America’s Last Stand: China’s Smart Battery Dominance

By Andrew King

America remains perilously unaware as it approaches a catastrophic ambush—a savvy, ruthless strategy designed to eliminate credible competition in the critical energy and rare earth domain. Contemporary Amperex Technology Limited (CATL) is aggressively orchestrating a $5 billion+ initial public offering (IPO) in Hong Kong. Bolstered by powerful global financial syndicate, which includes Bank of America and JPMorgan, CATL is deliberately targeting the most influential, global investors, including America’s largest asset managers, BlackRock, Prudential, State Street, and Vanguard.

While Wall Street leaders claim prudent stewardship, Bank of America and JPMorgan are headlining the bookrunning of the offering for CATL—a Chinese company explicitly 1260H-listed by the Pentagon calling attention to their direct ties to China’s military-industrial complex—expected to be the largest Hong Kong listing since at least 2021. This isn’t merely bad optics; it’s strategic sabotage, endangering America’s national security.

Make no mistake: CATL is not just a battery company—it’s central to China’s global ambitions. With a dominant 38% share of the global electric vehicle battery market, supplying giants like Tesla, BMW, Ford, and Volkswagen, CATL anchors Beijing’s bid to dominate strategic technologies. At January’s World Economic Forum at Davos, CATL co-chair Pan Jian boasted of a new class of electric vehicles (EVs), “Electric Intelligent Vehicles” (EIVs)—cars equipped with CCP-backed surveillance technology, converting everyday vehicles into mobile intelligence assets to be dispersed across the globe. This is not speculation—it follows the CCP’s proven playbook, replicating Huawei’s telecom networks, ZPMC’s ship-to-shore, Port-based cranes, and TikTok’s data harvesting models.

Let this sink in: Bank of America—the very namesake of our nation—is actively providing financial and reputational cover for a firm that functions as a de facto extension of China’s military. A bank accused of systematically discriminating against American conservative and faith-based groups by fourteen state attorney generals and President Trump, who publicly excoriated CEO Brian Moynihan for politically motivated “debanking” of citizens at home, is actively facilitating China’s global ambitions abroad.

CATL: A Strategic Threat Far Worse than TikTok.

CATL represents a danger well beyond TikTok’s near-term data-harvesting concerns. While TikTok represents a near-term threat, it is in an industry notable for the fickleness of customers and rapid pace emergent platforms supplant laggards, while energy, battery and transportation technologies are deeply embedded in infrastructure with useful lives spanning decades. In fact, these strengths are so decisive that Beijing has structured its global ambitions on EV batteries, solar panels, and electric vehicles as cornerstones of its Belt and Road Initiative. According to the Rhodium Group, these same three segments accounted for 77% of Chinese foreign direct investment in 2024—of which, two of the three CATL is a leader—underscoring CATL’s central role as a strategic asset in Beijing’s goals of global dominance.

Yet beneath CATL’s EV battery veneer lies a deeper, more sinister strategic geopolitical calculus: reinforcing China’s near-total monopoly over rare earth minerals and critical materials that power nearly all semiconductor and advanced technologies. “China accounts for approximately 69% of global rare earth ore production and processes about 90% of rare earth minerals globally,” according to Polytechnique Insights. Make no mistake, CATL’s true geopolitical threat is not simply batteries; CATL is poised to be a rare earth mineral juggernaut. This is not a battery fight, it is a rare earth mineral war.

China controls 90% of permanent magnet manufacturing, it refines 98% of the world’s gallium, produces 99% of its terbium, and dominates 85% of global battery production. These are not abstract numbers—they represent a strategic chokehold on the materials that power commercial electronic guidance systems, electric vehicles, semiconductors, and next-generation energy solutions. And every piece of military hardware and advanced technology relies on these minerals, just as China restricted exports of the vast majority of such elements, publicly revealing a pillar of their economic statecraft strategy decades in the making.

In an era of electronics, control of rare earth and critical minerals is the kingmaker.

