FTSE China A50 -1.1 pct, BNY Mellon ADR China Select Index -0.3 pct SHANGHAI, May 22 (Reuters) - China stocks slipped on Tuesday, weighed down by real estate and banking firms, despite renewed optimism about global growth as the United States and China ... ( read original story ...)
Shanghai billionaire Gui Guojie, the financial power behind Port Adelaide in China
SHANGHAI tycoon Gui Guojie — the billionaire behind Port Adelaide’s move into China — expects the AFL to stay in China for a long time ... and not just for the big money. Gui, who immediately took to Australian football on seeing an AFL game (Port ... ( read original story ...)
Move over London, hello Hong Kong-Beijing-Shanghai as the world’s top financial centre?
There have been fierce debates in the United Kingdom and the rest of Europe since the Brexit vote about what might happen to the City of London in terms of its position as the world’s pre-eminent financial services centre. These arguments by ... ( read original story ...)
How Shanghai Tower has paid the price of China’s quest for height
Twisting more than 600 metres into the sky like a giant corkscrew, Shanghai Tower is not just a remarkable feat of engineering but a symbol of the city’s rise to become one of the planet’s major financial hubs. A testament to lofty ambition it may be ... ( read original story ...)
China’s Stock Market Did Something Important In May 2018
China’ stock market has been in a long consolidation for almost 2 years now. When the Shanghai stock exchange (SSEC) recovered from its 2015 crash, it entered in April of 2016 the 3000 points area, and consolidated between 3000 and 3600 points since then. ( read original story ...)
China shares higher at close of trade; Shanghai Composite up 1.23%
Advancing stocks outnumbered falling ones by 920 to 397 and 62 ended unchanged on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The CBOE China Etf Volatility, which measures the implied volatility of Shanghai Composite options, was unchanged 0.00% to 21.03. In commodities ... ( read original story ...)
Chinese bank staff offered dinner and photos with Trump for $150,000
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - A Chinese bank said on Friday it was tightening up its management after some staff were caught offering elite clients the chance to attend a dinner with U.S. President Donald Trump, and get their pictures snapped with him ... ( read original story ...)