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Overseas funds are buying Call Options on China Stocks ETF.
On Friday, there was another wave of overseas capital significantly buying Call Options for China Stocks ETF. According to media reports, last Friday (January 17), Wall Street traders significantly purchased Call Options linked to the Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) associated with Chinese stock indices. Chris Murphy, co-head of derivatives strategy at Susquehanna International Group, revealed that investors bought Call Options giving them the right to purchase about 4 million shares of iShares Core MSCI China Index ETF (FXI) at a price of $31-32 before the end of next week, and also purchased some 2.
Daily Options Tracking | Acquisition rumors resurge! Intel rises over 9%, with two Call orders making ten times profit; MSTR Options trading is booming, with the Call ratio skyrocketing to 71%.
Rumors of acquisition have resurfaced, and Intel rose over 9% last Friday. The Options Volume surged to 0.973 million contracts, nearly tripling from the previous day, with a Call percentage of 73.7% and an implied volatility level of 77.3%.
Morgan Stanley's Wilson: Interest rates and the dollar remain the biggest driving forces behind U.S. stocks.
Wilson stated that the strengthening of the dollar has a significant impact on individual stocks, and companies with lower overseas sales exposure and lower sensitivity to the strengthening dollar have started to outperform. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield range of 4.00%-4.50% is the most comfortable range for U.S. stocks, and once the yield falls to this range, the stock market will rebound significantly.
People's Bank of China One and Five-year Loan Prime Rates Unchanged in Jan, as Expected
Express News | Han Zheng met with elected Vice President Vance of the USA.
Is "Tariff 2.0" from Trump approaching? Wall Street: The risks have decreased, no need to worry too much!
① The president-elect of the USA will take the oath of office on January 20, and his tariff policy is receiving much attention; ② Analysts at Goldman Sachs believe the White House will avoid the economic costs and political risks associated with widespread tariffs, while Bank of America also believes that companies have learned lessons from the previous trade war, and the risks have decreased.