Podcasts about Caijing

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Best podcasts about Caijing

Latest podcast episodes about Caijing

STB-Finance理財大富翁
(中文) Imac Apple Invest panel - 群創 Taiwan INNOLUX 3481

STB-Finance理財大富翁

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2021 11:05


雖然台股今天開盤不久即跌破百點,但指數逐步往上游移並收紅。面板股友達 (2409) 、群創 (3481) 、彩晶 (6116) 在輪動格局下,早盤即逆勢大漲,中午過後更直奔漲停至收盤。 友達收在新台幣22.85元、群創21元、彩晶22.15元都是漲停板。 面板報價維持高檔,友達光電自結5月自結合併營收為321.2億元,較4月增加8.5%,較去年同期大幅增加47.8%。群創光電5月自結合併營收314億元,較4月增加3.4%,較去年同期增加42.3%。 股票發發發,「台股大行情」開始用LINE@了! 我們將會提供許多好康資訊給大家,請透過下方連結將我們加入好友。 一. https://line.me/R/ti/p/%40gcy7397x Line搜尋 @jqa3557y 二. Telegram,理財STB https://t.me/stbstock11 三. YT 理財教學頻道 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t-K-9Um96MQ 友達統計,5月面板總出貨面積達213.8萬平方公尺,較4月增加3.5%。群創光電統計,今年5月大尺寸面板合併出貨量共計1242萬片,較4月增加4%;中小尺寸面板5月合併出貨量共計2740萬片,較4月減少2%。 研調機構集邦科技指出,受惠於疫情衍生的宅經濟效應,帶動資訊電子產品需求在2021年持續增溫,顯示器驅動IC需求量也因此同步上升。儘管今年仍有晶圓代工新產能開出,對大尺寸面板所需軀動IC供應逐步改善,但仍無法緩解其供貨吃緊的問題,不排除該情況將延續至年底。 群智諮詢指出,32吋電視面板需求逐漸下滑,6月報價持平,50吋電視面板6月市況降溫,每片仍漲2美元。55吋電視面板6月需求稍減,上漲3美元。超過55吋的大尺寸電視面板方面,品牌備貨需求持續增加,6月每片均價約漲5美元 純網路銀行一切服務都透過網路完成,可以節省掉實體銀行的店租、ATM 、行員、水電費、維護費之類的成本,進而提供更優惠的存款及貸款利率,促進金融產業邁向4.0 Telegram,理財STB https://t.me/stbstock11 Although Taiwan stocks fell below 100 points shortly after the opening today, the index gradually moved upstream and closed in the red. Panel stocks AUO (2409), Innolux (3481) and Caijing (6116) bucked the trend in early trading under the rotation pattern, and went straight to the daily limit to the close after noon. AUO received 22.85 NT dollars, Innolux 21 yuan, and Caijing 22.15 yuan are all daily limits. Panel quotations remain high-end. AUO's self-integration revenue in May was 32.12 billion yuan, an increase of 8.5% from April and a significant increase of 47.8% from the same period last year. Innolux's self-integration revenue in May was 31.4 billion yuan, an increase of 3.4% from April and an increase of 42.3% from the same period last year. According to AUO's statistics, the total panel area shipped in May reached 2.138 million square meters, an increase of 3.5% from April. According to Innolux's statistics, the combined shipments of large-size panels in May this year totaled 12.42 million, an increase of 4% from April; the combined shipments of small and medium-sized panels totaled 27.4 million in May, a decrease of 2% from April. Research and research organization TrendForce pointed out that benefiting from the housing economy effect derived from the epidemic, the demand for information and electronic products will continue to increase in 2021, and the demand for display driver ICs will also increase accordingly. Although there are still new foundry production capacity opened this year, and the supply of mobile ICs required for large-size panels is gradually improving, it still cannot alleviate the problem of tight supply. It is not ruled out that this situation will continue until the end of the year. Qunzhi Consulting pointed out that the demand for 32-inch TV panels was gradually declining, and the quotations were flat in June. The market conditions for 50-inch TV panels cooled in June, and each piece was still up US$2. Demand for 55-inch TV panels declined slightly in June, rising by $3. For large-size TV panels exceeding 55 inches, the demand for brand stocking continues to increase, and the average price per unit in June has risen by approximately US$5 Powered by Firstory Hosting

