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Nie było wyjścia. Ta rekonstrukcja była po prostu koniecznością - mówił w rozmowie z Jackiem Nizinkiewiczem dr Mirosław Oczkoś, specjalista do spraw marketingu politycznego z SGH.Gościem programu Jacka Nizinkiewicza #RZECZoPOLITYCE był Dr Mirosław Oczkoś, ekspert ds. wizerunku z SGH
The ASX 200 closed up 31 points to 8698 (0.4%) as banks were back in the driving seat. CBA up 1.2% with the Big Bank Basket up to $276.18 (+0.9%). MQG rallied 1.0% as financials generally found some love. XYZ up 2.8% and MFG doing well, up 4.6%. RPL up 4.1% too. REITs doing well, GMG up 0.5% and SCG rising 0.8%. Industrials also firm, SGH up 2.2% with retail better, WES up 0.6 % and WOW up 0.8%. Tech better, WTC up 0.3% and the All-Tech Index up 1.0%. Healthcare too in demand, CSL up 1.0% on trade deal, RMD rising 1.0%. Old Skool platforms better too, CAR up1.7 % and REA rising 1.3%. Resources were mixed, the shocker from BOE falling 44.0% as it warned on future production. Shorts had a ball in PDN, DYL and lithium stocks tumbled as Asian prices dropped hard. LTR down 8.0% and PLS off 11.7%. Gold miners were mixed, NEM up 4.5% on broker upgrades, the rest in the doldrums, GMD down 1.8% and RMS off 4.4%. Coal stocks also smacked down, WHC and YAL hit hard on a court ruling.In corporate news, WTC has a new CEO, HLO rose 14.1% after an earnings upgrade. BUB too has a new CEO. Nothing on the economic front.Asian markets mixed, Japan down 1%, HK up 0.4% and China up 0.1%. 10-year yields steady at 4.34%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 finished up 9 points to 8677 as the initial rally fizzled out. More the sellers turned up in spades for the banking sector again. CBA crushed 3.1% with the Big Bank Basket down to $272.11 (-2.6%), under serious pressure again as the money flowed to resources. BHP up 2.6% and RIO charging ahead up 3.4%. Gold miners also back in demand, NST up 1.3% and NEM rising 2.8%. Lithium stocks on pause as were rare earths, LYC down 0.1% and graphite stocks taking a breather. SYR fell 9.3% and NVX off 0.8%. Oil flat and uranium falling a little. The industrials were flat, WES off 0.8% and BXB down 0.9% with SGH putting on the Ritz up 1.3%. Healthcare doing well as CSL hit a 4-month high, up 3.4% with PME up 2.1%. REITs firmed, tech better, XRO up 0.6% after SPP pricing period finishes, WTC up 1.4% and the All-Tech Index up 0.2%. In corporate news, IFL rose 12.2% as CC Capital agreed a 480c cash scheme. PPT up 0.7% on restructure plans.In economic news, RBA minutes continued to show caution and gradual moves. Consumer confidence fell 0.2% last week to 86.3 points, according to the ANZ-Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence index, as households were less optimistic about financial conditions.Asian markets mixed, Japan down 0.3% after holiday. HK up 0.5%. China up 0.8%.10-year yield eases to 4.30%Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 exploded 118 points higher to 8757 (1.4%) as banks and resources caught a wave of buying. BHP production numbers, coupled with iron ore gains in Asia, helped the Big Australian up 3.0%. RIO up 1.8% with FMG lagging only up 0.5%. Lithium and graphite stocks flew, LTR up 10.1% and PLS rallying another 8.6%, with MIN up 4.8% and ILU rising 5.0%. Graphite stocks were in demand, SYR up 25.9%, and TLG up 10.0%. Gold miners found some love late in the day, NST up% % with EVN rising % but uranium stocks dipping slightly. Industrials firmed across the board, WES up 1.4% with TCL up 0.9% and SGH rising 3.0%. Healthcare is too in demand, CSL rallying 3.6% on a broker report, and MSB is living up to its name on revenue, up 34.6%. Tech stocks are better, WTC up 1.2%, and XRO rising 1.0%. Banks, as usual, didn't want to miss out. CBA up 0.9% with WBC rising 1.8% and MQG up 1.3%. The Big Bank Basket up to $286.78 (+1.1%). Financials are also in demand, IFL is better by 5.8% on reports that a deal is close. Insurers rose, REITS better, GMG up 1.5%, and SGP up 0.9%.In corporate news, ALX fell 0.4% on US supreme court news, FBU rose 3.0% on a business update. Nothing on the economic front local.Asian markets mixed, Japan down 0.2% ahead of weekend election, HK up 0.8% and China up 0.4%. 