Apple: China remains a 'risk factor' amid iPhone 15 launch

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Apple (AAPL) showed off the next generation of its devices today with investors paying extra close attention to the iPhone 15. Constellation Research Principal Analyst and Founder R 'Ray' Wang and Bob O'Donnell, TECHnalysis Research President and Chief Analyst, join Yahoo Finance Live from Apple's launch event in Cupertino, California, to discuss the overhang on Apple stock over China's iPhone ban for government workers. 'It's also the fact that [the] India market is also not able to get their semiconductor chips and manufacturing up fast enough,' Wang says. 'But the good news is there is still demand. we are in a super cycle, there's about 250 to 300 million iPhones that need to get the 5G.' O'Donnell notes Apple's potential conversion rate for older device owners based on the iPhone 15's price point and new features: 'Since the prices didn't change, which a lot of people expected them to change a lot more than they did, I think people now are going to be a little bit more comfortable.'

I was all set for my trip, or so I thought. That's when my friend told me to always keep a bread clip when traveling. The reason is quite clever.“Before social media, the press had control of narratives. Now the public has control of narratives," a crisis PR manager tells Yahoo Entertainment.

The revelation that a parliamentary researcher has been arrested on suspicion of spying for China is a shocking one. Traditionally, the Government could respond in any number of ways. It could expel a few diplomats, impose mild tariffs, or put restrictions in imports, even if only temporary. And yet, according to Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch, none of that is possible. Her reasoning is simple: we need China to provide us with all the kit we need to meet our climate change commitments.

A Canadian military airbus caused serious damage when it collided with a French military plane on an airstrip in Guam earlier this summer after the crew didn't fully secure the aircraft, says a recent report on the incident.The Royal Canadian Air Force says a CC150 Polaris flew to Guam on July 21 to pick up Canadian military members who had been taking part in a multinational exercise in the Indo-Pacific.The aircraft, which was loaded with equipment and baggage, landed in Guam around 9:45 p.

 

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