![](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2025/01/18/multimedia/18China-Companies-01-vfbg/18China-Companies-01-vfbg-square320.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
Even Before TikTok’s Troubles, Chinese Companies Were Wary of Washington
Start-ups with Chinese ties have found it increasingly difficult to do business and list shares in the United States.
By Meaghan Tobin and Daisuke Wakabayashi
Start-ups with Chinese ties have found it increasingly difficult to do business and list shares in the United States.
By Meaghan Tobin and Daisuke Wakabayashi
Turo, which investigators say was used to acquire the vehicles involved in the attack in New Orleans and explosion in Las Vegas, was emerging as an alternative car-rental service.
By Eli Tan
It was another down year for mergers and acquisitions, but Wall Street is optimistic that the lengthy lull is coming to an end.
By Michael J. de la Merced
The encyclopedia maker could have become a casualty of the Wikipedia era. But it has remade itself into a digital learning giant that is weighing going public.
By Michael J. de la Merced
As academics fear being priced out of the fossil market, a private company announced that it aims to raise $13.75 million by selling shares in a stegosaurus fossil.
By Zachary Small
Tokyo Metro had raised over $2 billion in one of Japan’s largest initial public offerings in years.
By River Akira Davis
The Silicon Valley company would be among the first A.I. companies to go public since the release of ChatGPT nearly two years ago.
By Erin Griffith and Cade Metz
WeRide, a $5 billion software maker, is set for an I.P.O. amid geopolitical risks and a rush by Chinese automotive tech firms to raise money in the United States.
By Daisuke Wakabayashi
The announcement came a day after he had scaled back the expected size of the offering.
By Maureen Farrell
An investment fund from William Ackman aims to raise around $2 billion, according to a regulatory filing, a fraction of what was originally envisioned.
By Maureen Farrell
Advertisement
Advertisement