Russell Flannery was a country editor for the Forbes Billionaires List in 2003-2024 and editor at large at Forbes in 2021-2024. He is currently an advisor at Forbes China, the Chinese-language edition of Forbes, and was its editor-in-chief in 2016-2021. Flannery opened Forbes
China Investing: Big Nasdaq Gains Attract Chinese IPOs
Some 42 Chinese companies have listed on the Nasdaq this year, not including eight SPAC combinations by businesses from the country; that total exceeds last year's
New Trump Tariff Impact On China Likely Overestimated: Andy Rothman
Recovery in domestic confidence is more important to China’s own growth, says long-time Matthews Asia China investment strategist
“Brace Yourself”: U.S. Business Leader In China During Trump 1.0 Sizes Up Trump 2.0
Former AmCham Shanghai Chairman Ker Gibbs expects U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports to rise and decoupling to expand in the aftermath of Donald Trump’s election triumph.
New China Consul General In New York Sees U.S. Ties “Moving Ahead”
Chen Li is a former Chinese ambassador to Finland
Rate Cuts, Gov’t Stimulus Will Eventually Pave Way For China Recovery
The U.S. and China don’t need to see “eye to eye on a political stage” before benefitting from lower interest rates, Zhonglu Group Vice Chairman George Wang says
General Atlantic Chairman Upbeat On China Outlook Despite Tensions
"I remain optimistic that we can find a constructive path forward that is mutually beneficial for the U.S. and China and supports global growth," William Ford says
Chinese Americans Hurt By Strained Washington-Beijing Ties: Survey
About two thirds of Chinese Americans said to face at least one form of discrimination in an average month
New Cancer Study Highlights Role Of Clinical Trials In Saving Lives
Report released to coincide with World Cancer Research Day
U.S.-China Politics Hurt Fight Against A Common Enemy: Cancer
China and the U.S. rank No. 1 and 2 in the world in annual cancer deaths
China’s Govt. Is Divided On A Favorite In U.S. Presidential Vote: Steve Orlins
Opinions vary among different interest groups, says president of influential National Committee on U.S.-China Relations