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CSB blanks San Sebastian to lead NCAA volleyball

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

Games on Friday
(LPU Gym)
9 a.m. – Mapua vs LPU (Men)
11 a.m. – Mapua vs LPU (Women)
1 p.m. – AU vs UPHSD (Women)
3 p.m. – AU vs UPHSD (Men)

COLLEGE OF ST. BENILDE (CSB) overpowered San Sebastian University, 25-20, 25-13, 25-21, on Thursday to remain unbeaten in the NCAA in the last five years and atop Season 100 women’s volleyball at the LPU Gym.

Wielyn Estoque led the way with 15 points while Clydel Mare Catarig and Zam Nolasco scattered 12 and 11 hits, respectively, to help keep the Lady Blazers’s amazing streak going.

It was the third win in a row for the three-peat champion and 43rd overall that started during the pandemic-shortened season in 2020.

Interestingly, it was a duel between two squads whose coaches — CSB’s Jerry Yee and SSC-R’s Roger Gorayeb — gave up their head-coaching jobs to become assistants in order for them to continue handling their respective teams.

That is because of an old league rule barring mentors who are also coaching in the pros to handle the head-coaching reins in the NCAA.

Mr. Yee is coach of ZUS and Mr. Gorayeb Capital1 in the Premier Volleyball League.

It was the Lady Stags’ first defeat in three outings.

In the other match, Jose Rizal University claimed its first win at the expense of San Beda, 25-22, 25-23, 25-22, after three straight setbacks.

The Red Spikers fell to 0-3. — Joey Villar

Bucks rout shorthanded Dallas Mavericks 137-107

DAMIAN LILLARD scored 34 points and Giannis Antetokounmpo added 32 to lead the host Milwaukee Bucks to a 137-107 win over the significantly short-handed Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday night.

Milwaukee has won four straight games and eight of its last nine. AJ Green added 18 points and Kevin Porter Jr. had 10 points, 11 rebounds and 14 assists off the bench for his first triple-double of the season.

Dallas lost its third straight game and fifth in its last six. With nine players ruled out of this game and just eight available, Klay Thompson led the way with 28 points, followed by 15 from Naji Marshall. The latter added 10 rebounds.

Both teams came out firing in the first quarter. Antetokounmpo and Lillard scored the first 20 points for the Bucks, who led 40-29 going into the second.

Lillard had 26 points in the half for the Bucks, and Thompson had 15 for Dallas.

Milwaukee outscored Dallas 34-26 to take a 106-79 lead into the fourth quarter. Antetokounmpo hit a key milestone, surpassing 20,000 points. He is the sixth-youngest player in NBA history to reach that mark behind LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant, Wilt Chamberlain and Michael Jordan. — Reuters

Mavs take the risk

The Mavericks just can’t seem to get a break. They went for what they deemed the best way to generate immediate gains when they swapped erstwhile foundational piece Luka Dončić for Anthony Davis. For eternal optimists squinting to see the light in the face of the shocking decision of the front office, the key lay in the availability of the perennial Defensive Player of the Year candidate for the remainder of the season. Unfortunately, he succumbed to a freak injury midway through his debut for the blue and silver, joining vital cogs Derek Lively II and Daniel Gafford in the sidelines for the foreseeable future. And then, when they appeared to be making the most of their challenged roster, they wound up losing leading scorer and playmaker Kyrie Irving to a torn anterior cruciate ligament.

Of course, the Mavericks couldn’t have known they would be snakebitten when they let go of Dončić this time last month. Considering how determined they were to forge a new path, however, it’s fair to argue that not even some premonition of the outcome of the deal would have stopped them. That the Lakers are now tangibly reaping the benefits of the development serves only to rub salt on open wounds. And these lesions look to fester while they ponder on the best course of action in the interim. Because prudence is the better part of valor, viewing the 2024-25 campaign as a lost cause may yet prove reasonable.

Interestingly, the sight of the bank getting broken by an all-in call, ill-advised or not, is more common in the National Basketball Association than conventional wisdom would care to admit. Practically all franchises have chosen seemingly questionable personnel options at one time or another — some with recalcitrance in subscribing to the sunk cost fallacy. In the case of the Mavericks, though, success was deemed critical given that they gave up a five-time All-NBA First Team selection yet to hit his peak in order to draw their desired hand on the river.

