No Data
No Data
Amplify ETFs Completes Acquisition to Reach $9.1 Billion AUM Across 31 ETFs
Daimler CEO: automakers may face chip shortages by 2023
According to media reports, Ola Kaellenius, chief executive of German carmaker Daimler, said on Sunday that the surge in demand for semiconductor chips means it may be difficult for the car industry to procure enough semiconductor chips from next year to 2023, but then the supply shortage should not be so severe. Carmakers, most of which were forced to close their factories last year as a result of the COVID-19 epidemic, faced fierce competition from the huge consumer electronics industry in chip delivery and were hit by a series of supply chain disruptions during the outbreak. At the same time, cars are becoming more and more dependent on chips-from improving fuel economy
The method of quality inspection is uncertain. Delivery of Boeing Co Dreamliner 787 will be suspended until the end of October.
Boeing Co may suspend deliveries of Boeing Co Dreamliners, at least until the end of October, after the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) rejected a recent proposal by Boeing Co to inspect the 787 Dreamliners, media reported on Saturday. Boeing Co met with FAA on Aug. 2 local time to try to persuade the authority to approve an inspection method to speed up delivery through targeted inspection rather than nose-to-tail disassembly, but failed to agree with FAA on this quality inspection method, the report said. On the evening of July 12, local time, FAA issued a statement saying that the root of the authority
The global market is waiting for the annual meeting of Jackson Hole? The meeting may be a little cold, the two major central bank governors announced that they would not attend.
Original title: the global market is waiting for the annual meeting of Jackson Hole? The meeting may be a little cold, the two major central bank governors announced not to attend the source: FX168 FX168 Financial News (Hong Kong) last week, the United States economic data is uneven, the United States consumer prices (CPI) data in July has indicated that inflation may have peaked, but PPI data highlight inflationary pressure, helping to increase the possibility of the Fed withdrawing some stimulus measures. As inflation heats up, the market is very concerned about when the Fed will start to scale back its bond purchases. The Fed has been buying $120 billion a month in fixed-income assets.
Oxford Institute of Economics: House prices in the richest countries are overvalued by 10%
The housing boom of the past decade has been one of the strongest in history; the Netherlands, Canada, France and Sweden are the riskiest markets. After a decade, one of the most prosperous periods since 1990, house prices in the richest countries may have been overvalued by about 10 per cent, according to the Oxford Institute for Economics. The British research firm ranks the Netherlands, Canada, Sweden, Germany and France as the riskiest real estate markets based on long-term trends and price-to-rent ratios. It estimates that house prices in 14 developed economies have risen by 43% over the past decade. The duration of the current boom has been ranked in the past 120 years.
The draft communiqu é of the Group of Seven commits itself to the sustainability of long-term public finances.
The G7 finance ministers will commit themselves to more sustainable long-term public finances while supporting economic growth, the draft communique reported. The meeting will be held from June 4 to 5. The G7 will also express its support for an agreement on corporate taxes such as the world's lowest tax rate. More details are as follows: "promise not to withdraw policy support prematurely, but to promote economic growth through investment, create high-quality jobs and address climate change and inequality". Once the recovery is solid, we need to ensure the long-term sustainability of public finances in response to future crises. "promise to reach a fair solution to the distribution of taxation rights