The threat is most clearly displayed by a simple categorical listing of the most critical minerals:

Source: American Resources Policy Network, unless noted herein. Samarium is per FreightWaves; Lithium is per Georgetown Security Studies Review; Gadolinium, Yttrium is per ChinaPower Project.

For critical minerals like Neodymium (precision-guided missiles), Gallium (semiconductors), Terbium (sonar), and Graphene (advanced sensors), China’s dominance approaches absolute—between 95% and 99%. As illustrated, reconstituting American capacity would require billions of dollars for each mineral and, for the vast majority of minerals, five to ten years to reconstitute a competitive balance—with some rare minerals having estimates of a decade and a half, time the U.S. simply does not have.[1]

These minerals underpin every advanced American weapons system, from F-35 fighters and submarines to guided missiles and drones. Wall Street’s underwriting of CATL’s IPO further cements China’s chokehold, allowing Beijing to weaponize American dependency.

Intellectual Property Theft: China’s Longstanding Playbook.

China has spent decades infiltrating American artificial intelligence labs, quantum computing firms, and advanced materials research centers—stealing $400-600 billion annually in intellectual property (IP). CATL’s IPO prospectus claims 40,000 filed and secured patents, dubious marketing already being debunked, evincing a more surreptitious, deeper question of the strategic use of China’s patent office in strategic IP warfare undermining and chilling the global trademark and patent field. Together with IP theft and forced coercion of companies, the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) perpetuates the charade of China as a “developing country,” a designation that permits favorable exemptions, waivers, and concessions benefiting China. As the think tank, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) notes, “China’s state-supported technology champions frequently benefit from stolen or unfairly appropriated intellectual property, directly undermining U.S. innovation.” By underwriting CATL’s IPO, Wall Street is indirectly legitimizing the industrial-scale theft of U.S. intellectual property and ruse of accountability under the WTO.

The CCP’s “Golden Share” Racket.

Perhaps even more reprehensible, this IPO directly benefits the Chinese Communist Party.

Beijing routinely employs a tactic known as the “Golden Share”—where a small government stake (often just 1%) grants the CCP outsized control over corporate decision-making. And with more than 12% ownership through state-owned entities, this IPO will massively inflate the value of their holdings, handing Beijing billions in fresh capital to fuel its military and industrial ambitions.

Rare Earths Rare Earth Dominance: China’s Hidden Weapon.

Control of rare earth and critical minerals is the decisive geopolitical lever and CATL is the vehicle of China’s broad ambitions which, as Chairman Jian noted, CATL has found a way to combine a range of rare earth-based technologies into EIV consumer sales. The Select Committee on the CCP further highlights ethical concerns, noting CATL’s supply chain has “indisputable evidence” of ties to forced labor in Xinjiang.

This IPO will enable CATL to penetrate European markets aggressively (Germany, Hungary, Spain), undermining American competitiveness and solidifying China’s global technological hegemony. It also provides a convenient loophole for U.S. investors who, due to restrictive mandates, may not be able to directly invest in mainland China but have greater discretion to channel funding through the Hong Kong market.

This IPO represents a strategic catastrophe. It enables China’s geopolitical ascent, legitimizes corporate espionage, and compromises America’s technological edge. By backing CATL’s IPO, Bank of America and JPMorgan implicitly legitimize industrial-scale IP theft, rewarding China’s illicit behavior and empowering Beijing at America’s expense. America’s banks must renounce their roles in any fundraising by CATL.

America Must Act—Decisively.

This moment demands clarity and leadership from both the private and public sectors.

Financial institutions must:

  • Withdraw from CATL’s IPO and refrain from engaging with entities flagged as national security threats.
  • Reassess risk frameworks to prioritize long-term national interest over short-term gain.

Government agencies must:

  • Move CATL from the Pentagon’s 1260H list to the Treasury Department’s OFAC sanctions list, which would impose binding restrictions.
  • Harmonize the regulatory stance across Treasury, Commerce, and Defense to prevent CCP-linked companies from accessing U.S. capital and sensitive technologies.

The stakes could not be clearer.