The good news is that history treats winners with kindness. And, yes, the Mavericks may well be able to see their vision through over time. The bad news is that they can’t withdraw their chips from the middle of the table. Meanwhile, they’re likely to keep attracting no small measure of backlash for their choice, what with a significant rise in ticket prices slated to kick in. The triumphs will be harder to come by. The scarcity of goodwill becomes more pronounced. The risk has been taken; the ultimate return is anybody’s guess.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Investors spy the dawn of a tectonic shift away from the United States

The Wall Street entrance to the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is seen in New York City, US, Nov. 15, 2022. — REUTERS

LONDON — A historic global trade war, a proposed $1.2-trillion European fiscal bazooka, and the emergence of China as tech race leader are upending global flows of money, marking a potential turning point for investor capital away from the United States.

China unlocked more stimulus on Wednesday and promised greater efforts to cushion the impact of an escalating US trade war. Hours earlier, Germany’s likely next government agreed on the biggest overhaul to fiscal policy since the country’s reunification.

Meanwhile, US economic data points to a weakening, and the trade war unleashed by US tariffs that kicked in this week is hurting sentiment inside and outside the world’s biggest economy.

For most of the last three years, investors had bet on “US exceptionalism,” with the country ahead of others in economic growth, stock prices, artificial intelligence and other areas.

“The world now sees the US model is changing, and saying — we need to adapt to that, the US is no longer as reliable as a trade partner, we have to take care of our own needs on defense,” said Tim Graf, head of macro strategy for EMEA at State Street Global Markets.

The change in sentiment has fueled a rare divergence in global stock markets.

While the S&P 500 stock index is down 1.8% this year, European shares are up almost 9% at a record high, and tech stocks in Hong Kong have surged almost 30%.

The euro shot to a four-month high above $1.07 and a number of banks have raced to ditch their recent calls for a drop to parity against the dollar.

Investors have chopped their bullish bets on the dollar in half to around $16 billion since US President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January, based on weekly data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

“Go back to December, this overwhelming consensus about US exceptionalism, and US was the only place to invest,” said Dario Perkins, managing director of global macro at TS Lombard, an economic consultancy.

“What’s really happened here is this threat of tariffs and the aggressiveness of Trump is forcing other countries to spend more.”

In his first 44 days in office, Mr. Trump has ripped up the playbook on foreign relations in place since 1945, launched a global trade war by slapping tariffs on his country’s largest trading partners and forced European leaders to drastically rethink how they fund their own security.

Tariffs and trade uncertainty are causing the US economy to lose steam, and companies more vulnerable to slower growth are starting to show the cracks.

Investors have poured money into Europe to diversify away from the US market.

SPENDING BIG
With Europe and China poised to spend big, the dollar is looking less appealing.

“We had been long the dollar against the euro and closed that position over a week ago. It had lost impetus,” said Mark Dowding, chief investment officer at RBC’s BlueBay fixed income team. “The behavior of Trump has diminished the appeal for US assets in general.”

After investors dumped Chinese assets last year, as the economy slowed and affluent consumers were closing their wallets, the government took several steps to encourage domestic spending. But many still viewed China as uninvestable in the absence of a jumbo stimulus plan as strains lingered from a real-estate bubble that burst, hitting companies and homeowners.

Almost uninterrupted outflows from China-focused funds after Mr. Trump’s election win in November reversed in early February, drawing in some $3 billion since then, according to Lipper data. 

One of the great US stock market draws has been its megacap tech shares. Nvidia, in particular, has become the poster-child of the artificial intelligence (AI) investment revolution and one of the world’s most valuable companies.

There was little evidence to suggest any serious challenge to the dominance of Wall Street in the AI arms race until late January, when a previously unknown low-cost Chinese AI model burst onto the scene.

The emergence of DeepSeek not only shattered assumptions about the cost and efficiency of the race to build out AI, but of how close behind Western companies China really was.

Hong Kong-listed tech stocks have roared 24% higher since January 27, while a basket of US tech megacaps has dropped 12%.

Yang Tingwu, vice general manager of asset manager Tongheng Investment, said China’s stock market is already immune to higher US tariffs as the country’s growing strength is underpinning domestic assets.

“If you look at TikTok, Xiaohongshu or DeepSeek, China’s technological clout is expanding,” Mr. Yang  said.