10-year yields steady at 4.33%Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 ended down 10 points at 8570 as the move out of banks to resources continued. Banks eased slightly with the Big Bank Basket down to $282.02 (-0.4%). ANZ the worst of the four with MQG up 0.2% and AMP rising 1.4%. BNPL XYZ and ZIP fell 2.8% on JP Morgan moves on charges, REITs firmed ever so slightly, GMG up 0.3% and industrials eased, CPU down 3.0% with QAN off 0.9%, SGH down 0.8% and ORG falling 0.9%. Retailer flat and tech slipping, XRO continuing to fall, WTC down 1.3%. Resources saw buyers again, BHP up 0.9% as iron ore closed on US$100 in Singapore. Lithium stocks rallied from a lacklustre open as shorts covered again. PLS up 6.5% and LTR rising 3.1%. MIN up 1.5% with feet in both camps. Gold miners too back in demand, NST rallied 1.7% with NEM up 1.7% and EVN rising 1.9%. Oil and gas firmed, and uranium powered ahead as shorts covered. BOE up 2.0% and PDN up 2.9%. In corporate news, ASK on the end of a 165c bid. CCX fell 1.2% on a trading update, issues in US hurting. DRO jumped 17.0% on increased R&D spending, HSN rallied 10.9% on business update. Nothing on the economic front locally but Chinese exports showed promise.Asian markets firm but not spectacular. HK up 0.4%.10-year yields up to 4.36%Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 fell 52 points to 8539 (0.6%) as losses accelerated in the afternoon. Banks helped relatively firm with CBA losing only % with the Big Bank Basket down to $281.96 (-0.1%). MQG dropped 2.5% and insurers losing steam, SUN down 0.8% and IAG off 1.2%. Healthcare under pressure, CSL down 0.9% on US tariff moves, SIG fell 3.3% and TLX bucked the trend rising 5.6% on good US code news. REITS stumbled lower as yields rose, GMG down 2.6% and SGP off 1.5%. Industrials also eased back, TCL down 0.9% with BXB off 0.6% and SGH falling 1.1%. Retail a little better and tech easing back. In resources, gold miners got walloped as AUD bullion prices staggered lower, NST fell 3.4% with EVN off 7.0% and GMD down 5.6%. The big iron ore miners slipped, BHP down 1.0% and RIO down 0.6%. Lithium stocks better, PLS up 1.7% and LTR rising 5.6%. Oil and gas stocks a little better, coal too and uranium falling hard, PDN down 8.3% and BOE off 7.6%.In corporate news, LIC crashed 37.3% on the recent court ruling. TLX jumped on Gozellix news. Nothing locally on the economic front. In China, PPI fell more than forecast. Asian markets mixed with five new IPOs listing today in HK. 10-year yields jumped to 4.34%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
ASX 200 rose 1 point to 8591 as the RBA kept rates on hold. Bullock's press conference calmed nerves and prompted a late recovery from small losses. The AUD jumped and yields pushed higher on the news, but the reaction was relatively muted. Banks were steady with CBA up 0.8% and the Big Bank Basket up to $282.25 (+0.6%). Insurers were weaker, QBE down 0.6% and SUN off 0.6% as financials drifted lower. Industrials too drifted lower, SGH down 1.5% with PMV off 2.3% as WOW and COL slumped around 1.3%. REITs too fell as yields rose. SCG down 1.3% with GPT off 1.2%. Tech stocks slightly better, WTC up 0.4% and TNE up 1.1% with the All-Tech Index up 0.6%. Resources were mixed with BHP leading the iron ore miners down, off 0.9% with lithium slightly firmer, PLS up 2.1% and gold miners in demand again, NEM up 2.4% and GMD up 2.9% with OBM bouncing hard, up 8% after a huge sell-off. Oil and gas fell, uranium producers firmed, PDN up 0.8% and DYL up 2.6%. In corporate news, PTM rose 3.0% after agreeing to a merger with L1 Capital. On the economic front, the NAB business survey was better than expected. RBA on hold again. Timing, not direction the issue. 10-year yields 4.26%Asian markets better with Japan up 0.3%, China up 0.7% and HK up 0.6%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