Bank of America’s CEO Brian Moynihan, who already faces a legacy most notable for excessive caution and lagging shareholder performance, is poised to be inextricably linked to overseeing a collaboration with America’s avowed enemy, further tarnishing an iconic banking brand. Mr. Moynihan faces a decisive moment, one that will define not only his leadership and Bank of America’s legacy but also America’s role in the world.

The banks’ actions will have far-reaching consequences, not just for the banks’ shareholders, but for every American who still believes in the values of freedom, security, and sovereignty. Investment banks, especially Bank of America, must choose. Do these banks serve America’s long-term prosperity, or merely eager, unprincipled mercenaries acting as accomplices in China’s strategic campaign to supplant our nation?

America deserves—and demands—an answer.


Andrew King is GP at Bastille Ventures, investing in critical technology furthering national security, and founder of the bipartisan nonprofit, Future Union, working with the private sector to combat state espionage, and advises Congress, the Select Committee on China, Dept. of Treasury, Dept. of Commerce, and White House. Formerly he was the general counsel of the Dallas Stars NHL team and corporate lawyer at Goodwin Procter and investment banker at JPMorgan.


Notes:

[1] American Resources Policy Network.

This article was originally published by RealClearDefense and made available via RealClearWire.

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Curious George
April 16, 2025 10:12 am

Finance gurus understand everything.

GeorgeInSanDiego
Reply to  Curious George
April 16, 2025 5:25 pm

All of the really smart students are majoring in finance.

Fran
April 16, 2025 10:31 am

What happens if the whole “transition” collapses – no more demand for windmills, electric cars and solar panels? This will leave China holding an outdated industry that they thought they could milk forever.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Fran
April 16, 2025 10:34 am

Key word is IF.
Some battles have been lost, some won, most are ongoing.
The war is far from over and it is uncertain it ever will be.

KevinM
Reply to  Fran
April 16, 2025 10:54 am

Car batteries have been around for a long time. At some moment it might make sense to try something other than lead acid.

Computer and phone batteries use the same rare earths that EVs use.

Reply to  KevinM
April 16, 2025 4:03 pm

I suspect that the total amount used in computers and phones is trivial compared to EVs.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 17, 2025 6:40 am

That would be an interesting study.
Hundreds of thousands of EVs versus hundreds of millions of laptops and billions of cell phones.

Michael Flynn
Reply to  KevinM
April 16, 2025 6:27 pm

Kevin, the Edison Flyer used NiFe batteries in 1889 or so.

Porsche started with an electric car.

BEVs are excellent in their niches. Time will tell if the advantages outweigh the considerable disadvantages. Depending on model, up to 30% of energy while charging is dissipated as waste heat. No need for any GHE at all.

And of course, one problem with BEVs is keeping the battery cool. Physics dictates that at maximum power, 50% of the energy is dissipated in the source (battery). More heat.

No problem if your “fuel” per km travelled is cheaper, and other costs and inconvenience are outweighed by your satisfaction. As for me, the new vehicle was petrol powered, doesn’t talk to me, and is made in China. Apparently Chinese vehicles are not available in the US, bad luck for them.

So far, so good,

Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 17, 2025 3:20 am

“Apparently Chinese vehicles are not available in the US, bad luck for them.”

Good luck for the U.S.. We don’t need any Chicom vehicles. We do just fine without them.

Michael Flynn
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 17, 2025 5:34 am

We don’t need any Chicom vehicles. We do just fine without them.

Obviously. I just like to have a choice – if I don’t like something, I don’t buy it. If you are happy with your Government making decisions for you I won’t argue.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 17, 2025 6:42 am

Waste heat dumped into the environment is an energy source that contributes to global warming. Only a question of how low is the magnitude.

Michael Flynn
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
April 17, 2025 4:16 pm

Only a question of how low is the magnitude.

About 1.5C or so since the Industrial Revolution? Almost certainly reflected in higher nighttime minima, leading to quite misleading “averages”.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  KevinM
April 17, 2025 6:39 am

Computer and phone batteries burn.
Lead Acid batteries explode (i am witness to one).

SxyxS
Reply to  Fran
April 16, 2025 12:14 pm

Still China is winning.