American users have been rapidly moving to Xiaohongshu, a Chinese social media platform known as RedNote in English, in response to the impending sale of rival TikTok’s US operations.

Still, for some, a resilient US economy and relatively higher interest rates will see the dollar retain its appeal over time.

“I do think there is a shift in play, we view it as a tactical versus a big secular shift,” said Nate Thooft, CIO for Multi-Asset Solutions and Global Equities at Manulife Investment Management. He has recently upgraded a maximum underweight on European equities to neutral. — Reuters

Trump to order US Education department abolished — WSJ

RAWPIXEL

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is expected to issue an executive order aimed at his long-held goal of abolishing the US Department of Education, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Wednesday.

The order may come as soon as Thursday, the newspaper said, citing people familiar with the matter whom it did not name. The White House and the department did not immediately respond to requests for comment late on Wednesday.

Mr. Trump has repeatedly called for eliminating the department, calling it a “big con job.” He proposed shuttering it in his first term as president, but Congress did not act.

His fellow Republicans have long sought to chip away at its funding and influence, and his education secretary, Linda McMahon, who was confirmed by the Senate on Monday, has defended Mr. Trump’s plan to abolish the agency.

The department’s defenders say it is crucial to keeping public education standards high and accuse Republicans of trying to push for-profit education. An immediate closure could disrupt tens of billions of dollars in aid to K-12 schools and tuition assistance for college students.

Mr. Trump said last month he wanted the department to be closed immediately but acknowledged he would need buy-ins from Congress, which determines its funding, and teachers’ unions.

Ms. McMahon told senators that unwinding the department would require congressional action and repeatedly promised the federal school funding appropriated by Congress to assist low-income school districts and students would continue.

Mr. Trump and his billionaire adviser Elon Musk have attempted to dismantle government programs and institutions such as the US Agency for International Development without congressional approval, but abolishing the Department of Education would be his first shutdown of a cabinet-level agency.

The department oversees some 100,000 public and 34,000 private schools in the United States, although more than 85% of public school funding comes from state and local governments.

Instead, it provides federal grants for needy schools and programs, including money to pay teachers of children with special needs, fund arts programs and replace outdated infrastructure.

It also oversees the $1.6 trillion in student loans held by tens of millions of Americans who cannot afford to pay for university outright.

Under Trump’s Democratic predecessor, Joseph Biden, Republicans particularly criticized the department over student loan forgiveness and policies related to diversity, equity and inclusion programs. — Reuters

South Korea air force jets accidentally drop bombs on homes

A POLICE OFFICER walks at a cordoned area after South Korea’s Air Force said that Mk82 bombs fell from a KF-16 jet outside the shooting range during joint live-fire exercises near the demilitarized zone separating two Koreas in Pocheon, South Korea on March 6, 2025. — REUTERS

POCHEON, South Korea — Fifteen people were injured in South Korea on Thursday after bombs dropped by fighter jets landed in a civilian district, damaging houses and a church during military exercises in Pocheon, the Air Force and the fire department said.

The Gyeonggi-do Bukbu Fire Services said in a statement that 15 people were wounded, out of which two were seriously hurt.

Pocheon is about 40 kilometers (25 miles) northeast of Seoul, near the heavily militarized border with North Korea.

South Korea’s Air Force said eight 500-pound (225 kg) Mk82 bombs from KF-16 jets fell outside the shooting range during joint live-fire exercises.

“We are sorry for the damage caused by the abnormal drop accident, and we wish the injured a speedy recovery,” the Air Force said in a statement.

The accident was due to a pilot entering incorrect coordinates, said a military official who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter. The official said that the two jets then dropped four bombs each, with all of them detonating.

Authorities would suspend live-fire exercises until there was clear understanding of what went wrong, but the incident would not affect major joint South Korean and US military exercises due to begin on Monday, the official said.

Residents in the area have protested about the disturbance and potential danger from nearby training grounds for years.

Photographs from the scene showed a house hollowed out by the impact, shattered windows and a church building strewn with debris.

Security camera footage aired on local TV also caught the moments before and up to the incident, with a pickup truck driving on a tree-lined street before the area is consumed by a large explosion.

“The unthinkable has happened,” said Pocheon city mayor Baeck Young-hyeun, who urged the government and military to come up with measures to prevent any further civilian damage.

