Americans love using their credit cards, the most secure and hassle-free way to pay. But DC politicians want to change that with the Durbin Marshall Credit Card Bill. This bill lets corporate megastores pick how your credit card is processed, allowing them to use untested payment networks that jeopardize your data security and rewards. Corporate megastores will make more money and you pay the price. Tell Congress to guard your card.
Because Americans lose when politicians choose. Learn more at GuardYourCard.com. Here's your TNB Tech Minute for Friday, April 11th. I'm Victoria Craig for The Wall Street Journal. Tariff-induced whiplash on Wall Street this week has helped lead the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite into its most volatile calendar month since 2008. The index has shed around 5% of its value since new U.S. tariffs were announced on April 2nd.
Those trade tensions are still ricocheting through the corporate world. With U.S. tariffs on China up to 145 percent on certain goods, China's biggest tech companies are deploying billions of dollars to help exporters. JD.com will spend nearly $30 billion over the next year to buy products originally destined for export markets.
to help manufacturers sell their goods to domestic customers. Alibaba's grocery chain, meanwhile, said it's opening a fast-track channel for exports and a dedicated platform for people in China to buy goods that otherwise would have been shipped overseas.
What Chinese customers can't buy as easily now, though? Tesla cars. The company has taken away from its China website the option to buy new Model S and X vehicles, both of which the American company exports to China. Buyers can still place orders on existing inventories of those cars and other models on the site. Tesla's China sales dropped 11 percent in March from last year as it faces pressure from tariffs and growing competition in the world's largest auto market.
Finally, Beijing has engaged with the European Union in a dialogue to find an alternative for the bloc's tariffs on Chinese-produced electric vehicles. The current discussion is around whether manufacturers can agree to offer price floors. The EU last year imposed tariffs of up to 35 percent on Chinese EVs after it cited evidence
evidence of unfair subsidies in China's supply chain. Share prices of Chinese EV makers BYD and Geely rose 7% and 6% respectively on that news. For a deeper dive into what's happening in tech, check out Monday's Tech News Briefing podcast. ADP imagines a world of work where smart machines become too smart. Copier, I need 15 copies of this. Printing. By the way, irregardless, not a word, Janet. Yeah, I know.
Page six should be regardless of or irrespective of. Just print them, please. If it were a word, Janet, it would mean without irregard, which is... Copier! Switch to silent mode. Let's put a pin in it. Anything can change the world of work. From HR to payroll, ADP helps businesses take on the next anything.