Kimi developer Moonshot AI valued at US$20b as it navigates China’s new IPO rules
Business

Kimi developer Moonshot AI valued at US$20b as it navigates China’s new IPO rules

Firm raised US$2 billion from investors including Meituan’s venture and China Mobile, taking total to US$3.9 billion in the last six months Chinese artificial intelligence start-up Moonshot AI has raised about US$2 billion in a new funding round, boosting its valuation to more than US$20 billion as it navigates Beijing’s new listing rules for companies registered overseas. The funding was led by Long-Z Investments, Meituan’s venture arm, and involved China Mobile. Over the past six months, Moonshot had raised a total of US$3.9 billion, according to a statement by the deal’s financial adviser HF Capital on Thursday. The Beijing-based company, best known for its Kimi chatbot, saw its annual recurring revenue (ARR) exceed US$200 million in April, the statement said. ARR is used to project a firm’s 12-month revenue by extrapolating earnings from a shorter period, like a month or a quarter. US AI start-up Anthropic’s ARR recently crossed US$30 billion. Moonshot’s valuation of US$20 billion “still has significant room for growth” as the market caps of its Hong Kong-listed peers Zhipu AI, traded as Knowledge Atlas Technology, and MiniMax, were much higher, according to HF Capital.

Alleged Gundam figurine thief injured after jumping from building in Hong Kong
Business

Alleged Gundam figurine thief injured after jumping from building in Hong Kong

Police say the man, aged 40, was linked to the theft of 10 boxes of Gundam models from a building in To Kwa Wan A Hong Kong man who allegedly stole HK$50,000 (US$6,380) worth of Gundam models was injured while leaping from a building in To Kwa Wan after police came to arrest him on suspicion of burglary. Police said on Thursday that the man, aged 40, was linked to the burglary at a building on Mok Cheong Street two days earlier, which resulted in the theft of 10 boxes of Gundam models and three empty suitcases. The force said officers had discovered signs that the rear door of the premises had been pried open. The investigation led to the arrest of a 50‑year‑old local woman in Yau Ma Tei on Wednesday afternoon on suspicion of burglary. Officers then sought the man and a 39‑year‑old local woman at the same building on Mok Cheong Street on Thursday, with the man injuring himself after allegedly attempting to flee by climbing out of a flat and jumping down. The man suffered abrasions to his limbs and forehead. He was taken to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Yau Ma Tei for treatment.

Euyo Semiconductor Closes Series C, Achieves Mass Production Milestone for Automotive Chips
Technology

Euyo Semiconductor Closes Series C, Achieves Mass Production Milestone for Automotive Chips

Euyo Semiconductor has closed a new funding round to advance domestic production of high-performance automotive chips, a critical step in China's push for semiconductor self-sufficiency in the automotive sector.

2 former Chinese defence ministers handed suspended death sentences
Business

2 former Chinese defence ministers handed suspended death sentences

Sentences for Wei Fenghe and Li Shangfu most severe of senior military officers since Xi Jinping started anti-corruption campaign in 2012 A military court found Wei guilty of accepting bribery, while Li was found guilty of both accepting and offering bribes, according to a two-paragraph statement released by Xinhua late on Thursday afternoon. The statement did not specify the bribe amounts involved in the cases. China sacks defence minister Li Shangfu with no explanation after nearly two-month absence Both men were sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve, deprivation of political rights for life and confiscation of all personal property, the statement said. After the two-year reprieve period, their sentence would be commuted to life imprisonment without the possibility of commutation or parole, it added. Li served as Chinese defence minister from March to October in 2023, becoming the country’s shortest-serving defence minister. Wei preceded him in the role, serving from 2018 to 2023. Beijing announced that an investigation was launched into Li in August 2023 and Wei in September 2023. They were subsequently expelled from the party and stripped of all military ranks and positions in June 2024.

What did China tell a close Trump ally ahead of the US leader’s Beijing trip?
Business

What did China tell a close Trump ally ahead of the US leader’s Beijing trip?

Top diplomat Wang Yi advises visiting delegation of US senators that the two countries should be ‘partners rather than adversaries’ In his meeting with Daines on Thursday, China’s top diplomat said Beijing and Washington should seek “harmony without uniformity” and be “partners rather than adversaries”. “The US should view China objectively, develop a rational perception of China, genuinely respect China’s core interests and properly manage differences,” Wang told Daines. “Beijing would work with Washington to implement the consensus reached by the two leaders and truly stabilise and improve Sino-US relations,” Wang said, adding that they should jointly explore the right way for two major powers to get along. Daines, a Republican from Montana and close Trump ally, is leading a five-member delegation visiting Shanghai and Beijing just days before the American leader’s rescheduled trip to Beijing.

China woman fired due to husband’s rival firm job receives US$101,000 for unjust dismissal
Business

China woman fired due to husband’s rival firm job receives US$101,000 for unjust dismissal

Company alleges potential sabotage in counter lawsuit but fails as court rules there is no evidence that woman passed secrets to her man A Shanghai company has been ordered to pay a woman employee 690,000 yuan (US$101,000) for illegally firing her because her husband works for a rival firm. Xuhui District People’s Court made the ruling in Shanghai in late April, the Yangtze Evening News reported. The woman, surnamed Liu, started working at the company in 2006. The firm’s name was not disclosed in the report, only that it operates in the property management industry. At the end of 2023, Liu received a notice from her employer telling her that they had decided to terminate her labour contract because her spouse works as the general manager of a rival company. Her employer said this had brought “adverse effects” to the company.