The defense ministry said earlier on Thursday that South Korea and US forces were holding their first joint live-fire exercises in Pocheon, linked to annual military drills due to start next week.

The Freedom Shield joint drills, which will run from March 10 to 20, aim to strengthen the readiness of the alliance for threats such as North Korea, the Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said before the accident.

This year’s drills will reflect “lessons learned from recent armed conflicts” and North Korea’s growing partnership with Russia, it added.

“Our planners look across the globe and identify the trends that are changing and we look at how we can incorporate that into our exercises,” Ryan Donald, a spokesperson for the United States Forces Korea (USFK), told a media briefing on Thursday.

About 70 combined field training sessions are scheduled for this year’s exercise, said Lee Sung-jun, a spokesperson for Seoul’s JCS. — Reuters

Malaysia discussing response to US chip tariffs with companies

A view of Kuala Lumpur skyline in Malaysia, Feb. 16, 2017. — REUTERS

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia is discussing with chip companies based in the country whether they can absorb the impact of potential US tariffs on semiconductors, its trade minister said, as it looks to hedge against risks to its export-driven economy.

The Southeast Asian nation is home to a large semiconductor industry, including top US multinationals, and is one of the top exporters of chips to the US.

US President Donald Trump said in February that he intended to impose tariffs on semiconductors starting at “25% or higher,” though it is unclear when this decision could be made.

Malaysia would need to see the magnitude and quantum of the tariffs, Trade Minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz said in an interview with Reuters on Wednesday, as they could have a significant impact on its exports.

“We’re discussing with the companies… whether the tariffs will be absorbed by the consumers,” Mr. Tengku Zafrul said. “Exports will continue to happen but someone has to pay for the higher cost, whether it be the consumers or the companies that absorbs.”

He said the government has not discussed what it will do or whether it will provide financial support to offset tariffs.

Last year, Malaysia shipped $16.2 billion worth of chips to the US, accounting for nearly 20% of all US semiconductor imports, Trade data showed.

Mr. Tengku Zafrul also said Malaysian data centers were unlikely to be affected by export restrictions imposed on advanced chips by the previous US administration as demand for artificial intelligence (AI) remains strong.

Malaysia is fast becoming a major hub for data centers and AI factories in Southeast Asia, with investments from Microsoft, Google Amazon, and Oracle. However, this investment boom may be hampered by new restrictions adopted in the final days of Joseph Biden’s administration in January on the use of US chips overseas, in a bid to further restrict China’s access to AI semiconductors.

It remains unclear how Mr. Trump will enforce the new rules but the two administrations share similar views on the competitive threat from China.

Under the new rules, which are set to take effect in May, US cloud service providers, such as Microsoft, Google and Amazon, will be allowed to deploy only 50% of their total AI computing power outside the United States, and no more than 7% in Malaysia and other countries that have not been granted privileged access to US chips.

Mt. Tengku Zafrul said Malaysia’s data centers will not be impacted given the sector’s growth trajectory accounted for the limits of the restrictions.

The sector’s prospects will be further boosted by the fact that the big data center companies in Malaysia are US companies, he added.

“When we talk to the data center players, Microsoft, Google, AWS … there is not a concern because the allocation (under the restrictions) is adequate,” Mr. Tengku Zafrul said.

“There will be no impact on the growth in data centers because AI will be used by many.” — Reuters

Filipino innovators need to keep their eyes peeled on opportunities, Pili Seal inventor says

Create your own opportunities and the rest will follow, advised Pili AdheSeal, Inc. CEO Mark Kennedy E. Bantugon to his fellow Filipino student inventors.

Read the related article: Pinoy makes ‘green’ aviation sealant from lowly pili tree – BusinessWorld Online

Interview by Almira Martinez
Video editing by Jayson Mariñas

Strength in leadership: The women of Global Dominion

From left: Jenelyn Morales, Sales and Marketing Head – Branch Division; Janice Morales, Deputy General Manager – Car Financing Division; Annabelle Alvaran, General Manager – REM Division; Zenaida Soriano, former Sales Area Head; and Eugenie Mabbayad, General Manager – Car Financing Division

By Sarah Tabing

March marks International Women’s Month, a time to recognize and celebrate the remarkable contributions of women across various industries. At Global Dominion, we take immense pride in our commitment to fostering an inclusive and diverse workplace — one where women thrive and lead. With women comprising 51% of our workforce and an impressive 57% holding senior management positions, we stand as a testament to the power of gender diversity in driving organizational success.

