The Quad is going beyond military exercises — and China is watching

The Quad is going beyond military exercises — and China is watching


Over the years, the Quad has been incorrectly called an “Asian NATO,” especially when it comes to security concerns about another big power in the region — China.

The Quad, or the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, comprises four big, democratic economies: the United States, Japan, India and Australia.

Over the years, the Quad has been incorrectly called an “Asian NATO,” especially when it comes to security concerns around another big power in the region — China. 

The Quad countries have cooperated in areas ranging from health and infrastructure development to military exercises —most notably the Exercise Malabar naval war games, which have developed into a permanent feature of the Quad.  

“Because it has no specific mandate, they can make economic or even global warming issues part of the mandate of the Quad,” said Ted Kemp, CNBC International digital managing editor, and author of a game-theory driven project on the future of the Quad. 

That includes being an effective counterbalance to China’s dominance in the Indo-Pacific region.  

“What the Quad countries individually and collectively have been concerned about is about China’s behavior,” Tanvi Madan, director of The India Project at the Brookings Institution, told CNBC. “The idea is to provide choice, stability, and to bring resources to the region that otherwise might not have been available.” 

Watch the video above to learn more about the Quad’s influence in the Indo-Pacific region.



Source

China leaves benchmark lending rates unchanged for the sixth straight month
World

China leaves benchmark lending rates unchanged for the sixth straight month

China left benchmark lending rates unchanged on Thursday for the sixth consecutive month in November, matching market expectations. Why it’s important The steady loan prime rate (LPR) fixings underscore the central bank’s reduced urgency to deliver additional monetary easing in the wake of a trade truce between Beijing and Washington, even as October economic data pointed […]

Read More
CNBC Daily Open: Nvidia CEO suggests AI doesn’t look like a bubble
World

CNBC Daily Open: Nvidia CEO suggests AI doesn’t look like a bubble

Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, attends the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 19, 2025. Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters Nvidia on Wednesday stateside reported fiscal third-quarter figures that beat analyst expectations (ironically, nothing unexpected there). It also provided guidance for sales in the current quarter that exceeded estimates (all good still). It was […]

Read More
Nvidia says there’s ‘no assurance’ of final agreement with OpenAI despite 0 billion pact
World

Nvidia says there’s ‘no assurance’ of final agreement with OpenAI despite $100 billion pact

Two months ago Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman stood side by side in San Jose, California, to announce a historic agreement between the two leaders in artificial intelligence. Nvidia would invest $100 billion over a number of years, starting in 2026, as OpenAI’s AI supercomputing facilities come online, the duo said. […]

Read More