Apple (AAPL) has sought U.S. government approval to purchase chips from China's ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT), a blacklisted Chinese semiconductor manufacturer, according to the Financial Times as reported by Bloomberg. The request puts the Biden-era export control architecture directly in tension with the sourcing demands of the world's largest company by market capitalization.
CXMT was added to the U.S. Entity List, restricting American companies from transacting with it without a license. Apple's application for that license signals the company faces a supply constraint serious enough to pursue a politically sensitive workaround. The FT did not report the timeline or probability of approval.
Separately, Bloomberg reported that Germany's carmakers face a next round of cutbacks, the latest development in a contraction of the country's automotive sector that has been running for multiple quarters. Porsche (PAH3.DE) plans to shift Cayenne production to its Leipzig facility, according to FAZ, as cited by Bloomberg, a move consistent with ongoing restructuring across the VW group ecosystem.
In China, government advisers are calling for policy intervention to address a two-speed economy, Bloomberg reported, with industrial overcapacity in low-margin manufacturing coexisting with a services and consumption recovery that has not offset the production-side drag. The advisory signals have not yet been accompanied by specific fiscal measures.
On AI infrastructure, U.S. authorities have asked OpenAI to restrict access to ChatGPT-5.6 to approved partners, according to a report cited by LEADERSHIP Newspapers via Google News. The restriction, if implemented, would formalize a tiered access model for frontier AI systems, limiting commercial distribution outside vetted channels.
Lenovo Group's CFO, in an interview with Bloomberg, described the current environment as one of strategic capital allocation during a major technology investment cycle, without providing specific forward guidance on capex.
Iran and the U.S. continued to trade accusations of ceasefire violations following the Hormuz-related strikes reported in prior dispatches, according to Bloomberg. No new military action was confirmed in this cycle's reporting window.