Ninja News, l'economia digitale
La Cina prepara la sua valuta digitale

Ninja News, l'economia digitale

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2019 1:48


Stai ascoltando un estratto gratuito di Ninja PRO, la selezione quotidiana di notizie per i professionisti del digital business. Con Ninja PRO puoi avere ogni giorno marketing insight, social media update, tech news, business events e una selezione di articoli di approfondimento dagli esperti della Redazione Ninja. Vai su www.ninja.it/ninjapro per abbonarti al servizio.Buongiorno Ninja, ecco le notizie di oggi selezionate per te... CES 2020.Il 2020 segnerà il ritorno ufficiale di Apple al Consumer Electronics Show di Las Vegas, la più grande fiera al mondo dedicata all'elettronica di consumo. Cupertino, assente all'appuntamento dal 1992, non presenterà però alcun dispositivo né nuovi servizi, ma sarà coinvolto in una conferenza sul tema della privacy. Batterie. La Commissione Europea ha approvato un piano di investimento da 3,2 miliardi di euro “per progetti comuni di ricerca e innovazione e di prima produzione industriale per la realizzazione di batterie di nuova generazione“. L’Italia è parte di questo progetto assieme a Belgio, Finlandia, Francia, Germania, Polonia e Svezia. Valuta digitale. La Cina si prepara all'arrivo della sua valuta digitale, la Digital Currency Electronic Payment, con i primi test di prova già entro la fine dell’anno. Secondo quanto riporta il magazine economico-finanziario Caijing, a condurre la sperimentazione sarebbe la Banca Centrale. Per il tabloid Global Times, sarebbero coinvolti anche i giganti di Internet Alibaba e Tencent. Indossabili. Le consegne mondiali di dispositivi indossabili sono quasi raddoppiate nel corso del terzo trimestre, con un incremento del 94,6% su base annua, alla cifra record di 84,5 milioni di unità. A dirlo sono gli analisti di IDC, secondo cui a trainare il settore dei wearable è la forte domanda di auricolari e cuffie senza fili (quasi la metà delle consegne complessive). Un terzo del mercato è in mano a Apple, che ha triplicato le consegne.Da Alessio Galea è tutto, per approfondimenti Ninja.it

The China in Africa Podcast
The Belt & Road Initiative: Bold Economic Agenda or Chinese Political Ploy?

The China in Africa Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2019 40:26


In the U.S. and many parts of Europe, China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is often seen as "Trojan Horse" where Beijing uses the lure of trade and investment to discretely extend its political influence around the world. Not surprisingly, in China, those U.S. and European fears are quickly dismissed. Understanding these different perceptions is very important given how high the stakes are, both for the member states in places like Africa and the international system as a whole. "More than any other project, [BRI] has come to symbolize a new phase in China's rise, the moment when Beijing embraces its role as a new superpower, capable of remaking the world economy and attracting other countries to its own economic orbit and ideological model," said Portuguese minister and Hudson Institute fellow Bruno Maçães in his new book "Belt and Road - A Chinese World Order." In our ongoing series that explores different interpretations of the BRI, Eric and Cobus are joined this week by Zhu Zheng, an international affairs columnist for the financial newspaper Caijing and a research fellow at the China-Eastern Europe Institute. Zhu has traveled across Belt and Road countries in Asia, the Americas, and Eastern Europe and writes extensively on the subject for his readers in China. JOIN THE DISCUSSION: What do you think of the Belt and Road Initiative? Do you want your country to join in the hopes of tapping investment funds for infrastructure development and increased trading opportunities with China? Or, do you share the U.S. concerns that this whole thing is really just a ploy to expand Chinese political influence throughout the developing world? Let us know what you think. Facebook: www.facebook.com/ChinaAfricaProject Twitter: @eolander | @stadenesque  Email: eric@chinaafricaproject.com | cobus@chinaafricaproject.com   Sign up here if you would like to join our weekly email newsletter mailing list for a carefully curated selection of the week's top China-Africa news.

