US-China-Taiwan: Technology is becoming national-security infrastructure
For investors, China’s key story is the convergence of technology, national security, and great-power competition. Whether the issue is semiconductors, export controls, Taiwan-related technology restrictions, AI development, or strategic supply chains, the same pattern keeps emerging. Technology is increasingly being treated not as an economic variable but as a national security asset.
As AI continues to grow, the fundamental question is becoming less about innovation and more about control. Who controls the compute? Who controls the chips? The data, the access, the deployment? The answers will shape capital allocation.
Investment implications: The US-China relationship fits the managed-stalemate thesis. Dialogue may reduce volatility, but it does not tamp down competitive rivalries. Nothing happening in either Iran or Ukraine reduces competition in China. If anything, both theaters increasingly reinforce it. Investors should have their eye on semiconductor supply changes, AI capital spending, and export controls.