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France intensifies hunt for Louvre raiders as museum security scrutinised
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Hermes taps British designer to lead its menswear line
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Conservative Takaichi named Japan's first woman PM
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US Vice President Vance in Israel to shore up Gaza deal
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Stocks up on China-US hopes, Japan's new PM lifts Tokyo
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Bayern Munich extend coach Kompany's contract until 2029
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Canadian teen Mboko eager to build on 'crazy' breakthrough year
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England women's great Scarratt retires from rugby
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Golf's Bryan Bros on 'wild' ride from Internet to facing major champs
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South Africa grind to 86-2 at tea in reply to Pakistan's 333
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Japanese man jailed after rare public accusation of rape
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Chinese woman charged over gold theft at Paris Natural History Museum
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Maradona's heirs sign deal with Swedish company to market brand
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Indonesia to repatriate British grandmother on death row in drug case
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US tariffs take big bite out of Swiss exports
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UK borrowing hits five-year high ahead of budget
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Dyche replaces Postecoglou as Nottingham Forest manager
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Dyche appointed new manager of Nottingham Forest
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France's ex-leader Sarkozy jailed, proclaiming his innocence
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European airlines drop vague promises on carbon offsets
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France's ex-president Sarkozy escorted to jail over Libya funding conviction
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Maharaj takes seven as South Africa dismiss Pakistan for 333
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Indian capital chokes after Diwali firework frenzy
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Chess mourns US grandmaster dead at 29
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Nigerian monarch takes on oil giant in search of environmental justice
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PM Sanae Takaichi, Japan's Iron Lady 2.0
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Paris verdict due in TotalEnergies 'greenwashing' case
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Indonesia to repatriate British grandmother on death row: govt source
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Virginia Giuffre shines light on Epstein ordeal in new memoir
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France and Europe: fertile AI training ground?
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After deadly floods, Spaniards fight to save photos
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Trump warns Hamas not to breach Gaza deal as Vance heads to Israel
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China hawk Takaichi named Japan's first woman PM
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Sanae Takaichi, Iron Lady 2.0 poised to be Japan PM
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Liverpool's Ekitike returns to face floundering Frankfurt
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Cape Verde captain getting to grips with 'dream' World Cup qualification
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'Enhancing the game': Football Manager includes women's clubs
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France's ex-president Sarkozy to be jailed over Libya funding conviction
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Blue Jays sink Mariners to reach World Series
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France intensifies hunt for Louvre raiders
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EU takes aim at plastic pellets to prevent their nightmare cleanup
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Equities rally on China-US hopes, new Japanese PM lifts Tokyo
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'Dream come true' for US pianist Eric Lu after Chopin competition win
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Nepal's 'hidden' mountains draw new wave of climbers
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Climate change, population growth threats as malaria fight stalls
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EU timber imports linked to deforestation on Indonesia's Borneo: NGOs
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Canada crime bill and rap group fracas spark free-speech debate
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Peru's Gen Z lead movement against crime, political paralysis
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Migrants brace for hostile climate after Chile's election
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Trump demolishes part of White House for new ballroom
China’s profitless push
Can we keep up? Chinese companies are sacrificing margins—sometimes incurring outright losses—to win global market share in strategic industries from electric vehicles and batteries to solar and consumer tech. The tactic is turbocharging exports, pressuring Western competitors and forcing policymakers in Europe and the United States to erect new defenses while they scramble to lower costs at home.
Electric vehicles: a race to the bottom on price. In late spring 2025, China’s largest carmakers unleashed another round of steep price cuts, with entry-level models reduced to mass-market price points. Regulators in Beijing have since urged manufacturers to rein in the bruising price war, citing risks to industry health and employment. Yet the incentives keep coming as dozens of brands fight for share in the world’s most competitive EV market. The financial fallout is visible: leading pure-play EV makers continue to post substantial quarterly losses, while ambitious new entrants have acknowledged that their car divisions remain in the red even as sales surge.
Green tech: overcapacity meets collapsing margins. China’s build-out in solar has morphed from a growth engine into a profitability trap. Module and polysilicon prices have fallen so far that key manufacturers forecast sizeable half-year losses, and producers are now discussing a coordinated effort to shutter older capacity. Industry reports describe spot prices for feedstocks dipping below production costs, a hallmark of cut-throat competition that spills over into export markets and undercuts rivals globally.
Trade blowback intensifies. The U.S. has moved to quadruple tariffs on Chinese-made EVs and lift duties on batteries, chips and solar cells. The European Union has imposed definitive countervailing duties on Chinese battery-electric cars and opened additional probes across green-tech supply chains. Brussels and Beijing have even explored minimum export prices to reduce undercutting—an extraordinary step that underscores how acute the pricing pressure has become.
Deflation at the factory gate. China’s factory-gate prices remain in negative territory year on year, reflecting slack domestic demand and excess capacity. That weakness transmits abroad via cheaper exports, squeezing margins for manufacturers elsewhere and complicating central banks’ inflation-fighting calculus. Beijing has rolled out an “anti-involution” campaign to curb ruinous discounting and steer investment toward “high-quality growth,” but implementation is uneven and local governments still depend on industrial output to stabilize employment.
Scale, speed—and logistics. Chinese champions are not only cutting prices; they are redesigning logistics to keep them low. One leading EV maker has built its own fleet of car carriers and is localizing production via overseas factories to sidestep tariffs and port bottlenecks. Such vertical integration magnifies the advantage from sprawling domestic supply chains in batteries, motors and power electronics.
What this means for Western competitors. The immediate effect is a margin squeeze across autos, solar and adjacent sectors. The strategic response taking shape in Europe and the U.S. is three-pronged: (1) trade defense to buy time; (2) industrial policy to catalyze domestic gigafactories and clean-tech manufacturing; and (3) consolidation to rebuild pricing power. Companies that cannot match China’s cost curve will need to differentiate—through software, design, brand and service—or partner to gain scale. Even in China, the current “profitless prosperity” looks unsustainable: consolidation is inevitable, and state guidance now favors capacity rationalization over raw volume.
The bottom line. China’s price-first strategy is remaking global competition. Whether others can keep up will hinge on how quickly they can de-risk supply chains, compress costs and innovate without hollowing out profitability. For now, the contest is being fought as much on balance sheets as it is on assembly lines.

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