Indonesia posts fastest first-quarter growth in 3 years, but headwinds loom
Business

Indonesia posts fastest first-quarter growth in 3 years, but headwinds loom

The 5.6 per cent growth was propelled by robust household consumption during the festive season and a surge in government spending Statistics body BPS attributed the growth to robust household consumption – which made up 54.36 per cent of gross domestic product and grew by 5.52 per cent year-on-year – and a surge in government spending. Amalia Adininggar Widyasanti, head of BPS and deputy minister for economic affairs at the Ministry of National Development Planning, told reporters on Tuesday that increased spending during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and Eid ul-Fitr-related travel between mid-February and March had boosted growth. The growth rate, the fastest since the third quarter of 2022, exceeded the 5.3 per cent predicted by analysts polled by Reuters. “The 5.6 per cent growth was above my expectation of 5.3 per cent, but not entirely surprising given the strong growth in government spending throughout the first quarter,” David Sumual, chief economist at Bank Central Asia, told This Week in Asia.

Apple and BOE reportedly deepen OLED partnership as BOE targets 35 million iPhone display shipments in 2026
Technology

Apple and BOE reportedly deepen OLED partnership as BOE targets 35 million iPhone display shipments in 2026

Every Wednesday and Friday, TechNode’s Briefing newsletter delivers a roundup of the most important news in China tech, straight to your inbox. Your support helps TechNode continue to provide credible, on-the-ground journalism and industry insights about the Chinese tech industry. Chinese display panel firm BOE Technology Group is expected to further deepen its partnership with Apple this year, with an estimated shipment of around 35 million OLED displays in 2026, according to online reports. The supply is said to cover multiple iPhone models, including the iPhone 14, iPhone 16e, and iPhone 17e, and the iPhone 17 Pro series alone is expected to account for around 8.2 million panels. While South Korea’s Samsung Display and LG Display remain the primary suppliers of OLED panels for Apple’s premium iPhone models, BOE has reportedly been expanding production capacity and improving yield rates, gradually challenging the long-standing dominance of Korean display makers in Apple’s supply chain. [TechWeb, in Chinese]

AirAsia to launch new airline, flying against wind of high oil costs
Business

AirAsia to launch new airline, flying against wind of high oil costs

‘We can’t control what happens in the Middle East, but we have to take a view that it’s not going to last for two years,’ CEO Tony Fernandes says AirAsia X co-founder Tony Fernandes said he is preparing to launch a new airline, betting that expanding while the aviation industry’s being roiled by high oil prices will pay off in the future. The new airline will be announced in the next month or two, Fernandes said in a video interview from Montreal late on Wednesday. The low-cost Southeast Asian carrier group is moving some planes for the business it is starting, he said, without providing further details. The expansion would come on the heels of AirAsia’s multibillion-dollar order for what Prime Minister Mark Carney lauded as the largest purchase ever of Canadian-made commercial aircraft. The order, involving 150 Airbus A220 planes, is part of the businessman’s plans to expand AirAsia’s fleet with smaller, nimbler planes that will fly passengers to all corners of Asia. “Why waste a crisis? There are opportunities in a crisis,” Fernandes, 62, said.

US-Iran peace optimism fuels Asian stock market gains
Business

US-Iran peace optimism fuels Asian stock market gains

US President Donald Trump said conflict in the Middle East would be “over quickly”, as Iran considered a peace proposal that could lead to the reopening of the vital Strait of Hormuz. “We’ve had very good talks over the last 24 hours, and it’s very possible that we’ll make a deal,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday, according to Reuters. The president has repeatedly played up the possibility of an agreement with Iran since the war began on February 28, without reaching an...

Hong Kong recalls Zwilling electric kettle over handle defect and scalding risk
Business

Hong Kong recalls Zwilling electric kettle over handle defect and scalding risk

Electrical and Mechanical Services Department recalls product over potential safety risk and urges users to contact supplier for a refund Hong Kong authorities have urged the public to stop using a certain model of Zwilling electric kettle over concerns that the handle may detach, posing a risk of scalding. The Electrical and Mechanical Services Department on Thursday issued a safety recall for the kettle (model 53005). Consumers should contact the supplier, Cheong Hing (1917) Company Limited, at 2687 5879 to arrange a refund. The supplier warned that, in a small number of cases, the kettle’s handle may loosen or break, potentially causing hot water to spill. In March, Zwilling issued a global recall of its 1.5-litre (0.4gallon) kettles after confirming one case in which a user suffered second-degree burns due to the defect. The UK government published an official product withdrawal notice in April. The long-established German manufacturer is known for high-quality kitchenware, professional cutlery and home appliances.

TikTok makes record US$25b investment to expand digital infrastructure in Thailand
Innovation

TikTok makes record US$25b investment to expand digital infrastructure in Thailand

The Chinese firm will install additional servers and expand data storage infrastructure to support rising demand for digital services TikTok is investing US$25 billion in data infrastructure projects in Thailand, the company’s biggest investment announced to date in Southeast Asia, as China’s technology giants continue expanding their footprint in the region. The investment would be used to install additional servers and expand data storage and processing infrastructure across Bangkok, Samut Prakan and Chachoengsao provinces to support rising demand for digital services, according to an announcement by Thailand’s Board of Investment on Wednesday. The company, owner of the short video platform of the same name, also committed to “developing digital literacy and e-commerce curricula to help create new business opportunities” for Thai entrepreneurs and the workforce, according to the statement. TikTok’s investment marked a massive increase from its initial plan announced last year, allocating US$8.8 billion over the next five years to digital infrastructure. It was also the largest of six projects totalling US$29 billion approved by the Thai government on Wednesday.