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BusinessWeek November 29, 2004 Brian Bremner |
Taiwan: Falling Into China's Embrace Beijing has toned down the rhetoric, but its economy's pull is irresistible. An independent Taiwan? The game is not going that way. |
BusinessWeek April 5, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
Showdown In Taiwan As the contested election causes turmoil, the economy will suffer -- and the impact will be felt around the globe |
BusinessWeek March 22, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
Will Taiwan Vote To Cool Down Tensions? It's one of the roughest presidential campaigns Taiwan has ever seen. Wild accusations of everything from corruption to wife-beating are flying, as incumbent President Chen Shui-bian faces a challenge from opposition candidate Lien Chan, chairman of the Kuomintang (KMT), the party that dominated the island's politics until Chen's election four years ago |
BusinessWeek September 22, 2003 Bruce Einhorn |
How Long Will Beijing Keep Playing It Cool on Taiwan? The Chinese leadership does not want to give any more ammunition to Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian, the Beijing critic who has used Hong Kong's civil-rights battle to win support for his reelection bid next March. |
BusinessWeek April 5, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
Why China Is Speaking Softly Beijing is finding that subtle diplomacy works better than the old saber-rattling |
BusinessWeek December 5, 2005 Matt Kovac |
Why Taiwan's Voters Are Fed Up With Chen Taiwan's President was voted into office twice on the strength of his anti-China, pro-independence stance. But the rhetoric is wearing thin. Is Chen Shui-Bian a lame duck? |
BusinessWeek January 24, 2005 Bruce Einhorn |
So Much For China's "Great Healer" With China's influence growing from Asia to the Americas, President Hu Jintao seems to feel little external pressure for political reform at home. Optimists looking for him to promote a new, more open China should settle in for a long wait. |
BusinessWeek May 16, 2005 |
Stan Shih on Taiwan and China The PC-pioneer-turned-VC talks about the two countries' futures and about how Taiwan can gain by becoming an "integrator" |
BusinessWeek May 16, 2005 Bruce Einhorn |
Why Taiwan Matters The global economy couldn't function without Taiwan. But can it really find peace with China? |
IEEE Spectrum February 2007 Yu-Tzu Chiu |
Carlyle Group's Taiwan Gambit A semiconductor acquisition by a U.S. investment group tests Taiwan's China policies. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2005 Linda Geppert |
Silicon Gold Rush Taiwan's chip makers can't resist the lure of China, the world's largest consumer of semiconductors. |
BusinessWeek March 14, 2005 Einhorn & Balfour |
Hong Kong: Why Hu May Topple Tung Governor of Hong Kong, Tung Chee-Hwa, is rumored to resign before his term is over pleasing Chinese President Hu Jintao. |
BusinessWeek June 17, 2010 Frederik Balfour |
China's Gravitational Pull on Taiwan China hopes to integrate its massive economy with Taiwan's to such an extent that political unification will be inevitable. |
The Motley Fool March 24, 2008 Saibal Saha |
Taiwan's Tiger Woos China's Dragon Taiwan's recent election outcome indicates good news for investors. |
BusinessWeek November 3, 2003 Bruce Einhorn |
A Chip Boom? In Asia, At Least With the tech recovery, contract foundries are revving up and gaining clout. |
BusinessWeek August 9, 2004 Stan Crock |
Taiwan: Uncle Sam Wants You To Buy Arms The complex diplomatic dance involving Washington, Taipei, and Beijing gets trickier by the day. The tension will rise this fall when Taiwan's legislature votes on arms-purchase legislation. |
BusinessWeek July 5, 2004 Einhorn & Culpan |
Chipmaking Titans Under Seige? Upstarts and giants alike are taking on global leaders Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and United Microelectronics Corp. |
BusinessWeek November 28, 2005 Matt Kovac |
The Mainland Beckons To Taiwan's Banks Taiwan's banks can't have branches in China. The Tsai brothers of Fubon Financial Holding Co., Taiwan's third-largest bank, aren't deterred. |
The Motley Fool March 9, 2005 Stephen D. Simpson |
The Future of the China Syndrome What will China's saber-rattling do to Taiwanese companies? While every investor must of course do his or her own due diligence, anyone who'd been waiting for an opportunity to get into Taiwan may have just been given an opening. |
TIME Asia July 12, 2010 Zoher Abdoolcarim |
The Moment In the Chinese megalopolis of Chongqing (where Mao Zedong and Chiang Kai-shek once talked peace), Beijing and Taipei signed a trade and investment pact, dramatically boosting Taiwan's opportunities in China. |
BusinessWeek July 26, 2004 |
China-Singapore Ties Tense Over Taiwan Singapore Deputy Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong paid an unofficial visit on July 10 to Taiwan, just weeks before his assumption of the city-state's premiership |
BusinessWeek October 6, 2003 Bruce Einhorn |
Taiwan's Climb Up the Tech Ladder It's becoming a center for R&D as well as manufacturing |
BusinessWeek January 19, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
Commentary: Hong Kong May Be Starting A Long March Toward Democracy China's leaders, faced with unrest, may allow some reform |
BusinessWeek March 7, 2005 Matt Kovac |
Taipei's Mayor Is On The Move If Ma Ying-jeou winds up atop the Kuomintang (KMT) party, he could be headed for the Taiwanese presidency. |
Salon.com October 31, 2002 Andrew Leonard |