NCUSCR Interviews
Julian Gewirtz on Chinese Reformers and Western Economists

NCUSCR Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2017 12:51


For nearly three decades Mao’s China closed itself to the influence of non-Marxist thought as it established a rigid command economy. When Mao died in 1976, China’s leaders embarked on a large-scale process of learning from abroad. The intellectual breadth of Chinese reformers in those early years was remarkably broad as they sought input from Nobel Prize winning economists, World Bank officials, free market fundamentalists, and an unlikely array of other partners. Many who participated in these exchanges recall it as a “golden age” of intellectual openness. Even as China’s economic policy makers hastened to import ideas and expertise that could help them “cross the river by feeling for the stones,” the new openness did not go unchallenged. The Maoist legacy of suspicion towards the west remains powerful to this day, and the communist government is still reluctant to acknowledge fully its engagement with foreign ideas. In his new book, Unlikely Partners: Chinese Reformers, Western Economists, and the Making of Global China, historian Julian Gewirtz uncovers the real story of China’s reform project and sheds light on the partnerships that helped build the world’s second largest economy. On June 12, 2017, Mr. Gewirtz joined the National Committee for a discussion of his book, in a conversation with National Committee President Stephen Orlins. Julian Baird Gewirtz is the author of Unlikely Partners: Chinese Reformers, Western Economists, and the Making of Global China (Harvard University Press, 2017), which The Economist called “a gripping read, highlighting what was little short of a revolution in China’s economic thought.” A Rhodes Scholar, he is currently completing his doctorate in modern Chinese history at Oxford University. He most recently worked as special advisor for international affairs at the U.S. Department of Energy and previously worked for Alibaba, Facebook, and Caijing magazine. Mr. Gewirtz has written on China for The Washington Post, the Financial Times, and Foreign Affairs. He graduated summa cum laude from Harvard College in 2013 and received a master’s degree in history from Oxford University in 2014. 

NCUSCR Events
Unlikely Partners: Chinese Reformers and Western Economists with Author Julian Gewirtz

NCUSCR Events

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2017 69:31


For nearly three decades Mao’s China closed itself to the influence of non-Marxist thought as it established a rigid command economy. When Mao died in 1976, China’s leaders embarked on a large-scale process of learning from abroad. The intellectual breadth of Chinese reformers in those early years was remarkably broad as they sought input from Nobel Prize winning economists, World Bank officials, free market fundamentalists, and an unlikely array of other partners. Many who participated in these exchanges recall it as a “golden age” of intellectual openness. Even as China’s economic policy makers hastened to import ideas and expertise that could help them “cross the river by feeling for the stones,” the new openness did not go unchallenged. The Maoist legacy of suspicion towards the west remains powerful to this day, and the communist government is still reluctant to acknowledge fully its engagement with foreign ideas. In his new book, Unlikely Partners: Chinese Reformers, Western Economists, and the Making of Global China, historian Julian Gewirtz uncovers the real story of China’s reform project and sheds light on the partnerships that helped build the world’s second largest economy. On June 12, 2017, Mr. Gewirtz joined the National Committee for a discussion of his book, in a conversation with National Committee President Stephen Orlins. Julian Baird Gewirtz is the author of Unlikely Partners: Chinese Reformers, Western Economists, and the Making of Global China (Harvard University Press, 2017), which The Economist called “a gripping read, highlighting what was little short of a revolution in China’s economic thought.” A Rhodes Scholar, he is currently completing his doctorate in modern Chinese history at Oxford University. He most recently worked as special advisor for international affairs at the U.S. Department of Energy and previously worked for Alibaba, Facebook, and Caijing magazine. Mr. Gewirtz has written on China for The Washington Post, the Financial Times, and Foreign Affairs. He graduated summa cum laude from Harvard College in 2013 and received a master’s degree in history from Oxford University in 2014. 

