This article is useless - so the only argument it makes on stimmy not enough is coz the share prices dropped? Idiotic
Alibaba, JD.com, NIO Stocks Fall. Why New China Stimulus Fell Short
Chinese stocks with American depositary receipts were falling early Monday even after China’s central bank lowered interest rates.Retailer Alibaba fell 2.5% in the premarket, and rival JD.com fell 1.5%. Bilibili, a video-sharing site, declined 1.17%, and electric-vehicle maker NIO fell 2.1%. The Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong fell 1.6% on Monday.The moves follow fresh stimulus from the People’s Bank of China. The central bank for the world’s second-biggest economy lowered two key lending rates, de
China ETFs Join Cathie Wood’s as Biggest Wealth Destroyers in US
A word of warning for traders who’ve been pouring billions into Chinese-stock ETFs like never before: The strategy is not only prone to big reversals, it has also lost a cohort of ill-timed investors
Alibaba is up +60% from my January bottom call, on rising optimism about China's economy for 2025.However, the stock quote is getting extremely overbought, and could witness 2-3 months of retracement
Wall Street commentary around this week's Fed rate cut could have filled a very long and boring book, but much of what you need to know about its effect on the stock market can be found in a movie rarely linked with monetary policy: "The Wizard of Oz.". The great and powerful man behind the central bank curtain, Jerome Powell, really can't do as much as people think to keep their portfolios from shriveling if the wheels are already starting to come off the economy. Stocks' initial reaction to Wednesday's cut was exuberant. That often proves to be a head fake, though -- we still don't know how this movie ends.Take the start of the rate-cutting cycle in 2007 -- one that coincidentally began on the same day of the year, the same starting federal-funds rate, and was for an identical amount, half a percent -- as Wednesday's move. The effect was electric: The Dow Jones Industrial Average had its largest gain in more than four years, rising 336 points, the equivalent of about 1,000 points to
Meituan’s 63% Stock Surge Faces Risks in China Consumer Malaise
Meituan’s strategy to focus on lower prices has helped the Chinese food delivery company beat sales targets even as the slowing economy drags peers. Investors are now wondering whether its steep share-price gains can last as the macro weakness deepens.
Alibaba's stock remains a soft 'buy' due to attractive pricing and a recent regulatory victory, despite mixed performance across its diverse operations.The company's Taobao and Tmall Group saw a sligh