At Global Dominion, we are guided by our core values: Grit, Excellence, Innovation, Integrity, Fun, and Care. These values empower our women leaders to break boundaries, shatter stereotypes, and drive positive change within the organization and beyond.

“We recognize that our strength comes from the diversity and dedication of our people. Empowering women in leadership is not just about representation — it is about fostering an environment where they can thrive, innovate, and make impactful decisions. Our women leaders play a crucial role in driving our mission forward, ensuring that we continue to provide simplified financing solutions that uplift Filipino families and businesses. This Women’s Month, we celebrate the incredible women of GDFI and reaffirm our commitment to creating opportunities for growth, leadership, and success,” said Patricia Poco-Palacios, President and Managing Director of Global Dominion.

Through mentorship programs, leadership training, and career development initiatives, Global Dominion invests in the professional growth of our female employees, ensuring that more women have access to the tools and opportunities needed to reach their full potential. As an organization, we remain steadfast in our mission to create an equitable and empowering workplace.

As we celebrate International Women’s Month, let us remain steadfast in advancing gender equality, fostering talent, and shaping a future where leadership is defined by dedication, resilience, and excellence — the very qualities that the women of Global Dominion exemplify each day.

 


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Shipping firms pull back from Hong Kong to skirt US-China risks

WILLIAM WILLIAM-UNSPLASH

 – Some shipping companies are discreetly moving operations out of Hong Kong and taking vessels off its flag registry. Others are making contingency plans to do so.

Behind these low-profile moves, six shipping executives said, lie concerns that their ships could be commandeered by Chinese authorities or hit with U.S. sanctions in a conflict between Beijing and Washington.

Beijing’s emphasis on the role of Hong Kong in serving Chinese security interests and growing U.S. scrutiny of the importance of China’s commercial fleet in a possible military clash, such as over Taiwan, are causing unease across the industry, the people told Reuters.

The U.S. Trade Representative’s office last month proposed levying steep U.S. port fees on Chinese shipping companies and others that operate Chinese-built vessels, to counter China’s “targeted dominance” of shipbuilding and maritime logistics.

Washington in September warned American businesses about growing risks of operating in Hong Kong, where the U.S. already applies sanctions against officials involved in a security crackdown.

Hong Kong for more than a century has been a hub for shipowners and the brokers, financiers, underwriters and lawyers supporting them. Its maritime and port industry accounted for 4.2% of GDP in 2022, official data show.

The city’s flag is the eighth most-flown by ships worldwide, according to VesselsValue, a subsidiary of maritime data group Veson Nautical.

Reuters interviews with two dozen people, including shipping executives, insurers and lawyers familiar with Hong Kong, revealed growing concern that commercial maritime operations could be ensnared by forces beyond their control in a U.S.-China military clash.

Many pointed to China’s intensified focus on national security objectives; trade frictions; and the broad powers of Hong Kong’s leader, who is accountable to Beijing, to seize control of shipping in an emergency.

“We don’t want to be in a position where China comes knocking, wanting our ships, and the U.S. is targeting us on the other side,” said one executive, who like others was granted anonymity to discuss a sensitive issue.

The concerns of shipowners and their actions to curb exposure to Hong Kong have not been previously reported. The perceptions of risk have grown in recent years, coinciding with a tightening security climate in the Chinese-ruled city and tensions between the world’s two largest economies.

 

TURNING TIDE

Commercial ships must be registered, or flagged, with a particular country or jurisdiction to comply with safety and environmental rules.

Despite an influx of Chinese-operated ships onto Hong Kong’s registry, the number of oceangoing vessels flagged in the city fell more than 8% to 2,366 in January from 2,580 four years earlier, according to independent analysis by VesselsValue. Government data show a similar drop.

Among the ships that left Hong Kong’s registry, 74 re-flagged to Singapore and Marshall Islands in 2023 and 2024, chiefly dry-bulk carriers designed to transport commodities such as coal, iron ore and grain. Some 15 tankers and seven container ships separately left the Hong Kong registry for those flags, according to VesselsValue.

The outflow of ships since 2021 marks a reversal for Hong Kong’s registry, which official data show grew roughly 400% in two decades following 1997.

