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(Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
(Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

China’s bad economic news continues to drive up stocks

Help is on the way for the beleaguered economy. Eventually. Right?

As I’ve been saying for a while, China’s ugly economy is turning into a bullish talking point for Chinese traders, with today’s lackluster GDP numbers from the East Asian hegemon reinforcing that dynamic.

Chinese output grew by 4.6% year-on-year in the third quarter, according to official numbers released by the National Bureau of Statistics. That was a tad slower than the second quarter’s 4.7% annual rate of growth, but a touch faster than analysts had expected.

The details matter less than the key storyline, which continues to be the fact that China is struggling mightily against a deflationary tide created by a cataclysmic bust in its housing market.

A key arrow in the monetary quiver in this kind of scenario is a bond-buying binge from the central bank. Such programs, referred to broadly and somewhat inaccurately as “money printing,” were what the US Federal Reserve undertook in the wake of America’s own housing bust that began in the late 2000s. Showerings of this so-called “helicopter money” tend to lift the spirits of stock-market investors, as they’re partially intended to.

That’s why I’ve argued that the worse China’s economy gets, the more likely it is that Xi Jinping will be forced to fire up the People’s Bank of China’s fleet of helicopters sometime soon.

And in recent weeks, the Chinese stock market has soared as investors could almost hear the “chup-chup-chup” of the monetary choppers. But that air cavalry never arrived, prompting a tumble in Chinese share prices over the last week or so.

The message from Chinese policymakers in the wake of Friday’s lackluster GDP report — it was the slowest growth rate in over a year — was that help continues to be on the way. PBOC governor Pan Gongsheng told a conference Friday that the central bank could cut rates again on Monday, and revealed details of two new central-bank programs aimed at channeling cash into Chinese stocks.

The result was a pretty rosy day for Chinese shares, with the CSI 300 finishing up 3.6% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rising 3.2%.

Of course, if they want the markets to continue to rise, reinvigorating deeply dour Chinese consumer sentiment — just check out Procter & Gamble’s earnings report, also released Friday — eventually Chinese policymakers are going to have to come through with the flood of free, freshly created cash that the market is expecting/demanding.

That’s something they’ve seemed a bit reluctant to do.

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Snap shoots up 25% on $400 million deal with Perplexity, strong earnings

Snap shares shot up as much as 25% in after-hours trading on the release of third-quarter earnings that beat estimates, as well as the announcement of a big deal with AI startup Perplexity to integrate its “conversational AI search” into Snap products.

Some highlights:

  • Revenue came in at $1.51 billion, up 10% year on year (compared to Wall Street’s estimate of $1.49 billion).

  • Adjusted EBITDA was $182 million (estimate: $124 million).

  • Global monthly active users hit 943 million, up 7% year on year.

  • Perplexity will pay Snap $400 million “over one year, through a combination of cash and equity, as we achieve global rollout” of its conversational search engine within Snapchat.

The company also announced a $500 million stock buyback program.

Some highlights:

  • Revenue came in at $1.51 billion, up 10% year on year (compared to Wall Street’s estimate of $1.49 billion).

  • Adjusted EBITDA was $182 million (estimate: $124 million).

  • Global monthly active users hit 943 million, up 7% year on year.

  • Perplexity will pay Snap $400 million “over one year, through a combination of cash and equity, as we achieve global rollout” of its conversational search engine within Snapchat.

The company also announced a $500 million stock buyback program.

Duolingo Q3 2025 earnings

Duolingo dives on Q3 user growth miss, uninspiring guidance

Duolingo has run into stiff headwinds this year.

markets

Nvidia slumps as Jensen Huang warns that China “will win” the AI race versus the US

Nvidia tumbled late in the session Wednesday after the Financial Times released an article in which CEO Jensen Huang says that “China is going to win the AI race” because it has a more favorable regulatory environment and cheaper access to power.

Reading between the lines here, I’d say the main takeaway for traders is what’s left unsaid at the end of this sentence: “China is going to win the AI race” — without having access to Nvidia’s flagship processors, or even wanting its nerfed chips!

Not exactly a signal that Nvidia’s hardware is as all-important and synonymous with success in AI as its stock price and revenue trajectory would suggest it is!

President Trump didn’t discuss Blackwell chips with Chinese President Xi at last week’s meeting, being convinced by advisers to keep that off the table. And while Nvidia has the all-clear to sell its H20 chips to China again, China’s internet regulator apparently instructed its leading tech companies not to buy them, preferring to bolster its domestic capabilities.

markets

Lucid dips as it lowers its full-year production forecast

Shares of Lucid are down more than 4% in after-hours trading on Wednesday following the luxury EV maker’s third-quarter earnings results.

Lucid, which delivered 47% more vehicles in Q3 than in the same period last year, posted an adjusted loss per share of $2.65, compared to the $2.29 loss per share Wall Street analysts polled by FactSet expected.

The company also:

  • Booked $336.6 million in revenue, up 68% from last year and above the consensus estimate of $349.5 million.

  • Updated its full-year production outlook to 18,000 vehicles, the bottom of its previous range of between 18,000 and 20,000 vehicles. Wall Street expected the company to build 18,940 vehicles on the year.

Lucid shares sold off heavily during Q3 as the company executed a 1-for-10 reverse stock split that took effect in early September. The stock remains lower compared to its highs earlier this year and is down more than 40% year to date as of Wednesday’s close. That’s significantly underperforming larger rivals like Rivian and Tesla.

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Lyft bookings top estimates as revenue grows

Lyft swung to a third-quarter profit, boosted by 11% revenue growth, as bookings topped Wall Street’s expectations.

Shares were up 2.7% in recent after-hours trading.

The company reported earnings per share of $0.11, compared with a loss of $0.03 in the year-earlier quarter. Gross bookings came in at $4.8 billion, slightly more than the $4.7 billion the Street was expecting. It reported revenue of $1.7 billion, in line with analysts’ expectations.

Lyft’s top competitor, Uber, reported revenue numbers on Tuesday that beat expectations, though its stock still took a dip on the news.

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