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series (Audio Only)
Mikkal E. Herberg on China's Energy Future

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series (Audio Only)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2013 14:50


Mikkal E. Herberg is Research Director of NBR's Energy Security Program. He is also a senior lecturer on international and Asian energy at the Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego. Previously, Mr. Herberg spent 20 years in the oil industry in Strategic Planning roles for ARCO, where from 1997 to 2000 was Director for Global Energy and Economics, responsible for worldwide energy, economic, and political analysis. He also headed country risk analysis, responsible for advising the executive management on risk conditions and investment strategies in countries and regions where ARCO had major investments. His previous positions with ARCO included Director of Portfolio Risk Management and Director for Emerging Markets. Mikkal Herberg writes and speaks extensively on Asian energy issues to the energy industry, governments, and major research institutions in the Asia-Pacific region and Europe, including the U.S., China, and Japan. He is cited frequently in the media, including The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, South China Morning Post, Asahi Shimbun, Reuters, NIKKEI News, Caijing, and National Public Radio.

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series
Mikkal E. Herberg on China's Energy Future

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2013 14:50


Mikkal E. Herberg is Research Director of NBR's Energy Security Program. He is also a senior lecturer on international and Asian energy at the Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego. Previously, Mr. Herberg spent 20 years in the oil industry in Strategic Planning roles for ARCO, where from 1997 to 2000 was Director for Global Energy and Economics, responsible for worldwide energy, economic, and political analysis. He also headed country risk analysis, responsible for advising the executive management on risk conditions and investment strategies in countries and regions where ARCO had major investments. His previous positions with ARCO included Director of Portfolio Risk Management and Director for Emerging Markets. Mikkal Herberg writes and speaks extensively on Asian energy issues to the energy industry, governments, and major research institutions in the Asia-Pacific region and Europe, including the U.S., China, and Japan. He is cited frequently in the media, including The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, South China Morning Post, Asahi Shimbun, Reuters, NIKKEI News, Caijing, and National Public Radio.

CEIBS Industry Forum
Why China Should Adopt a Universal Banking System

CEIBS Industry Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2012 3:34


Mr. Eric Raynaud, CEO for Asia Pacific, BNP Paribas, speaks about why China should adopt a universal banking system as it continues to modernize and internationalize its financial sector. He also offers thoughts on what elements would be essential for a Chinese-style universal banking system. He was speaking, on September 10, 2012, at The 6th Annual China Bankers Forum hosted by CEIBS and Caijing magazine and co-organized by the CEIBS Lujiazui International Finance Research Centre.

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series (Audio Only)
John Garnaut - Is China Becoming a Mafia State?

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series (Audio Only)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2011 44:07


John Garnaut is the China correspondent for the Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne Age newspapers. He has written for other publications including Caijing magazine, Tempo (Indonesia), The Diplomat (Australia) and the International Herald Tribune. Recently his coverage has been recognised with a Walkley award for 'Scoop of the Year' for breaking the story that Rio Tinto's Stern Hu had been arrested; the Citigroup award for business journalism ; and a finalist for the Graham Perkins Australian journalist of the year. Before arriving in Beijing with his family in 2007 he was Economics Correspondent for the Sydney Morning Herald, based at Parliament House in Canberra. In an earlier life he was a commercial lawyer in Melbourne. As a child he spent stints in Papua New Guinea and China.

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series
John Garnaut - Is China Becoming a Mafia State?