In response to Reuters questions, Hong Kong’s government said it was natural for shipping companies to review operations given changing geopolitical and trade circumstances, and normal for the number of ships on registries to fluctuate in the short term.

Hong Kong would “continue to excel as a prominent international shipping centre”, a spokesperson said, outlining a range of incentives for shipowners, including profits tax breaks and green subsidies.

Neither the laws governing the registry nor emergency provisions empowered Hong Kong’s leader to commandeer ships to serve in a Chinese merchant fleet, the spokesperson said.

The spokesperson declined to elaborate when asked about industry players’ concerns over how colonial-era emergency powers might be applied during a U.S.-China conflict. The provisions allow the city’s leader to make “any regulations whatsoever”, including taking control of vessels and property.

China’s defense and commerce ministries didn’t respond to questions about the role of a merchant fleet in Beijing’s warfighting plans, the potential involvement of Hong Kong-flagged vessels, and the worries of commercial shipowners.

The U.S. Treasury and Pentagon declined to comment about potential sanctions, shipping executives’ concerns, and the role of Hong Kong-registered vessels in a Chinese merchant fleet.

Lawyers and executives say ships can be re-flagged for various reasons through sale, charter or redeployment to different routes.

Basil Karatzas, U.S.-based consultant with Karatzas Marine Advisors & Co, said Singapore had become the preferred domicile for companies with lesser exposure to Chinese shipping and cargo trade, because it offered many efficiencies, including its legal system, but less risk than Hong Kong.

Singapore’s Maritime and Port Authority said decisions about domiciles and flagging were based on commercial considerations. It had not observed any “significant change” in the number of Hong Kong-based shipping companies relocating operations or re-flagging vessels to Singapore.

 

MERCHANT FLEET

Hong Kong’s shipping registry is widely regarded for its safety and regulatory standards, executives and lawyers say, allowing its ships to pass easily through foreign ports. Hong Kong’s flag is now flown by many of China’s state-owned international vessels.

In a conflict, these tankers, bulk carriers and large container vessels would form the backbone of a merchant fleet serving the People’s Liberation Army to supply China’s oil, food and industrial needs, according to four security analysts and PLA military studies.

By contrast, the U.S. has a small commercial shipbuilding industry and far fewer ships under its flag.

While China’s state-owned fleet is growing in size, it would be a target for the U.S. in a military clash, and Beijing would likely require other vessels to ensure supplies given its vast needs and reliance on international sea lanes, three analysts said.

Strategic maritime operations have surfaced on President Donald Trump’s radar. In his inauguration speech in January, Trump threatened to “take back” the Panama Canal, which he said had fallen under Chinese control.

He did not give specifics, but Mr. Trump’s remarks focused attention on two Panama ports operated by a subsidiary of Hong Kong conglomerate CK Hutchison Holdings. The group, which didn’t respond to questions about Trump’s comments, agreed this week to sell a majority stake in the subsidiary to a consortium of investors led by BlackRock, giving U.S. interests control over the ports.

Mr. Trump told Congress on Tuesday that his administration will create an office of shipbuilding in the White House and offer new tax incentives for the sector.

A U.S. congressional study in November 2023 stated that “cargo ships typically transport 90% of the military equipment needed in overseas wars”. It noted that Chinese shipyards had 1,794 large oceangoing ships on order in 2022, compared with five in the U.S.

Merchant vessels were vital in Britain’s long-range mission to retake the Falkland Islands from Argentina in 1982. And UK-flagged commercial ships operating out of Hong Kong – many owned by local firms dependent on or controlled by China – supplied communist Hanoi during the Vietnam War, frustrating the U.S., declassified CIA documents show.

The need for a strong Chinese merchant fleet to help build China’s maritime power was outlined by President Xi Jinping in a Politburo study session in 2013.

Over the last decade, Chinese government and military documents and studies have highlighted the dual-use military value of China’s merchant ships.

Regulations enacted in 2015 required Chinese builders of five types of commercial vessels – including tankers, container ships and bulk carriers – to ensure they could serve military needs, according to state media.

Since then, the state-owned COSCO line has grown significantly.

Public COSCO documents show China is placing political commissars – officers who ensure Communist Party goals are ultimately served – on nominally civilian ships.

In January, the U.S. blacklisted COSCO subsidiaries for what it said were links to the Chinese military.

