Market news: Vestis, a supplier of workplace supplies, is interested in acquisition by several acquisition companies.Latvian Foreign Minister Blase said, I am sure that we can cooperate with US Secretary of State Lu Biao.Institution: AUD/NZD may rebound in the coming months. Jane Foley, foreign exchange strategist of ABN amro, said in a report that AUD/NZD may rebound in the coming months, because the growth momentum of New Zealand's economy is far less than that of Australia. "The weakness of the New Zealand economy and the risk of further sharp interest rate cuts by the New Zealand Federal Reserve indicate that the fundamentals do not support the further performance of the New Zealand dollar against the Australian dollar." The New Zealand Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 50 basis points in November and hinted that it would cut interest rates further in 2025. The Reserve Bank of Australia kept interest rates unchanged on Tuesday. The Dutch cooperative bank predicts that the Australian dollar will rise from the current 1.0991 to 1.12 against the New Zealand dollar within three months.
ISHARES China ETF fell 4.3%.Delong Laser: There is no robot-related business at present. Delong Laser (688170) said on the interactive platform on December 10th that the company has no robot-related business at present. The company's products use machine vision technology to realize functions including positioning, defect handling and size detection.The Australian dollar fell 1% against the US dollar to 0.6375.
Domestic black futures closed at night, with iron ore down 1.09%, iron ore down 1.09%, rebar down 0.29%, hot coil down 0.34%, coking coal down 1.48% and coke down 0.19%.U.S. stocks fell. Nasdaq China Jinlong Index fell more than 3%,iShares China large-cap ETF fell 3.8%, KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF fell 3.9%, and Nasdaq China Jinlong Index fell more than 3%. BILI.O fell by 8%, FUTU.O by 6% and Xpeng Motors by 4%.The British Chancellor of the Exchequer called on the EU to grant greater access to the City of London. The British Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves visited Brussels, urged the EU to grant greater access to the City of London, and told the finance ministers of the group that this would help promote their stagnant economic growth. Reeves said: "Britain has a deep global capital market, which can fund the growth needed by the economies in continental Europe."
Strategy guide 12-14
Strategy guide 12-14
Strategy guide 12-14