ASX 200 drifted 14 points lower to 8589 (0.1%). CBA held up with the banks drifting slightly lower. The Big Bank Basket is down to $280.46 (-0.2%). Financials firmed in places, IFT up 3.1% and NWL rising 1.5%. REITS soft with GMG down 0.5% and SCG off 0.8 %. Industrials mixed, SGH up 1.0% with QAN rising 1.0% with retails slightly firmer as RBA looks to cut tomorrow. ORG was a standout up 6.8% on an Octopus update from the UK. In resources, Gold miners took a hit with production and costs weighing on NST, off 8.7%. Other golds follow lower with the bullion price off too. EVN down 2.2% and OBM falling 6.8%. Lithium once again depressed, PLS off 4.3% and LTR falling 5.3%, shorts back and selling. Uranium stocks mixed, BOE down 2.4% and DYL up 0.9% with coal better, Oil and gas mixed, WDS off 0.8% and STO up 0.4%. In corporate news, S32 down 0.6% on news of the sale of its Cerro Matso nickel project. MIN fell 2.0% as it named two new independent directors. Nothing on the economic front. Asian markets eased with Japan down 0.6%, China down 0.5% and HK off 0.3%.10-year yields rising to 4.19%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
ASX 200 fell just 1 point to 8541 in quiet trade as banks came under some pressure. CBA sold down 1.2% as money flowed to other three, ANZ up 2.5% the big winner. The Big Bank Basket flat at $286.04 (0.4%). MQG drifted 1.0% lower, and financials steady, GQG up 2.2% and IFL up 5.2% on news CC Capital was still actively trying to stitch the takeover together. Insurers mixed, REITs better, SCG up 2.8% and VCX up 1.6% with industrials drifting around. SGH fell 2.9% on Boral CEOs retirement. JHX fell 2.2% and tech eased, WTC down 1.0% but XRO rallying 1.2%. Retail flat. In resources, the iron ore majors steadied, FMG up 0.7% and gold miners rallied, NEM up 2.0% and BGL up 3.9%. Oil and gas stocks becalmed with uranium mixed, PDN down 1.4% and DYL recovering some poise up 5.4%.In corporate news, FND were suspended for not filing reports on time. MSB jumped 11.2% after progress made on FDA. HMC fell 17.3% as energy transition head, Angela Karl stepped down.Nothing on the economic front today. Chinese Caixin PMI rose, and EU CPI tonight.Asian markets mixed, Japan down 1.4%, HK closed and China up 0.2%.10-Year Yield falling to 4.11%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 trod water rising 4 points to 8559 as CPI numbers came in below forecast. Narrow trading range. Banks were firm again, CBA up another 1.7% with the Big Bank Basket at $295.09 (+1.5%). Financials also doing well, GQG up 9.1% and XYZ up 1.0% with REITs better on rate cut hopes. GMG up 0.4% and CHC rising 1.2%. Industrials were mixed, retail better on rates, LOV up 1.9% and NCK rallying 3.3%. Travel stocks better too, CTD up 2.2% with LNW soaring as ALL fell 0.9%. SGH continue to push to new highs, QAN up 0.8% with VGN up 3.4% on day two.Resources were once again under pressure. The big three are getting smaller, BHP down 1.0% and FMG off 2.3%. Lithium stocks fell, MIN off 6.0% and PLS falling 3.1%. Gold miners too slipping again as bullion eases back. NST down 2.6% and GMD down 4.0%. Oil and gas stocks continue to suffer despite crude finding buyers, STO down another 1.2% with uranium steady and coal down, WHC off 2.2%.In corporate news, HUM got a NBIO from its chair, DRO soared 19.9% on a new EU contract, PNI down 3.7% as founder sold a parcel, PBH shareholders turned Japanese, SGR got shareholder approval for Bally and Mathieson to take the stakes. XRO in a trading halt with big capital raising and US acquisition worth $4bn.On the economic front, the local monthly CPI came in below forecasts and rate cut hopes emerged. Asian markets better Japan up 0.3%, China up 0.6% and HK up 0.8%. 10-year yields falling to 4.12%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