COSCO did not respond to questions about its deployment of commissars, the U.S. restrictions and what role the company’s ships, including Hong Kong-flagged ones, might play in a wartime scenario.

 

‘REALLY DE-RISKED’

Hong Kong remains an important base for shipowners, despite the geopolitical challenges. But some are quietly hedging their bets.

One company founded in Hong Kong in 2014, London-listed Taylor Maritime TMI.L, now has a smaller presence in Hong Kong after making several strategic moves over the past few years.

Since 2021, it has kept its ships flagged in the Marshall Islands and Singapore. Its offices are in London, Guernsey, Singapore, Hong Kong and Durban.

The firm “really de-risked Hong Kong”, said a person familiar with the matter, citing investors’ concerns about a Chinese invasion of Taiwan and the Communist Party’s increasing control of Hong Kong.

A Taylor Maritime spokesperson said that initially, the company moved its Asia-based commercial teams to Singapore from Hong Kong to be closer to clients.

With its acquisition of shipping company Grindrod, which had its Asia office in Singapore, Taylor Maritime expanded its operation there and relocated some functions from Hong Kong, to the point where Singapore became its primary Asia hub, the spokesperson added.

Hong Kong-listed Pacific Basin Shipping 2343.HK has traditionally flagged its 110-strong fleet of bulk carriers in Hong Kong but is drafting contingency plans to register them elsewhere as it gauges potential risks, said two people familiar with the matter.

A Pacific Basin spokesperson said the company was constantly evaluating geopolitical risks but that its fleet was still flying the Hong Kong flag, “which at least for now outweigh(s) the challenges”.

“Being in Hong Kong positions us close to China’s 40% share of global dry bulk import/export activity and close to Asia’s strong economic and industrial growth regions,” the spokesperson said.

Angad Banga, chairman of the Hong Kong Shipowners Association, said shipping firms adjusted contingency plans based on risk assessments in a complex geopolitical environment but he had not encountered concerns about the commandeering of vessels.

“While some may be reviewing operational strategies, we as an organisation do not to see any widespread exodus or loss of confidence in Hong Kong,” Banga told Reuters, adding that the city remained attractive for maritime commerce.

Yet some industry figures described a broad unease about Hong Kong that was affecting their planning.

Three lawyers said that until recent years, contracts hammered out for the growing number of ships built in China and financed by Chinese banks typically stipulated that they must fly the Hong Kong flag.

But over the last two years, some have included a caveat demanded by owners to provide flexibility: a few other prominent flags are listed as options alongside Hong Kong, the lawyers said. Reuters could not independently verify the changes.

Beyond China’s military modernization and its refusal to renounce the use of force to seize Taiwan, Beijing officials have stressed the importance of Hong Kong in fulfilling national security priorities.

Three executives and two lawyers told Reuters that sweeping security legislation, first imposed on Hong Kong in July 2020 and strengthened in March 2024, had added to the dangers.

The lawyers said any move by Hong Kong’s leader to commandeer vessels in an emergency might prove difficult in practice, as locally registered ships often plied routes far from Hong Kong. But such long-standing powers now had to be viewed through a national security lens, they said.

Some shipowners wouldn’t object to an official request to turn over their vessels, either out of patriotism or the potential to profit from a crisis, one lawyer said.

But “it is better not to be in a position where you might even be asked”, said another veteran lawyer.

“It was not an issue just a few years ago, in what is clearly a redrawn national security map.” – Reuters

Trump plans executive order to strengthen US shipbuilding, blunt China domination

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Mateusz Dietrich from Pixabay

 – The U.S. plans to levy fees on imports arriving on Chinese-made ships and offer tax credits to resuscitate domestic shipbuilding and reduce China’s grip on the $150 billion global ocean shipping industry, a White House document seen by Reuters shows.

President Donald Trump is drafting an executive order that would also establish a Maritime Security Trust Fund as a dedicated funding source and create shipbuilding incentives through the use of tax credits, grants and loans, according to a draft fact sheet of the 18-point plan.

“The White House is standing up an office at the National Security Council to lead a whole-of-government effort to strengthen the maritime industrial base,” the document said, following Mr. Trump’s announcement of the plans during an address to Congress on Tuesday.

