Prev Close | 95.35 |
Open | 97.99 |
Day Low/High | 94.91 / 99.61 |
52 Wk Low/High | 68.62 / 120.84 |
Volume | 2.15M |
Avg Volume | 849.50K |
Prev Close | 95.35 |
Open | 97.99 |
Day Low/High | 94.91 / 99.61 |
52 Wk Low/High | 68.62 / 120.84 |
Volume | 2.15M |
Avg Volume | 849.50K |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 138.20M |
Market Cap | 60.63B |
EPS | 23.90 |
P/E Ratio | 39.45 |
Div & Yield | 7.35 (1.65%) |
Alibaba and JD.com climbed and led the way in Hong Kong after Chinese officials pledged to soon "compete the special rectification" to the tech sector.
Upside - +135% (Hoth Therapeutics mRNA Frame-Shifting Therapeutic, HT-KIT, proves effective against aggressive cancer cells) - +30% (confirms to be acquired by Thoma Bravo for $65.25/shr in cash valued at $6.9B) - +29% (Novel COVID-19 drug candidate...
What will it take for Chinese stocks to be considered safe territory?
After a savaging this year, the Hong Kong stock market shot higher as a top official said China is ready to support capital markets.
We had a puzzling start of the day and decline in Chinese tech but an upward turn could play out on good news.
The PlayStation maker likely will introduce a subscription service later this year, hence the planned buyout of "Destiny" developer Bungie.
With Chinese tech stocks selling off and inflation worrying even the Bank of Japan, there are multiple Asia-specific reasons for the decline.
After its parent, Sina Corp., delisted in New York, Weibo could be next now that its stock has established a Chinese presence.
China's ride-hailing market leader is bowing to Chinese government pressure and will exit the New York Stock Exchange.
Beijing regulators push top management of the ride-hailing app to make the move after a disastrous IPO, according to media reports.
ln a sign of things to come, MSCI indexes will stop using the New York share price and start following the Hong Kong listing of the two Chinese tech companies, to the detriment of U.S. liquidity.
Alibaba shares and the Hong Kong tech index are both coming off all-time lows in Hong Kong. Whether that continues has little to nothing to do with business.
One day, either the Modern Monetary Theorists will be right, or the fiscal hawks will prove correct. Count me with the hawks.
Chinese tech stocks have nearly halved in value in the last six months, with President Xi Jinping suggesting "excessively high incomes" need redistribution.
Are videogame makers like Tencent and NetEase the latest targets in the Communist Party's bid to curb Big Tech?
An act to improve the accounting compliance of foreign U.S.-listed companies doesn't mention China, and doesn't need to.
China's second-largest e-commerce operator is spinning off its online pharmacy and health clinic JD Health in a $3.4 billion IPO.
The president takes aim at 31 companies that the Defense Department says have ties to the Chinese military.
Changing the business practices that have been criticized by Chinese antitrust regulators might not carry a massive financial hit, and past selloffs on regulation fears proved to be buying opportunities.
As the yields of relatively safer bonds decline, dividend-yielding utility stocks become more attractive.
The cash set aside to invest in Ant's prospective record-setting initial public offering is too much for the Hong Kong currency to handle.
TikTok's parent reportedly is looking to list the Chinese version of its app in Hong Kong, with U.S. investors also missing out on Ant Group's initial public offering.
The fast-food purveyor is part of a trend of Hong Kong stock offerings, with potentially the largest stock sale in history waiting in the wings.
The operator of Alipay could raise as much as US$30 billion when it skips U.S. markets with same-time listings in Hong Kong, Shanghai.
Hong Kong's Exchange had record results due to secondary offerings by Nasdaq stocks, Shenzhen preps for tech startups to go public.
Trip.com, China's biggest online travel agency, is hoping investors may take it private at a premium.
The Hang Seng Tech Index monitors the performance of the 30-largest tech companies listed in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong will have its own tech quartet as of next Thursday; Asian shares don't have the same euphoria as U.S. stocks (yet), and that's a good thing.
NetEase is the second Chinese company to launch a secondary listing in Hong Kong. It is unlikely to be the last.
Everyone from game publishers to chip developers to game-streaming websites appears to be getting a lift.