E-Learning

Tesla to fix software for 77,650 China-made vehicles, says market regulator

Tesla will fix software in 77,650 China-made Model 3 and Model Y cars over safety hazards, China's market regulator said on Tuesday. The action, due to software issues that may fail to display the monitored tyre pressure immediately after the vehicle starts, is described as a product recall under Chinese regulations, the regulator said. It was not immediately clear if drivers might need, or would be eligible, to return vehicles to Tesla for refunds.

Read more

A better year expected for IPO bankers as Hong Kong claws its way back into top 10 markets

After a satisfying year for investment bankers in Hong Kong, who helped lift the city back into the top 10 ranking in initial public offerings (IPOs) worldwide, the new year could be merrier as Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) prepares for more market debutants. Companies and investors raised US$11 billion from 64 first-time stock offerings on the main board, according to data compiled by the London Stock Exchange Group, making it the fifth busiest IPO venue. India's two main exchanges an

Read more

Markets in 2024: Wall Street's high-octane rally keeps investors captive to the US

Markets that began the year with investors expecting a global stock rally to fizzle, swift U.S. interest rate cuts to boost Treasuries and soften the dollar and emerging market currencies to strengthen have firmly defied that consensus. That comes mostly thanks to a second year of huge gains for Wall Street stocks as artificial intelligence fever and robust economic growth sucked more global capital into U.S. assets and took the dollar up 6.6% against peers in 2024. U.S. exuberance rose after Donald Trump's Nov. 5 election win, as traders focused on the President-elect's plans for tax cuts and deregulation, with the surge in animal spirits propelling cryptocurrency bitcoin to a 122% annual gain.

Read more

Chinese stocks post first annual gain since 2020, HK ends 4-year rout

Chinese stocks registered their first annual gain following an unprecedented three-year decline despite a dip on the final trading day of 2024, while Hong Kong shares ended the year higher, supported by optimism over policy support. The blue-chip CSI 300, tracking the biggest companies listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen, rose 14.7% this year, breaking a losing streak since 2021 set off by the COVID-19 pandemic, property sector woes and weak consumer confidence. Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index closed the year's final session up 0.1%, for an annual gain of 17.7% that ended four consecutive years of losses.

Read more