Flag of inconvenience Fearing the Taiwanese flag would irk China, Red Hat yanked it from its version of Linux -- and started an international geek uproar. |
BusinessWeek May 14, 2007 Bruce Einhorn |
The Tech Dragon Stumbles China's upstarts are finding life in the big leagues tougher than they reckoned. |
Fast Company March 2010 Damian Joseph |
China-Taiwan Trade Agreement Worth Billions China and Taiwan may have a tenuous relationship, but a possible trade agreement worth billions could cement the closest formal ties between them since 1949. |
BusinessWeek November 12, 2009 Bruce Einhorn |
Taiwan's New Tech Dreams As the PC business declines, Taiwan's top tech players are shifting out of low-margin businesses and into smartphones, solar-power chips, and beyond. |
The Motley Fool March 26, 2008 Saibal Saha |
A Cheap Way Into China? In reopening its doors to China, Taiwan's newly elected government is also reopening a gateway to opportunity for foreign investors. ETFs can be a good way to bet on Taiwan. |
Wired November 2002 Arthur Kroeber |
The Hot Zone An untamed technology boom is sweeping through China's Pearl River Delta, where cheap labor, mass production, police thugs, and get-rich-quick dreams rule. It's a terrible, horrible, lawless frontier. And it works. |
BusinessWeek June 28, 2004 Einhorn & Balfour |
Hong Kong: How Free A Future? Anger over Beijing's policies toward Hong Kong may soon come to a head |
The Motley Fool January 12, 2007 Bill Mann |
If You Buy Only One Foreign Market ... Investors have ignored Taiwan's promise for too long. |
BusinessWeek July 21, 2003 Clifford et al. |
Behind the Revolt The rise of people power has changed Hong Kong and China forever |
BusinessWeek October 22, 2007 Tschang & Balfour |
Alarming Talk in Hong Kong Its stock market is soaring, but prospects of an all-China exchange raise fears. |
Fast Company April 1, 2011 April Rabkin |
Chen Guangbiao, China's Charity Champion Chen Guangbiao's model of giving is the philanthropic equivalent of nouveau-riche ostentation: He's fond of publicity stunts, cash giveaways, and media scrums. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2006 Yu-Tzu Chiu |
Taiwan's High-Tech Hubbub Inexplicably, when Taiwan started developing plans 10 years ago for a bullet train to go from the north end of the island to the south, the route was allowed to conflict with plans for a new semiconductor park in Tainan. Here's the latest on the issue. |
BusinessWeek November 7, 2005 Bruce Einhorn |
A High-Tech Capital Runs Dry On Engineers Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is in the market for hundreds of engineers and technicians, and it's having trouble finding them. |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2013 |
Country Report: Taiwan The past three years have been some of the most eventful in memory for Taiwan's life sciences industry. At this year's Bio Taiwan exhibition, the excitement was palpable. |
BusinessWeek December 22, 2003 Dexter Roberts |
Why China And The U.S. Are Suddenly So Cozy Wen Jiabao could not have asked for a better welcome on his first official visit to Washington since becoming Chinese Premier nine months ago. The warm tone reflects just how far U.S.-Chinese relations have come since the tense early days of the Bush Administration. |
Salon.com April 26, 2001 Jake Tapper |
Briefs or no briefs? As tensions with China build, Bush's history of ignoring those foreign policy briefing papers from Condoleezza Rice seems to be catching up with him... |
BusinessWeek August 25, 2003 Frederik Balfour |
Drowning in Dollars It's a problem for China, but is revaluing the yuan a wise move? |
InternetNews January 6, 2004 Colin Haley |
IBM Snatches Chip Deal Big Blue's investment in a new semiconductor factory begins to pay off against its competition. |
PC Magazine May 31, 2006 |
Top Gun Meets eBay You never know what you may find on eBay. |
BusinessWeek September 6, 2004 Simon Cartledge |
Shopping Makes A Comeback In Hong Kong As the mainland allows freer travel, tourists are springing for tax-free loot. |
BusinessWeek May 16, 2005 Pete Engardio |
Where The Valley's Chips Are Born The importance of the silicon umbilical cord connecting America to Taiwan is hard to overstate. The island's "foundries" -- factories that make chips for other companies on a contract basis -- dominate what has become a $16 billion global industry. |
BusinessWeek February 6, 2006 |
China's New Eye for Fine Art The deputy chairman of Christie's Asia says mainlanders are buying up works from their own country as well as the West. |
Salon.com April 10, 2001 Richard Blow |
Protest chic goes global Latter-day hippies and martial arts masters form an odd coalition in Taiwan to promote "global peace." But something is lost in the translation... |
BusinessWeek December 20, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
China Goes Shopping Billions of dollars, euros, and yen have been invested to build up companies on the China mainland in the last decade. Now Chinese companies, flush with cash and in command of the world's lowest-cost manufacturing plants, are doing some foreign investing of their own. |
Food Processing August 2011 Erin Erickson |
Made in Taiwan: Good Food, Good Principles The heart of Asia celebrates its food, its culture and its progress toward culinary stardom. |
The Motley Fool October 28, 2005 Stephen D. Simpson |
An 800-Pound Semiconductor Gorilla Does Taiwan Semiconductor's dominance among chip fabricators guarantee profits? Investors, take note. |