Call for MINT Incubating support programme Ministry of innovation and technology aimed to provide guidance and resources to help you refine your business model, identify target markets, and develop your go-to-market strategy, connect startups with experienced mentors who can offer industry-specific knowledge, advice, access to a network of entrepreneurs, investors, industry experts, technical and business training and skill sharing programme and potential partners, market channel, business tools access to wifi, photocopy and working space. So all potential startups whom want to incubate can register below
Call for MINT Incubating support programme Ministry of innovation and technology aimed to provide guidance and resources to help you refine your business model, identify target markets, and develop your go-to-market strategy, connect startups with experienced mentors who can offer industry-specific knowledge, advice, access to a network of entrepreneurs, investors, industry experts, technical and business training and skill sharing programme and potential partners, market channel, business tools access to wifi, photocopy and working space. So all potential startups whom want to incubate can register below
Spiking bond yields driving sharp losses in tech stocks
A spike in interest rates since the start of the year has accelerated a rotation out of high-growth technology stocks and into value stocks poised to benefit from a reopening of the economy. The Nasdaq has fallen more than 10% over the past month as the Dow has soared to record highs, with a spike in the 10-year US Treasury yield acting as the main catalyst. It recently surged to a cycle high of more than 1.60% after starting the year below 1%. But according to Jim Paulsen, the Leuthold Group's chief investment strategist, rising interest rates do not represent a long-term threat to the stock market. Paulsen expects the 10-year yield to cross 2% by the end of the year.
A spike in interest rates and its impact on the stock market depends on the economic backdrop, according to Paulsen. Rising interest rates amid a strengthening economy "may prove no challenge at all for stocks," Paulsen said.
The SSE was the first modern stock exchange to open in China, with trading commencing in 1990. It has now grown to become the largest stock exchange in Asia and the third-largest in the world by market capitalization, which stood at RMB 50.6 trillion (US$7.8 trillion) as of September 2021. Stocks (both A-shares and B-shares), bonds, funds, and derivatives are traded on the exchange. The SEE has two trading boards, the Main Board and the Science and Technology Innovation Board, the latter more commonly known as the STAR Market. The Main Board mainly hosts large, well-established Chinese companies and lists both A-shares and B-shares.