The Republican president’s initiative won rare praise from Jake Sullivan, national security adviser to former President Joe Biden, who said decades of unfair trade practices by China had negatively affected U.S. commercial and military shipbuilding.

“American shipbuilding is critical to protecting our national and economic security. Now is the time to act — to address the impact of China’s policies and to replenish American maritime capacity and power,” Mr. Sullivan told Reuters.

Republican and Democratic U.S. lawmakers for years have warned about China’s growing dominance on the seas and diminishing U.S. naval readiness. The pending executive order appears to be influenced by existing proposals, including legislation with bipartisan backing.

Mr. Trump’s initiative comes two months after the Biden administration concluded a nearly year-long probe requested by the United Steelworkers and other unions, which found that China uses unfair policies and practices to dominate the sector.

Michael Wessel, president of the Wessel Group, who helped coordinate that investigation under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, said Mr. Trump’s announcement was an encouraging step forward after years of efforts by unions to revitalize the industry.

“We can still be the industrial leaders of the world – but only if we act,” he saidadding that a range of tools was needed, including investments, tax credits and efforts to strengthen both supply chains and the workforce.

Mike Waltz, Mr. Trump’s national security adviser and a former House Republican from Florida, last year introduced a bill with Democratic Senator Mark Kelly from Arizona to reinvigorate commercial and military shipbuilding in the United States.

The U.S. Trade Representative’s office last month proposed charging up to $1.5 million for Chinese-built vessels entering U.S. ports as part of its probe of China’s growing domination of the global shipbuilding, maritime and logistics sectors.

Mr. Trump on Tuesday hailed an unrelated deal led by U.S. firm BlackRock to buy most of the $22.8 billion ports business of Hong Kong conglomerate CK Hutchison.

The deal will give the U.S. consortium control of key Panama Canal ports amid White House calls to remove them from what it says is Chinese ownership.

“My administration will be reclaiming the Panama Canal, and we’ve already started doing it,” Trump told the U.S. Congress.

That BlackRock announcement followed last month’s reintroduction of bipartisan legislation that would require the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense to develop a strategy to monitor China’s efforts to build, buy, or own strategic ports.

Other measures in the draft document would direct Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to review government procurement processes, including at the U.S. Navyincrease wages for nuclear shipyard workers and develop a security strategy for the Arctic. – Reuters

Elon Musk says Post Office, Amtrak should be privatized

Elon Musk — EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

 – Billionaire Elon Musk, who is advising President Donald Trump on plans to radically shrink the U.S. government, said on Wednesday that the U.S. Postal Service and passenger railroad Amtrak should be privatized.

“I think logically we should privatize anything that can reasonably be privatized,” Mr. Musk said at a Morgan Stanley conference. “I think we should privatize the Post Office and Amtrak for example… We should privatize everything we possibly can.”

He said he thought those actions would require congressional approval.

Last month, Mr. Trump said he was considering merging the Postal Service with the U.S. Commerce Department, a move Democrats said would violate federal law.

The Postal Service has lost more than $100 billion since 2007, including $9.5 billion in the 12 months ending September 30. Earlier this month, however, it reported a fourth-quarter profit of $144 million. As email boomed, the agency has been hurt by an 80% decline in first-class mail volume since 1997. Volume is now at the lowest level since 1968.

USPS declined to comment.

Amtrak said in December ridership topped 2019 pre-COVID-19 levels for the first time in 2024 when it increased 15% over 2023 to a record 32.8 million customer trips. The rail operator reported an adjusted operating loss of $705 million for the 12 months ended September 30, down 9% versus 2023.

Mr. Musk said that in comparison with Chinese high-speed rail, Amtrak “is a sad situation… It will leave you with a very bad impression of America.”

Asked about Mr. Musk’s comments, Amtrak said Wednesday its “business performance is strong. Ridership and revenue are at all-time highs…. The train service we operate across our nationwide network, as mandated by law, is on-track to reach operational profitability – for the first time in history – during this administration.”

Amtrak in March said it was boosting passenger services on the East Coast as it aims to double ridership nationwide by 2040 to 66 million passengers.

Congress approved $66 billion for rail projects as part of a massive infrastructure bill in 2021, with $22 billion dedicated to Amtrak over five years on top of regular funding.

President Donald Trump during his first term repeatedly sought to cut funding to Amtrak, which received about $2.4 billion in annual federal support last year. – Reuters