Wealth and Power go along with co2 output.
And China is building Power Plants like crazy(besides potemkin windmills).

So even if rhe forced and staged transition collapses China will be fine.
(the chinese were paying tons of money for Hunter Biden “art” for a reason)

The most interesting thing is : Why are the co owners of the FED financing and helping China?
On the other hand JP Morgan has been financing Hitler alongside Rockefellers and Bushs(Prescott)
and the Rockefellers played an integral part in outsourcing jobs to China via Lima agreements etc and play a crucial role in the climate scam (and let’s not forget that another rich climate scam pusher from the oil industry,Maurice Strong, ended up hiding in China to escape law and justice)

Reply to  SxyxS
April 17, 2025 3:22 am

Well, the United States has in place the administration most capable of stopping China’s winning.

Let’s see if they do it.

They made a good start: China is no longer in control of the Panama Canal. That didn’t take much effort. The leader of Panama is our new best friend. American troops are heading back to Panama.

Sparta Nova 4
April 16, 2025 10:32 am

Anyone buying a Chinese EV or specifically a Chinese battery is guilty of aiding and abetting a crime and as an accessory after the fact. Look at Indonesia and nickel for proof.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
April 16, 2025 10:35 am

And Congo for cobalt.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 16, 2025 10:34 am

“Rare earth minerals” are neither rare nor hard to mine. The only thing that keeps America from mining them is eco zealots that would prefer another country mine them, pollute the world’s atmosphere, and earn the money. Fact is America is far more conscious about its’ environment than China and would be doing the world a favor.

Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 17, 2025 3:34 am

Oklahoma has several rare earth processing facilities starting up to extract lithium and other materials.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 17, 2025 6:46 am

The term rare earth was coined when an unusual black rock was unearthed by a miner in Ytterby, Sweden, in 1788. The ore was called “rare” because it had never been seen before and “earth” because that was the 18th-century geological term for rocks that could be dissolved in acid.  In 1794 the chemist Johan Gadolin named this previously unknown “earth” yttria, after the town where it was discovered. Over time the mines around Ytterby extracted rocks that yielded four elements named for the town (yttrium, ytterbium, terbium, and erbium).

— Science History Institute

KevinM
April 16, 2025 10:51 am

Financial institutions must:”

Sounds like asking goverment to decide what citizens can and can’t buy.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  KevinM
April 17, 2025 6:47 am

According to politicians a while back, the government should have all of our money because they know better how to spend it.

I am not going to try to track down the quote. It was some number of years ago and no doubt has been silenced.

Walter Sobchak
April 16, 2025 10:59 am

We can protect ourselves from Chinese batteries by giving up on battery electric cars which are useless, expensive, and dangerous.

Or should I say dangerous, expensive, and useless?

Reply to  Walter Sobchak
April 16, 2025 11:34 am

Just dangerous with limited uses.
BEVs are limited to around town. Hybrids relieve some of the range anxiety.

I wouldn’t mind an American EV or hybrid if the batteries were not constructed with a very dangerous neurotoxin – lithium. Lithium is just too dangerous to have cruising around in public subject to spontaneous combustion or accident related damage resulting in a hazmat clean up.

Walter Sobchak
Reply to  Brad-DXT
April 16, 2025 7:47 pm

You will allow expensive, won’t you.

Reply to  Walter Sobchak
April 17, 2025 5:47 am

If you can afford a niche product, go for it. It’s not like I don’t have expensive hobbies.

antigtiff
April 16, 2025 11:40 am

Freedom and free enterprise are not compatible with a communist dictatorship. Don’t buy China made.

April 16, 2025 12:56 pm

Well thank you China for cutting off the supply critical to ecotard BS, so back to basics and ICUs, (S)uck the rest and get on with your lifes. Let others deal with lunatic pipedreams, exploding houses and mobiles firecrackers… actually China is doing the rest of the world a huge favour restricting supply.

Don’t see any russians complaining about that matter, not that China would cut them off – they simply don’t depend on them (hint: count their solar panels or windmills installed).

Dream of MAGA as much as you want, RIGA is reality…that’s the hard lesson to realize and maybe learn from it..dear western and sadly mislead world…sorry to say it.

