前收市價 | 84.250 |
開市 | 96.850 |
買盤 | 94.500 x 無 |
賣出價 | 94.550 x 無 |
今日波幅 | 94.350 - 98.000 |
52 週波幅 | 60.250 - 122.000 |
成交量 | |
平均成交量 | 63,064,069 |
市值 | 2.003T |
Beta 值 (5 年,每月) | 0.61 |
市盈率 (最近 12 個月) | 無 |
每股盈利 (最近 12 個月) | 無 |
業績公佈日 | 無 |
遠期股息及收益率 | 無 (無) |
除息日 | 無 |
1 年預測目標價 | 141.59 |
European equities rose on Wednesday while stocks in Asia were buoyed by Chinese ecommerce giant Alibaba’s plans to splinter into six business units following years of pressure from domestic regulators. Europe’s region-wide Stoxx 600 index added 0.9 per cent in morning trading, with shares in UBS up 2.2 per cent after the bank said it would bring back Sergio Ermotti as chief executive to steer its takeover of Credit Suisse. In Asia, Alibaba’s Hong Kong-listed shares rose more than 12 per cent, following similar gains on Wall Street the day before, while the Hang Seng Tech index tracking the largest technology companies listed in the city climbed 1.8 per cent. China’s CSI 300 rose 0.2 per cent.
The last time Alibaba made a radical move to reorganise its business the Chinese tech group set in motion a train of events that led to a clash with regulators, the disastrous cancellation of what would have been the world’s biggest initial public offering and a crackdown by Beijing on Big Tech. This time around Alibaba hopes to please investors and Beijing bureaucrats with a major restructuring into six business units, heralding the biggest shake-up of China’s best-known ecommerce company since Jack Ma founded it 24 years ago. This week’s move by Ma’s successor as chief executive, Daniel Zhang, may make Big Tech seem smaller to Beijing.
Also in today’s newsletter, JPMorgan’s Dimon to be deposed in Epstein lawsuits, and FT investigates North Korean oil smuggling