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Tesla supplier CATL, as well as tech giant Tencent, named as “Chinese military companies” by Pentagon

Every year, the Secretary of Defense is required to publish a list of “Chinese military companies.” One of the latest to be added to that list is a big one — in fact, it’s China’s biggest company by market capitalization: Tencent. Also added to the directory was Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. (CATL), the world’s leading battery maker for electric vehicles and an important supplier to some of the world’s biggest automakers, including Tesla, Ford, Stellantis, and Volkswagen.

Per Bloomberg, Tesla is CATL’s largest customer, accounting for more than 12% of its revenue, with 1 in 3 electric cars around the world estimated to have a CATL battery. Last year, the chairman of CATL divulged in an interview that it was working on faster-charging batteries for Tesla, and at the end of December 2024 the company filed for a second listing of its shares in Hong Kong, as it seeks further access to capital in order to fund its global expansion.

Shares in CATL were 3% lower in trading today. Tencent’s Hong Kong-listed shares fared worse, closing down more than 7% after the company was designated a “Chinese military company,” wiping out more than $35 billion in market value.

The growing list of companies on the Defense Department’s list is part of an escalating economic tit for tat between the two superpowers. After the US’s export controls aimed to limit China’s semiconductor industry, Beijing recently bit back by banning shipments of certain semiconductor- and military-related minerals and metals to the US.

Per Bloomberg, Tesla is CATL’s largest customer, accounting for more than 12% of its revenue, with 1 in 3 electric cars around the world estimated to have a CATL battery. Last year, the chairman of CATL divulged in an interview that it was working on faster-charging batteries for Tesla, and at the end of December 2024 the company filed for a second listing of its shares in Hong Kong, as it seeks further access to capital in order to fund its global expansion.

Shares in CATL were 3% lower in trading today. Tencent’s Hong Kong-listed shares fared worse, closing down more than 7% after the company was designated a “Chinese military company,” wiping out more than $35 billion in market value.

The growing list of companies on the Defense Department’s list is part of an escalating economic tit for tat between the two superpowers. After the US’s export controls aimed to limit China’s semiconductor industry, Beijing recently bit back by banning shipments of certain semiconductor- and military-related minerals and metals to the US.

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Paramount sues Warner Bros. for more info on its deal with Netflix, says it plans to nominate new directors

It’s a fresh week and that means a fresh bit of escalation in the ongoing Warner Bros. Discovery merger drama.

At an upcoming meeting, Paramount Skydance plans to “nominate a slate of [WBD] directors who, in accordance with their fiduciary duties, will... enter into a transaction with Paramount,” CEO David Ellison wrote in a letter to WBD shareholders disclosed on Monday.

Ellison also said that Paramount sued WBD in Delaware court in an effort to force the board to disclose “basic information” that will allow shareholders to make an informed decision between Paramount’s offer and one from Netflix. WBD shares dipped about 2% on Monday morning.

The latest update follows Paramount’s move last week to reaffirm — but not raise — its $30-per-share offer for WBD. Some saw that decision as Paramount effectively throwing in the towel on its merger hopes, given that the same deal has been rejected twice by the WBD board and winning over shareholders directly is a difficult process. Monday’s disclosure appears to signal that whether it loses or not, Paramount isn’t going to make Netflix’s acquisition easy.

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