No Data
No Data
6 Singapore Semiconductor-Related Stocks Poised to Surge When the Industry Rebounds
Revive the stock market, Singapore will make a big move! The FTSE Straits Times Index in Singapore hit a new 6-year high.
On September 16th, local time, Singapore's Second Minister for Finance, Lawrence Wong, announced that Singapore is prepared to embark on a "bold reform" of its regulatory structure to rejuvenate the sluggish stock market.
The chain reaction of the Fed's interest rate cut: small cap stocks are highly favored.
Many smaller AI sector stocks in the Asian market are relatively few, so their valuations are not expensive; coupled with the dovish turn of the Federal Reserve, which has pushed up the currencies of these Asian countries, some central banks have room to lower interest rates and implement loose policies to support economic growth.
Unfazed by the volatility! The chip index has risen for four consecutive days. Nvidia and Broadcom have rebounded strongly this week. Is the optimistic sentiment quietly returning?
In the face of such intense turbulence, several major chip giants still have bullish forecasts from Wall Street, with a potential increase of around 20%-40%. How should investors view the investment prospects of chip stocks?
Is Intel facing an existential crisis, the fate of the semiconductor giant?
On one hand, the uproar of Wolfspeed falling from grace has not stopped. On the other hand, Intel's series of crises continue to spread, with declining performance, massive layoffs, product deficiencies, asset sales, and outsourcing spin-offs... Since the beginning of this year, Intel's stock price has fallen by nearly 60%, making it one of the worst-performing chip stocks.
Express News | In July, global semiconductor sales reached $51.3 billion, an 18.7% year-on-year increase.
No Data
No Data