Przygotujcie się na wyjątkowy odcinek “Biznesu bez Lukru”, w którym naszym gościem jest Przemysław Kuśmierek. Przedsiębiorca, który od ponad 15 lat, jest w biznesie synonimem innowacji z misją. Założyciel Migam.org, Migam.ai i Ommi.io od najmłodszych lat nasiąkał duchem przedsiębiorczości w rodzinnej firmie, by szybko zrozumieć, że prawdziwą sprawczość buduje się na własnych zasadach. Przetrwał trzykrotnie, ucząc się na błędach, by jego firma mogła z sukcesem wejść na ścieżkę budowy “globalnej fabryki języków migowych”. Czego jeszcze dowiesz się z dzisiejszej premiery?✅ Czego Przemek nauczył się o budowaniu firmy, która trzy razy niemal zbankrutowała i dlaczego jego startup z misją społeczną musiał działać jak pełnoprawny biznes, a nie NGO?✅ Co zrobił, by przebudować firmę z lokalnej w globalną – i dlaczego m.in. wymagało to zmiany języka na Slacku?✅ Co najbardziej nasz gość ceni w ludziach, z którymi pracuje i dlaczego „ambicja” nie wystarczy?✅ Dlaczego nieustanne zdobywanie wiedzy – od kursów na Stanfordzie po studia MBA na SGH – jest kluczowe w budowaniu globalnego biznesu? ✅ Jak osobiste doświadczenia Przemka (w tym walka z chorobą i „koszty zdrowotne”) wpłynęły na jego podejście do życia i pracy?Chciał mieć wpływ, więc zbudował firmę. Wiedział, że nie da się w niej pracować od godz. 9 do 17. To jednak nie był jedyny kompromis na który poszedł, podejmując się realizacji celu, który spędza sen z powiek innym już od 70 lat. Czy mu się uda, czy wytrwa? Z kim idzie w tę podróż, dlaczego talenty przyciągają talenty, a w biznesie najważniejsze są relacje, dobry produkt oraz rozmowy z klientami? Zapraszamy do obejrzenia dzisiejszej premiery już teraz ▶️
Studia, o których rozmawialiśmy: https://www.sgh.waw.pl/studia-podyplomowe-i-mba/studia-podyplomowe-finanse-osobiste-oszczedzanie-inwestowanie-finansowanieI konkurs, o którym wspomniałem! (obejrzyjcie i koniecznie bierzcie udział): https://youtu.be/npt8dOAKL7A I konto w Saxo Banku na promocyjnych warunkach: ► https://doradca.tv/saxo2025/Jeśli chcesz założyć rachunek z bonusem w postaci książek ode mnie, to załóż go z poniższego linku zgodnie z instrukcją, wykonaj dowolną wpłatę na rachunek oraz wyślij do mnie potwierdzenie przelewu na adres kontakt@doradca.tv, żebym mógł zweryfikować udział w promocji.*Partnerem nagrania jest Saxo Bank. O co pytałem Kamila Gemrę:- jak inwestują Polacy? - czy mamy hossę bez inwestorów indywidualnych? - czemu geopolityka wypiera finanse? - czemu nie możemy kupić łatwo obligacji samorządowych? - jak SGH podchodzi do tematu rozwoju AI? - jak AI zmieni szkolnictwo wyższe? - jakie książki poleca dr Gemra? Miłego słuchania!
Młodzi dorośli między 18 a 24 rokiem życia coraz rzadziej mają problem ze spłatą zaległości finansowych. Jednak ich łączny dług to wciąż 800 mln zł! Jakie są źródła takich problemów i z czego wynikają te statystyki tłumaczy dr hab. Waldemar Rogowski, prof. SGH - główny analityk grupy BIG InfoMonitor. Pyta Kuba Łasicki.
Kamil Kuć rozmawia z dr. Danielem Kaszyńskim z Instytutu Ekonometrii SGH o tym, jak wyglądał hackathon Mastercard „od kuchni” i czym zajmuje się jednostka AI Lab na SGH. Sztuczna inteligencja, innowacje i studencka energia w praktyce.
Choć start Sławosza Uznańskiego znów został przesunięty, to temat polskiej obecności w kosmosie jest bardziej aktualny niż kiedykolwiek. Kamil Kuć rozmawia z prof. dr hab. Elżbietą Marciszewską – pełnomocniczką rektora SGH ds. Akademickiej Sieci Kosmicznej – o tym, jaką rolę może odegrać SGH w eksploracji kosmosu i dlaczego kosmos to nie tylko rakiety, ale też gospodarka, dane i strategie.
