Artículos Relacionados con Globalization

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Wearing Slippers, Drinking Hot Water, Practicing Baduanjin: This Generation of Foreigners Collectively 'Diagnosed' as Chinese

An article from The New York Times Chinese website explores the viral TikTok trend where Western users humorously "diagnose" themselves as Chinese by adopting certain lifestyle habits. These include wearing slippers indoors, practicing the exercise Ba Duan Jin, using pillow covers, drinking hot water (often with apples, red dates, or goji berries), and embracing aunty-style floral cotton jackets. What began as a joke evolved into a popular meme, with users enthusiastically sharing their "very Chinese moments" and exploring details like whether to peel apples or switch to pears. While some Chinese-American influencers act as cultural arbiters, promoting practices like hotpot dinners or traditional medicine, others criticize the trend for oversimplifying and fetishizing Chinese culture. The phrase "diagnosed as Chinese" is particularly contentious, evoking racist stereotypes heightened during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite this, the trend reflects a surprising shift towards admiration, with users praising China’s high-speed rail, electric vehicles, and affordable healthcare. The article notes that this fascination coexists with political tensions, such as the potential TikTok ban in the U.S., which drove users to Chinese app Xiaohongshu. Ultimately, the trend highlights both a romanticized vision of Chinese life and the complex dynamics of cultural exchange on social media.

比推03/20 19:18

Wearing Slippers, Drinking Hot Water, Practicing Baduanjin: This Generation of Foreigners Collectively 'Diagnosed' as Chinese

比推03/20 19:18

Three CZs, Three Different Stories

Three individuals share the initials "CZ" but represent vastly different paths in the era of globalization. The first, Chen Zhi, epitomized the lawless, gray-area entrepreneurship of the mid-2010s. Operating from Cambodia, he built a transnational fraud network, generating up to $30 million daily through scams and forced labor. His empire, built on exploiting regulatory gaps and weak international cooperation, collapsed in 2026 when he was arrested and repatriated to China, signaling the end of an era of unregulated profiteering. The second, Changpeng Zhao (CZ), founder of Binance, represents the tech-entrepreneurial era. A technologist at heart, he built the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange through product excellence and innovation. Unlike Chen Zhi, his venture created value but eventually faced escalating regulatory scrutiny. In 2023, Zhao and Binance pleaded guilty to U.S. charges, resulting in a $4.3 billion fine and his resignation as CEO. His story illustrates that technological innovation must ultimately adapt to regulatory frameworks to survive. The third, CZ Chen, a Millennial and COO of AI firm Manus, represents a new model of success in the AI age. As a skilled professional, she achieved rapid wealth and influence by joining the right company at the right time. Manus, hailed as the first通用 AI Agent, was acquired by Meta in 2025. However, the deal faced review by Chinese authorities, highlighting that her success is now intertwined with geopolitical tensions between major powers. Together, these three stories reflect the evolving interplay between individual ambition and the shifting landscapes of regulation, technology, and global politics.

marsbit01/09 11:55

Three CZs, Three Different Stories

marsbit01/09 11:55

2026 Investment Framework: The End of Globalization, AI Supply-Demand Mismatch, and the Silver Frenzy

Investment Framework 2026: End of Globalization, AI Supply-Demand Mismatch, and Silver’s Surge The author outlines a macro investment framework centered on three key themes: the end of globalization, accelerating resource nationalism, and the rise of AI-driven structural shifts. The portfolio returned 131%, largely due to significant long positions in gold and silver. Silver markets are experiencing extreme volatility and a potential supply squeeze, with prices influenced by COMEX contango, LBMA backwardation, and Asian export restrictions. Investment strategies include calendar spreads and butterfly options on silver. Other positions include shortening duration, adding crash protection via SPY, shorting student loan servicers, and going long on tin miners and Japanese banks. Key thematic drivers: - Globalization’s end: Resource nationalism rises; Monroe Doctrine 2.0 emerges; metal inflation continues while oil may face oversupply. - China’s challenges: Banking system fragility, hidden real estate losses, and rising religious dissent. - AI acceleration: Compute demand will vastly outstrip supply by 2035. Two phases: near-term oversupply (2025–2027) followed by demand explosion (2028–2030+) as agentic AI matures. - Domestic US issues: Government shutdown risks, student debt crises, and the societal impact of AI and GLP-1 drugs. Investment opportunities include copper, tin, photonics, nuclear energy, natural gas, and compute infrastructure. Markets face pressure from Japanese monetary normalization and private credit illiquidity. Core view: AI demand is real, energy and metal markets are shifting, and policy changes are accelerating. Short-term cash flow gaps may cause volatility, but long-term thematic bets remain valid.

marsbit01/09 08:48

2026 Investment Framework: The End of Globalization, AI Supply-Demand Mismatch, and the Silver Frenzy

marsbit01/09 08:48

Global Wealth Transfer: The Disruption and Restructuring of Investment Strategies in the Next Decade

