The world’s most indebted real estate developer, China Evergrande Group, was delisted from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on August 25, 2025. This was one of the largest delistings in recent years.
Wall Street banks are preparing for the recovery in the mergers and acquisitions market by hiring dozens of senior executives in recent months. Increased economic confidence has revived appetite that stalled in
The World Federation of Exchanges (WFE), representing the world’s largest exchanges, has called on regulators to oversee “tokenized shares.” According to the federation, these products create new risks for investors and threaten
Oil prices rose on Monday due to geopolitical risks. Brent crude rose 0.6% to $68.12, WTI rose 0.7% to $64.08. Markets are concerned that new US sanctions against Russia and Ukrainian attacks
European stocks edged lower on Monday following last week’s Powell rally. The STOXX 600 index fell 0.2%, the German DAX fell 0.4% and the French CAC 40 fell 0.5%. The UK market
In the US, major banks are applying to the OCC (Court of Accountability) to limit state influence and ensure uniform rules are applied to their operations. The banks are requesting national standards
Investors are warning that markets could experience sharp fluctuations as they await Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole. Powell must strike a delicate balance between curbing inflation and supporting
The German economy shrank by 0.3% in the second quarter of the year compared to the previous quarter. The main reason for this contraction was a drop in export demand following purchases
Evergrande, which shone as China’s largest real estate developer, was delisted from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange after years of a debt-fueled growth strategy. This end for the company is seen as
Elon Musk sought the support of his rival Mark Zuckerberg for his $97.4 billion OpenAI offering earlier this year, but the Meta CEO did not participate in the initiative. This information emerged