This text is an on-site model of our FirstFT e-newsletter. Subscribers can signal as much as our Asia, Europe/Africa or Americas version to get the e-newsletter delivered each weekday morning. Discover all of our newsletters right here
Good morning and welcome to FirstFT Asia. In at the moment’s e-newsletter:
-
Apple’s AI rollout in China held up by Beijing
-
South Korea’s new president takes cost
-
Shareholders lambast $33bn take-private of Toyota subsidiary
Apple’s rollout of synthetic intelligence companies in China with Alibaba is being held up by a Beijing regulator, because the tech partnership turns into the most recent casualty of Donald Trump’s commerce conflict. Right here’s what you want to know.
What’s taking place: The tech giants have been working collectively to launch Apple Intelligence, the iPhone-maker’s suite of AI companies, for Chinese language customers. A number of AI merchandise co-developed by the tech corporations have been submitted to China’s web authority this yr for approval. However their purposes had been stalled on the Our on-line world Administration of China, two individuals acquainted with the matter mentioned, citing rising geopolitical uncertainties between China and the US.
Apple’s commerce conflict woes: Regardless of Apple partnering with Alibaba in an try and win CAC approval, the high-profile relationship has nonetheless attracted regulatory scrutiny as US-China commerce tensions have escalated. Apple has suffered particularly from the rising tensions between Washington and Beijing, with Trump pressuring the corporate to deliver manufacturing again to the US. Delays to the discharge of Apple Intelligence in China are additionally hampering the US firm because it faces rising competitors from Chinese language rivals led by Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo. Learn the complete story.
Right here’s what else we’re holding tabs on:
-
Financial knowledge: Taiwan and the Philippines report Could CPI inflation knowledge.
-
Nintendo: The brand new Change 2 video games console goes on sale within the US, with the Japanese online game firm forecasting gross sales of 15mn items in its present fiscal yr.
5 extra high tales
1. South Korea’s new leftwing president mentioned his nation confronted a “tangled web of overlapping crises” as he was sworn into workplace after an emphatic election win. Lee Jae-myung vowed to overtake what he mentioned was an outdated and over-centralised mannequin of improvement in Asia’s fourth-largest financial system. Traders reacted very positively to his feedback.
-
FT View: Lee’s victory is an affirmation of democracy after Yoon Suk Yeol’s martial legislation bid, writes the editorial board. However the brand new president faces severe difficulties at house and overseas.
2. Trump mentioned Vladimir Putin was not prepared for an “immediate peace” in Ukraine after an hour-long dialog yesterday throughout which the Russian president warned of retaliation for Kyiv’s drone assault on his nation’s bomber fleet. “President Putin did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields,” the US president mentioned on Fact Social after the decision.
-
Extra on Russia: Moscow desires to deploy 10,000 troops within the separatist Transnistria area on Ukraine’s border and goals to put in a pro-Kremlin authorities in Moldova to take action, the nation’s prime minister has mentioned.
3. Toyota Industries shares fell 12 per cent yesterday after minority shareholders lambasted a proposed $33bn privatisation for severely undervaluing the automobile components provider and trampling over their rights. Right here’s why the deal has provoked investor outrage.
4. Singapore’s Temasek is drastically decreasing its investments in early-stage corporations, due to rate of interest rises and following some embarrassing blow-ups for the state-owned fund. Temasek has grow to be extra bearish on high-risk unlisted corporations, believing it’s tougher for them to go public, in accordance with individuals with information of the group’s funding technique.
5. Columbia College now not meets accreditation requirements due to its violation of federal anti-discrimination legal guidelines, the US authorities mentioned yesterday. The announcement marked one other escalation in Trump’s battle in opposition to the US’s elite increased training establishments.
The Massive Learn
Italian voters are wrestling with the contentious problem of whether or not the nation ought to ease its restrictive immigration guidelines and provides its long-term, authorized migrant employees — and their youngsters — a quicker path to citizenship. In a quickly ageing society and with migrant flows dominating public discourse throughout Europe, there shall be profound implications from a nationwide referendum that asks: who will get to be Italian?
We’re additionally studying . . .
-
US psychedelic period: Magic mushrooms stay unlawful in California however you wouldn’t know that from the gatherings in San Francisco, writes Elaine Moore.
-
Martin Wolf: Rates of interest could have normalised lately, however the world doesn’t look very “normal”.
-
Metal tariffs — once more: The trade has suffered from overproduction and protectionism for many years, writes Alan Beattie.
Chart of the day
As gold enjoys a historic worldwide rally, the demand from Iran — which is the world’s fifth-largest client of gold bars and cash — has given the worldwide market an additional increase. Right here’s why Iranians are in search of security in bullion.

Take a break from the information
Researchers have developed a wi-fi, wearable “electronic tattoo” that estimates, in actual time, how onerous our brains are working, writes Anjana Ahuja. The clear plaster is caught on to the brow and tracks brainwaves and eye actions. The event raises the query: who owns our neurodata?
