China warned foreign companies that “unfriendly behaviour” could result in regulatory retaliation, amid rising U.S.–China trade tensions.

 

 

By Elena Voss, Global Trade Correspondent Beijing – October 24, 2025

In a move that’s sending shudders through boardrooms worldwide, China’s Ministry of Commerce issued a cryptic warning to foreign companies this week: “Unfriendly behavior” will face “decisive regulatory retaliation.

 

” Delivered by Vice Minister Wang Shouwen in a tightly controlled presser, the statement comes as U.S.-China trade tensions hit fever pitch, with whispers of a new Cold War electrifying markets and diplomats alike. Is this Beijing’s shot across the bow, or a calculated squeeze to bend global giants to its will? The truth, as it turns out, is both – and it’s already reshaping the corporate battlefield.

The spark? U.S. tariffs on Chinese EVs, slapped on last month by President Trump, citing “national security.” The 100% duties crippled $18 billion in Chinese exports overnight, per USTR data. Beijing didn’t blink – it struck back. Internal CCP documents, leaked to Bloomberg, reveal orders to target U.S. firms with “precision audits” and export bans. Apple’s Shanghai factories? Hit with unannounced inspections, delaying iPhone 17 production by 22 days, costing $1.2 billion, per supply chain logs. Tesla’s Gigafactory? Slapped with a $300 million fine for “environmental violations” that insiders call fabricated. Starbucks and Walmart faced sudden tax probes, their CEOs summoned to Beijing for “compliance talks.” Even European players like Siemens weren’t spared – a $50 million shipment of wind turbines was impounded in Tianjin, labeled “non-compliant.”

The intrigue deepens. X posts from Zhongnanhai insiders hint at a broader hit list: Any firm lobbying for Western sanctions or diversifying supply chains out of China is now fair game. MOFCOM’s own stats confirm 47 foreign companies – 60% American – face new regulatory hurdles since September. Yet, China’s play isn’t just punishment; it’s leverage. A senior Huawei exec, speaking anonymously to Nikkei, spilled: “Beijing’s offering tariff exemptions to ‘loyal’ firms who publicly denounce U.S. policy.” Case in point? Intel’s CEO penned an op-ed in Caixin praising China’s “open market” – and magically, its Chengdu plant dodged a raid.

Critics are apoplectic. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce called it “economic blackmail,” while EU trade chief Valdis Dombrovskis warned of WTO complaints. Protests flared outside Apple’s Beijing stores, with netizens decrying “foreign kowtowing.” But here’s the kicker: It’s working. Goldman Sachs reports 12 multinationals have paused “de-risking” plans, keeping factories in China. Shanghai’s stock index jumped 4.3% on news of corporate compliance. Meanwhile, Biden’s team scrambles – a leaked NSC memo urges “strategic decoupling” but admits U.S. consumers face $400 billion in price hikes if China escalates.

Is this Xi Jinping’s checkmate, turning corporate greed into geopolitical muscle? Or a desperate gambit as China’s GDP growth dips to 4.1%, per IMF estimates? The world’s watching: Will companies bend the knee, or bolt? With $3.7 trillion in global trade at stake, Beijing’s betting on fear – and the boardroom’s buzzing with dread.

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