Hello, this is Kenji, presenting this edition of the #techAsia newsletter from Tokyo.
Leading automakers here in Japan have been busy dealing with a range of issues as the era of electrification and intelligent cars blunts their traditional competitive edge.
Over the past weekend, Nissan Motor was in the spotlight, with Nikkei learning that the ailing automaker is considering shutting down two factories in Mexico. Two more facilities in Kanagawa, a prefecture neighbouring Tokyo, may also be on the chopping block.
There is no denying that one of Japan’s oldest homegrown automakers — which traces its history back to the 1910s — is struggling. After recording an annual net loss of ¥670.8bn ($4.6bn) last week, Nissan said it will reduce its number of assembly plants from 17 to 10 and cut 20,000 jobs worldwide. The magnitude of the loss and the scale of restructuring are reminiscent of the “Nissan Revival Plan” in 1999, introduced and implemented under now-ousted Carlos Ghosn. It remains to be seen, however, whether it can repeat the comeback it made in 2000s.
Meanwhile, Honda Motor, another iconic Japanese maker of cars and motorbikes, announced on Tuesday it will drastically cut back its investment plan.
Just a year ago, the company was saying it would spend ¥10tn through March 2031. That figure was slashed by 30 per cent to ¥7tn, marking a significant retreat from the electrification strategy that was originally intended to be the main engine of its transformation drive.
“Considering market conditions, policy trends and environmental regulations, our initial electrification strategy cannot be implemented as planned,” Honda president Toshihiro Mibe told reporters on Tuesday.
Merger talks between these two troubled automakers fell apart in February.
Just as Honda was announcing taking a step back from electrification, the world’s biggest EV battery maker was making a splash on the Hong Kong market. China’s Contemporary Amperex Technology Co, better known as CATL, started trading in the city on Tuesday. It is dual-listed in Shenzhen.
After its share price rose 16 per cent from its offering price on the first trading day, the overallotment option was fully exercised, pushing up the total amount of funds raised to HK$41bn ($5.3bn).
CATL has gained substantial ammunition for its war chest as it plans a new facility in Hungary, further highlighting Chinese players’ determination to conquer the global EV market. While the dual-listing in Hong Kong was an act of self-help, however, the company has also been enjoying hefty financial support from the government.
A generous helping
CATL, which notched the year’s biggest share offering globally on Tuesday, is also one of the biggest recipients of government funding, Nikkei Asia’s Kenji Kawase reports.
The leading EV battery maker stopped releasing figures on state subsidies for the full year in 2024, but the amount previously disclosed for the first half at Rmb3.84bn was enough to place it in second place among all mainland-listed companies, after only state-owned oil major Sinopec.
There are hints as to how much CATL may have received from the government for the full year, by connecting some dots in its official disclosures. The company and its independent external auditor have not responded to queries from Nikkei Asia at the time of publication.
Apart from CATL’s disclosure issue, the overall ranking of government subsidies is quite telling of where Beijing places its policy focus. While Sinopec, along with PetroChina, is traditionally a strategic target of support from an energy security standpoint, the appearance of BYD, Great Wall Motors, SAIC Motor and Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC) in the top 10, along with CATL clearly indicates the importance of the EV industry.
Closer to the action
Nvidia is planning a research and development centre in Shanghai, signalling a continued commitment to China despite slumping sales due to stringent US export controls, write the Financial Times’ Zijing Wu and Michael Acton.
Chief executive Jensen Huang discussed the plan with Shanghai’s mayor, people with knowledge of the matter told the FT.
While core intellectual property and production would remain outside China, the proposed centre would focus on better understanding local customer needs and navigating complex US regulations.
It will also have teams working on areas such as chip design verification and autonomous driving. Nvidia also seeks to tap into China’s AI talent pool and maintain its foothold in a market Huang estimates could be worth $50bn.
This move comes as Nvidia grapples with restrictions on its advanced chips, offering lower-specification alternatives like the L20 processor, which Chinese tech giants are hesitant to adopt.
The company is attempting to balance its ambitions in China against the backdrop of escalating US-China tech rivalry and competition from local players like Huawei.
The best of Computex
Nikkei Asia’s tech correspondents Cheng Ting-Fang and Lauly Li were busy this week covering Computex Taipei, one of the most important tech industry events of the year.
On Monday, the eve of the official opening, they reported that Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang revealed plans for his company to build an AI supercomputer for Taiwan with Foxconn, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and the local government, as demand for “sovereign AI” grows around the world.
The duo then caught MediaTek CEO Rick Tsai’s keynote speech on Tuesday, where he revealed that the Taiwanese chip designer will start using TSMC’s cutting-edge 2-nanometer chipmaking technology as early as September in an effort to stay competitive in the AI era.
Cheng and Li on Wednesday covered Nvidia’s Huang again as he revealed that the American chip company has lost substantial market share in China. It was 95 per cent at the beginning of the Biden administration, but was down to about 50 per cent under the second Trump regime.
“We lost a lot of revenue,” Huang said, while slamming Washington’s export controls on AI chips to China as a “failure.” The restrictions, he argues, have only motivated homegrown players like Huawei to grab a bigger slice of the Chinese market.
AI in court
AI-powered legal tech start-ups are emerging in South Korea and Japan, shaking up the law industry in both markets. Kim Jaewon and Ryohtaroh Satoh, Nikkei Asia’s reporters in those two countries, report on how this new breed of tech companies is offering a wide range of legal services from a client-lawyer matching app to AI-based legal analysis tools — and providing them at much more affordable prices.
However, not everyone in the legal profession in either country is happy about the latest wave of tech-led innovation. In South Korea, especially, the country’s older and more established lawyers are pushing back, while those in the younger generation, who graduated from recently introduced law schools and passed a new national exam, are more open to the changes.
Highlighting this tension, the country’s bar association has accused legal start-ups of acting as “illegal brokers” and doing business without a lawyer’s license.
Suggested reads
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Half of Japan’s new chip fabs still shy of mass production (Nikkei Asia)
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Thailand’s Banpu and CP turn to Japan ‘deep tech’ for sustainability (Nikkei Asia)
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Baiont’s Feng Ji: Quant managers who don’t adopt AI will be eliminated by the market (FT)
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Panasonic’s US battery plant on course to open after ‘toughest’ delays (Nikkei Asia)
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AI for the teacher: 30% of South Korean schools wield digital textbooks (Nikkei Asia)
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Nvidia chief announces major Taiwan chip investments (FT)
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Global supply chains threatened by lack of Chinese rare earths (FT)
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Rio Tinto ups its lithium bet with $900mn investment in Chilean JV (Nikkei Asia)
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OpenAI to join US-UAE plan to build vast data centre in Abu Dhabi (FT)
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Japan arms itself against foreign cyber attacks with new law (FT)
#techAsia is co-ordinated by Nikkei Asia’s Katherine Creel in Tokyo, with assistance from the FT tech desk in London.
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