USC U.S.-China Institute Speaker Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2011 44:08


John Garnaut is the China correspondent for the Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne Age newspapers. He has written for other publications including Caijing magazine, Tempo (Indonesia), The Diplomat (Australia) and the International Herald Tribune. Recently his coverage has been recognised with a Walkley award for 'Scoop of the Year' for breaking the story that Rio Tinto's Stern Hu had been arrested; the Citigroup award for business journalism ; and a finalist for the Graham Perkins Australian journalist of the year. Before arriving in Beijing with his family in 2007 he was Economics Correspondent for the Sydney Morning Herald, based at Parliament House in Canberra. In an earlier life he was a commercial lawyer in Melbourne. As a child he spent stints in Papua New Guinea and China.

Watchdog Conference
INNOVATIONS 3: Innovations on Narrative Forms and Platforms for Investigations

Watchdog Conference

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2009 56:38


In the US, the biggest constraint on watchdog reporting is diminished resources brought about by declining advertising and circulation revenues. This panel will look at successful models of news organizations that have pursued watchdog journalism despite shrinking budgets. The first speaker will be an editor from the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, which continues to support investigative or projects teams even with reduced resources. The paper’s watchdog unit recently won the AP Innovators Award. The paper’s watchdog editor, Mark Katches, will talk about civic responsibility and also how watchdog journalism has an audience. WNYC, New York’s public broadcasting radio network, has pioneered crowd-sourcing – getting listeners to help in research and reporting – as a way of getting community involvement in investigations. At the same time, investigative reporting is going global. In China, a new generation of investigative reporters has braved the restrictions of the Chinese Communist Party to report on level corruption, financial scams and social issues. Weiqiang Ye of Caijing will speak about muckraking in China, while Daoud Kuttab will speak on finding the spaces for this kind of journalism in the Arab world.Moderator: Brant Houston, Knight Chair for Investigative and Enterprise Reporting at the University of Illinois Mark Katches, investigative editor, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (winner, AP Award for Innovations in Investigative Reporting) Brian Lehrer, WNYC Radio: Public radio as a home for investigative reporting; “crowd-sourcing” and other techniques Daoud Kuttab, Chairman of ARIJ (Arab reporters for Investigative Journalism) and Founder of AmmanNet: Finding space for investigative journalism in the Arab world Weiqiang Ye, Assistant Managing Editor, Caijing: Muckraking in China amid Communist Party restrictions

Watchdog Conference
INNOVATIONS 3: Innovations on Narrative Forms and Platforms for Investigations

Watchdog Conference

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2009 56:38


In the US, the biggest constraint on watchdog reporting is diminished resources brought about by declining advertising and circulation revenues. This panel will look at successful models of news organizations that have pursued watchdog journalism despite shrinking budgets. The first speaker will be an editor from the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, which continues to support investigative or projects teams even with reduced resources. The paper’s watchdog unit recently won the AP Innovators Award. The paper’s watchdog editor, Mark Katches, will talk about civic responsibility and also how watchdog journalism has an audience. WNYC, New York’s public broadcasting radio network, has pioneered crowd-sourcing – getting listeners to help in research and reporting – as a way of getting community involvement in investigations. At the same time, investigative reporting is going global. In China, a new generation of investigative reporters has braved the restrictions of the Chinese Communist Party to report on level corruption, financial scams and social issues. Weiqiang Ye of Caijing will speak about muckraking in China, while Daoud Kuttab will speak on finding the spaces for this kind of journalism in the Arab world.Moderator: Brant Houston, Knight Chair for Investigative and Enterprise Reporting at the University of Illinois Mark Katches, investigative editor, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (winner, AP Award for Innovations in Investigative Reporting) Brian Lehrer, WNYC Radio: Public radio as a home for investigative reporting; “crowd-sourcing” and other techniques Daoud Kuttab, Chairman of ARIJ (Arab reporters for Investigative Journalism) and Founder of AmmanNet: Finding space for investigative journalism in the Arab world Weiqiang Ye, Assistant Managing Editor, Caijing: Muckraking in China amid Communist Party restrictions