Global Wealth Transfer: A Decade of Disruption and Reinvention in Investment Strategy We stand at a historical inflection point. The three pillars of past prosperity—demographic dividends, globalized supply chains, and broad-based technological progress—are collapsing simultaneously. This article analyzes the profound implications for wealth and investment from 2026 to 2035. A core driver is a global "fertility strike," exemplified by South Korea's record-low fertility rate (0.72) and Japan's plummeting births. This is fueled by socio-economic pressures, such as the "4B Movement" (No dating, marriage, sex, or children) and widespread "economic nihilism" among youth, who find traditional paths to prosperity blocked. Coupled with "climate anxiety," this leads to a conscious societal contraction with dire macroeconomic consequences: permanent labor shortages, collapsing demand for traditional goods, and the impending failure of pension systems. This sets the stage for the largest intergenerational wealth transfer in history—$84 trillion to Millennials and Gen Z. As "digital natives" deeply distrustful of traditional finance, these heirs will not follow their parents' investment playbook. They are poised to fuel a digital asset explosion, viewing cryptocurrencies as a hedge against fiat devaluation and a tool for financial emancipation. Concurrently, "de-dollarization" trends and the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA) will reshape finance. Furthermore, the AI and robotics revolution will exacerbate inequality through a "Technological Cantillon Effect." Wealth generated by AI will primarily benefit the owners of capital (data, models, compute power), not laborers, widening the wealth gap. Therefore, traditional diversification is obsolete. The prescribed strategy is a "barbell approach": * **Offensive End:** Concentrate on beneficiaries of the tech monopoly (AI giants), digital scarcity (Bitcoin), and emerging markets with healthier demographics. * **Defensive End:** Hedge against chaos with prediction markets (e.g., Kalshi for event risk), select real estate, and gold. Assets to avoid include labor-intensive services and traditional consumer stocks reliant on population growth. The next decade will be a "Great Filter," offering highly differentiated alpha returns. One must become a shareholder in technology or a winner in the new financial casino, or risk becoming a footnote to this disruptive era.

marsbit12/31 02:41

Global Wealth Transfer: The Disruption and Restructuring of Investment Strategies in the Next Decade

marsbit12/31 02:41

Web3 Entrepreneurship in Mainland China: What Can and Cannot Be Done?

Summary: Under China's current legal and regulatory framework, Web3 entrepreneurship is possible but must avoid activities related to issuing tokens, speculative trading, fundraising, or operating exchanges. The article outlines four viable paths: 1. **Pure Technology & Infrastructure**: Developing blockchain as a distributed database or collaborative tool for enterprises and governments, focusing on data verification, supply chain coordination, and judicial record-keeping without financial incentives. 2. **De-Financialized Digital Assets**: Creating non-fungible tokens (NFTs) as digital collectibles, membership passes, or copyright certificates—emphasizing utility over investment value and avoiding secondary market trading. 3. **Compliance & Risk Management Services**: Providing legal, regulatory, and analytical support for Web3 projects, including anti-money laundering measures and chain monitoring, which are increasingly essential as regulations evolve. 4. **Overseas-Centric Operations with Domestic Support**: Structuring projects so that technical development, research, and backend services are handled in mainland China, while financial aspects (e.g., token issuance, trading) are managed by compliant entities abroad. The author stresses that success depends on treating Web3 as a tool rather than a financial instrument, avoiding public promotions of crypto investments, and ensuring clear legal boundaries to sustain long-term operations.

marsbit12/26 07:15

Web3 Entrepreneurship in Mainland China: What Can and Cannot Be Done?

marsbit12/26 07:15

The Dilemmas and Future of Web3 Chinese Entrepreneurs

In the increasingly mainstream crypto industry, Chinese entrepreneurs appear to be receding from the center stage. While early Chinese-founded projects like Binance, OKX, and Bitmain once dominated sectors such as exchanges and mining, a noticeable decline in the visibility and influence of new-generation Chinese entrepreneurs has emerged since the 2020 DeFi Summer. Three major factors contribute to this trend. First, regulatory crackdowns and shifting geopolitical dynamics in China disrupted local crypto activities, forcing entrepreneurs to relocate overseas and lose their native market advantages in user acquisition and community building. Second, capital preferences have shifted structurally toward欧美-led ventures due to better compliance alignment and exit opportunities, leaving Chinese projects at a funding disadvantage. Third, a mismatch exists between the skill sets of Chinese engineers—who excel in B2C applications—and the industry’s earlier focus on B2B infrastructure development. Notable exceptions, like Hyperliquid’s Jeff Yan, highlight the rising importance of multicultural backgrounds. Many successful new-wave founders have Western education or experience, enabling better integration into global ecosystems. The article concludes that future success in crypto will depend less on cultural origin and more on cross-cultural collaboration, long-term technical commitment, and adaptive resilience amid regulatory complexity.

marsbit12/15 14:32

The Dilemmas and Future of Web3 Chinese Entrepreneurs

marsbit12/15 14:32

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