Independence trumps…*wink wink 47* good luck and my best wishes in cleanig up your mess on your own within your 4 year term.

If history teaches us a lesson…well who cares…

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  varg
April 17, 2025 6:51 am

Please spell out RIGA.

April 16, 2025 3:15 pm

Uhhhhh . . . exactly what is a “smart battery”?

Is it one that has a built-in AI bot such as Chat GPT or Perplexity? If so, it is not smart!

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  ToldYouSo
April 17, 2025 6:53 am

First it was “New and improved.”
Next came “Designer.”
Then there was “Mega.”
Now it is “Smart.”

These are all advertising ploys to get a positive emotional response to something being sold.

I submit to the jury, incontrovertible evidence that owning a Li-ion or LiPO battery is not smart.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
April 18, 2025 11:48 pm

Don’t forget “carefully curated”.

Abbas Syed
April 16, 2025 3:38 pm

This sounds like a very far fetched conspiracy

First of all, if the CCP was going to try to dominate (infiltrate as you would see it) the world, they couldn’t have picked a worse vehicle than green tech

They made a huge gamble. 15/20 years ago, the West was determined, it seemed, to commit suicide by going green

The Chinese spotted an opportunity. High end tech is something they knew was important to continue developing as an economic power. There was only so long they could rely on the cheap crap sold to the rest of the world. They knew the west would talk about it forever but never make the required investment

So they decided to assist the west in its desire to self immolate, at the same time entering the high end tech world

Unfortunately, and if you ask me it was inevitable from the beginning, the west has finally woken up to the reality

Where does that leave China?

Well, they have at least gained control of rare earths, both mining and processing, so it’s looking good in that respect

EVs, windmills and PV have had their day, and the scale of investment turned out to be a big error

On EVs, they are already pivoting to hybrid, following the example of the legacy car makers

They should, and I expect probably will, shift focus towards consumer electronics, requiring smaller scale batteries that they can produce easily

The reality is that they are not especially competent, as the decision on EVs shows

They are best at wasting money on infrastructure projects in a desire to massage gdp. If you live in China you see this everywhere, brand new empty apartment, office blocks, hospitals, etc

The central government doesn’t say anything even though they know what’s going on. the fact is they were doing the same thing when they were heads of provinces, so there is a conspiracy of silence

In the belt and road initiative, almost all the money was wasted, especially in Africa. They wanted to secure the rights and were willing to pay, in the hope that they would make huge money selling green shit to the west

Neither are they well organised or have full control of what goes on even in China. There is a lot of corruption at local level, money wasted on stupid projects like setting up new institutes of hydrogen, batteries, this, that and the other, with all sorts of back handers.

Well connected people can access big money from their chums in local government to set up these sorts of things, with the sole purpose of making money before moving onto the next scam after 5 years

As has happened in the west, it’s increasingly difficult to make money in the private sector, so these well connected types are turning to taxpayer money

They preach loyalty. They don’t demand it, that’s not their style, it’s done through nudging and propaganda.

The reality, however, is that they are all self interested, finding ways to line their own pockets, buying properties abroad and sending their kids to study and work in the US

Reply to  Abbas Syed
April 17, 2025 3:42 am

That’s another thing: Why does the U.S. allow thousands of Chinese students into U.S. universities, displacing thousands of American students?

Answer: It’s all about the money.

Selling our Soul for money.

Abbas Syed
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 17, 2025 10:34 am

Tom, they don’t displace American students.

The Chinese, Indian, South American etc overwhelming come in at graduate level.

