China In-Focus — Xiaomi posts 20% revenue fall; Russian coal imports hit 5-year high

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Updated 21 August 2022
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China In-Focus — Xiaomi posts 20% revenue fall; Russian coal imports hit 5-year high

RIYADH: China’s Xiaomi Corp. posted a steep drop in second quarter revenue on Friday, as the world’s biggest smartphone market shrank, hit by strict COVID-19 restrictions.

Sales fell 20 percent year on year to 70.17 billion yuan ($10.31 billion), missing estimates and marking a steeper decline from the previous quarter when the company posted its first revenue drop since listing.

Net income fell 67 percent to 2.08 billion yuan, also missing analysts’ estimates.

“In the Chinese market, there was the resurgence of the pandemic, so as a result, demand was difficult and weak,” company president Wang Xiang said on an earnings call.

Wang added that rising fuel prices, input costs, and inflation affected overseas sales as well. Net profit fell as a result of pressure to clear inventory via sales and promotions.

China sentences tycoon to 13 years

A Shanghai court on Friday sentenced Chinese-Canadian billionaire Xiao Jianhua, not seen in public since 2017, to 13 years in jail and fined his Tomorrow Holdings conglomerate 55.03 billion yuan ($8.1 billion), a record in China.

Xiao and Tomorrow Holdings were charged with illegally siphoning away public deposits, betraying the use of entrusted property, and the illegal use of funds and bribery, the Shanghai First Intermediate Court said.

It added the punishment was mitigated because both had admitted their crimes and cooperated in recovering illegal gains and in restoring losses.

China-born Xiao was last seen whisked away in a wheelchair from a luxury Hong Kong hotel in the early hours with his head covered, a source close to the tycoon told Reuters at the time.

Xiao and Tomorrow have “severely violated a financial management order” and “hurt state financial security,” the court said. 

China soybean imports from Brazil fall

China soybean imports from Brazil fall in July, US imports up.

China’s soybean imports from Brazil dropped in July from a year ago, while shipments from the US increased, customs data showed on Saturday, as high prices curbed demand for South American cargoes.

China, the world’s top soybean buyer, imported 6.97 million tons of the oilseed from Brazil in July, down from 7.88 million tons a year earlier, data from the General Administration of Customs showed.

Total imports last month dropped 9 percent from a year before to 7.88 million tons, the lowest number for July since 2016, as high global prices and weak demand curbed appetite for the oilseed, customs data showed earlier.

US arrivals in July reached 377,642 tons, up from 42,277 tons in the same month last year, according to customs data.

China's July Russian coal imports hit 5-year high

China’s coal imports from Russia jumped 14 percent in July from a year earlier to their highest in at least five years, as China bought discounted coal while Western countries shunned Russian cargoes over its invasion of Ukraine.

China brought in 7.42 million tons of coal from Russia last month, data from the General Administration of Customs showed on Saturday. That was the highest monthly figure since comparable statistics began in 2017, up from 6.12 million tons in June and 6.49 million tons in July 2021.

 

(With input from Reuters) 


Saudi Arabia’s approach to AI transformation delivering business value: Publicis Sapient CEO

Updated 22 January 2026
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Saudi Arabia’s approach to AI transformation delivering business value: Publicis Sapient CEO

  • Nigel Vaz: We’re reimagining how, in the case of tourism, we transform Saudi Arabia into a destination that is actually relevant and attractive for people to explore
  • Vaz: Our Slingshot platform handles everything from design to deployment, allowing legacy modernization and new digital apps to be built

DAVOS: As 2026 emerges as a tipping point for artificial intelligence, executives across the Middle East are moving from experimentation to scaling AI in ways that can deliver real business value, according to Nigel Vaz, CEO of Publicis Sapient.

Speaking to Arab News at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Vaz highlighted Saudi Arabia’s proactive approach to integrating technology into national and sectoral strategies.

“I was in meetings with the minister for tourism in Saudi Arabia (Ahmed Al-Khateeb), where we do a lot of work for them, and meetings with (Communications) Minister Abdullah Alswaha,” he said.

“What you realize is technology is incredibly critical, but it’s critical to the extent that we’re reimagining how, in the case of tourism, we transform Saudi Arabia into a destination that is actually relevant and attractive for people to explore.”

Vaz also highlighted applications of AI beyond tourism, including energy and healthcare.

“You’re thinking about how it can enable a greener approach to energy, which is a big goal for their government,” he said.

“And in healthcare, predictive and preventative approaches allow trends to be addressed before they occur, which is a significant cost saving for the government,” he added.

The shift in mindset around AI reflects a broader trend globally.

“Last year there was a lot of excitement about AI, but most work was at a proof-of-concept stage,” Vaz said. “What’s tipped this year is the recognition that AI is only valuable if it drives real business outcomes.”

This involves moving beyond automating individual tasks to enabling entire workflows or decision sets that produce superior results.

“Individual tasks being automated by AI don’t create business benefit,” he said. “Entire workflows or decision sets need to be enabled by AI, and they must deliver better outcomes than are currently possible today.”

Vaz underscored the importance of integrating people and AI rather than treating technology as a replacement, adding: “Unless you’re a technology nerd, you’re not really caring about the technology for its own sake.”

Geopolitical tensions further heighten the importance of AI for real-time, intelligent decision-making. Vaz explained that Publicis Sapient has developed platforms such as Slingshot, Bodhi and SustainAI to deliver enterprise-grade AI solutions with measurable business impact.

“Our Slingshot platform handles everything from design to deployment, allowing legacy modernization and new digital apps to be built two to three times faster and 30 to 40 percent cheaper,” he said.

Bodhi leverages industry expertise to create agentic capabilities for autonomous decision-making, while Sustain transforms IT service management, using AI to monitor systems, self-heal, and reduce manual workload, he explained

“All of this is not to sell software; it’s to deliver outcomes to clients. That’s what we care about,” Vaz added.

He offered guidance for leaders navigating the AI era.

“An AI North Star is focusing on an area of the business where untapped value can be unlocked,” he said. “Focus on how that value will drive growth, reduce costs, or improve experiences for customers or employees, and use AI to achieve those outcomes, rather than experimenting in small pockets.”

For Vaz, 2026 represents a year when enterprises, particularly in forward-looking Middle Eastern economies like Saudi Arabia, are moving from theory to practice, scaling AI to deliver tangible impact and measurable outcomes for businesses, governments, and citizens alike.