say that allowing them to exposes loopholes in U.S. enforcement.
Top officials warn more sanctions on China are coming from both the United States and NATO, as concerns loom over China’s support for Russia’s war in Ukraine.
U.S. officials say they arrested a Chinese national for allegedly running the “largest ever” malware network. The botnet is believed to have stolen billions from COVID-19 relief funds.
- Restricted Chinese Firms Rebrand as American: Report
- U.S. States Push Pension Funds to Divest from China
- U.S. Warns of Sanctions for China Over Russia Support
- Large Economies ‘Difficult’ to Sanction: Expert
- Xi Hosts Leaders of Arab States in Beijing
- China Ministry: ‘Taiwan’s Independence Means War’
- Chinese National Arrested in Major Covid Fraud Bust
- 14 Hong Kong Dissidents Found Guilty in Subversion Case
- Bloomberg: China to Impose Record Fine on PWC for Fraud
- Beijing Clamps Down on ‘Wealth-Flaunting’ Behavior