This is because although in theory the undergraduate system is fantastic and produces many well educated individuals, it has a built in get out clause for the lazy and disinterested. They can select easier routes to graduation. If the want a serious education they can get it

In the past many availed themselves of the opportunity of advanced level courses on offer, but in modern times, with an overall degradation of secondary and tertiary education and shorter attention spans, the supply of motivated and qualified grads has diminished

In the UK, there is not even the opportunity to get to that level. They will end up dumb and ignorant no matter what

The thinking in the US is that they can import the best from the rest of the world at the higher (grad) levels to make up for any shortfall

What they used to get from China is automatons. Technically very good but no imagination whatsoever. Nod at everything, understand nothing. It’s cultural nobody can question the “teacher”

This has changed. The Chinese education system has deteriorated dramatically in the last 10 years. Many, including Chinese academics, despair at both the level of training and commitment of modern day students. They are unbelievably lazy and hedonistic. They also have a tendency to plagiarise, lie, manipulate, massage

The US has dramatically reduced the intake of Chinese students, for these reasons and also because visas for Chinese students are much more difficult to obtain since trumps first term

April 16, 2025 3:39 pm

The battery electric auto did not become dominant in 1900, and it will not be dominant in 2050 for the same reason – battery energy density is limited by electrochemistry according to the periodic table. The Li-ion battery energy density per kilogram is FORTY times lower than a kilogram of gasoline or diesel, not to mention the losses on charging and discharging. A fully loaded freighter, train or semi- operating on a battery is not going very far. No 747-equivalent or even a private jet airplane will ever be battery powered. The battery has a role in flashlights and laptops, but not as utility backup, in spite of huge expenditures against the headwind of reality.
Putting lipstick on a pig leaves you with a ugly red-lipped pig.

April 16, 2025 4:00 pm

“it’s central to China’s global ambitions”—- which is to dominate the world by the 100th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China- which happens to be the day I was born, October 1, 1949.

Michael Pillsbury wrote a book on it, “The Hundred-Year Marathon” subtitled, “China’s Secret Strategy to Replace America as the Global Superpower”.

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 17, 2025 6:16 am

I read a 1999 book, Unrestricted Warfare: China’s Master Plan to Destroy America by Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui. In it, the two Chinese Colonels detailed such strategies as flooding the US with drugs, exacerbating internal strife, and other non-military means. Buying politicians like Biden and enlisting US financial institutions are consistent with that strategy.

Reply to  Mark Whitney
April 17, 2025 7:17 am

China knows how to play the long game better than any other nation.

Michael Flynn
April 16, 2025 4:11 pm

/sarc on

Oh dear! Those devilish Orientals just refuse to accept their place.

Devious and sly, lending money to the ever-more indebted US, locking them into a never ending cycle of poverty.

Stealing the intellectual property of the brilliant US inventors, so nobody in the US can use it.

It’s all a bit strange. Why is the US worried about 1.4 billion “Communists” that at least one politician has characterised as “peasants” who need “US money”? Just threaten them with a good whipping if they don’t keep up the supply of cheap, high quality goods for their US masters.

Oh, and lock up your intellectual property so the sneaky yellow devils can’t pilfer it.

/sarc off

Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 17, 2025 3:51 am

I don’t know what to make of that comment of yours.

It’s the “/sarc” that throws me off. Do you mean what you wrote, or don’t you?

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 17, 2025 6:58 am

I suspect you would have been better using /humor.

Keitho
Editor
April 17, 2025 12:46 am

And we are told Blackrock has taken over control of the Panama Canal ports from China which looks like just sleight of hand as they are heavily involved with the CCP in this and other ventures.

Reply to  Keitho
April 17, 2025 3:48 am

American troops are heading to Panama. That’s not a “sleight of hand”. It’s real action meant to secure the Panama Canal.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 17, 2025 7:00 am

Might be there by now. Deployment started something like 1 week ago.

Michael Flynn
April 17, 2025 5:50 pm

China has spent decades infiltrating American artificial intelligence labs, quantum computing firms, and advanced materials research centers—stealing $400-600 billion annually in intellectual property (IP).

Maybe someone might care to specify just one piece of this “intellectual property” which has been “stolen”?

Sim Wong Hoo, a Singaporean, invented the Soundblaster, first widely useable sound card for PCs. Some US companies took the view that only Americans were entitled to intellectual property rights, and helped themselves to his intellectual property. All part of the sometimes cut-throat world of money making.

Chinese, US – all governments conduct espionage of various sorts. Usually, they justify what they are doing by claiming the opposition is even worse!