Sztuczna inteligencja szturmem wkroczyła do mainstreamu, a Google i SGH postanowiły wykorzystać ten moment, by realnie pomóc polskiemu sektorowi MŚP. W niniejszym odcinku specjalnym TechCast Podcast “#LIVE14 - Umiejętności Jutra AI - jak Google wraz z SGH przygotowuje nas na rewolucję AI?” rozmawiam z Łukaszem Pietrzakiem z Google oraz prof. Bogumiłem Kamińskim z SGH o kursie Umiejętności Jutra AI – jego kulisach, celach, efektach i feedbacku z rynku. Mówimy o tym, jak AI wpływa na codzienną pracę, co naprawdę daje użytkownikom i co jeszcze musi się zmienić.W materiale:✅ kulisy współpracy Google i SGH✅ jak wyglądały przygotowania✅ ilu uczestników wzięło udział✅ jakie są efekty 5-tygodniowego szkolenia✅ jakie są dalsze planyGoście podcastu:
Przemysł musi przejść transformację cyfrową, by sprostać rosnącej konkurencji. Proces ten już trwa. Wiele zostało zrobione, jednak na tle innych państw Unii Europejskiej wciąż pozostajemy w tyle. Goścmi podcastu Moniki Borkowskiej byli Michał Jaworski, Microsoft oraz Prof. Michał Bernardelli z SGH.
O tym, jak wygląda współpraca gospodarcza Polski z Japonią i gdzie drzemie niewykorzystany potencjał, rozmawia Kamil Kuć z prof. Arkadiuszem Kowalskim – kierownikiem Katedry Badań Gospodarki Wschodniej i zastępcą dyrektora Instytutu Gospodarki Światowej SGH.
ASX 200 fell 21 points in quiet trade to 8415 (0.1%). Most sectors showing losses as nerves crept back in on Trump and Chinese negotiations. Banks slipped with WBC off 1.2% and the Big Bank Basket down to $275.32 (-0.1%). MQG fell 1.0% with insurers better, QBE up 1.3% and MPL rising 2.1%. REITs slid, GMD down 0.9% and VCX off 0.4%. Industrials were mostly flat, WOW and COL better, WES up 0.5% and SGH doing well, up 0.7% with BXB rallying 1.0%. TLS continued to push higher, tech was mixed as WTC fell 2.3% and XRO rose 1.5% with the All-Tech Index down 0.5%. Healthcare under a little pressure, SIG off 3.2% following the sell-down last week. In resources, iron ore down in Singapore, BHP off 1.2% and FMG sliding 2.5%. Lithium stocks under pressure following the UBS downgrade last week, MIN off 11.8% and PLS falling 8.1%. Gold miners were better as bullion pushed higher on steel tariff issues, EVN up 3.1% and NEM up 1.2%. Oil and gas stocks eased slightly and uranium stocks fell. In corporate news, SOL announced a merger with BKW to create a new $15bn top 50 stock. Both stocks rallied hard on the news, a $500m zero discount capital raising also helped sentiment. BSL jumped 4.4% on US tariff moves, APE extended the buyback, JHX rose 1.4% on securing a new debt facility. Nothing on the economic front locally, China and US ratchet up war of words. Asian markets fell, Japan down 1.3%, HK off 1.9% and China down 0.5%. 10-year yields steady at 4.26%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
Kamil Kuć zaprasza do rozmowy Lukasa Kasicę – przedstawiciela studentów w radzie programowej kierunku Ekonomia Stosowana w SGH. Wspólnie zastanawiają się, jak ta dziedzina pomaga podejmować lepsze decyzje – od domowego budżetu po politykę gospodarczą państwa.
ASX 200 rallies 48 points to 8343 (0.6%), regaining yesterday's loss as the RBA cuts rates by 25bps, as expected. Banks better, led by NAB up 1% with the Big Bank Basket up to $269.90 (+0.7%). MQG rallied 2.0% with other financials better, too, ZIP up 3.1% and PNI up 1.7%. Insurers firmed, and REITS pushed higher as rates fell. 10-year yields fell to 4.44%. Industrials are also doing well, with WES up 0.8% and TLS rising 2.2% as it pushed up phone plans. SGH is up 1.4%, and retail is doing better as rates fall. JBH is up 1.3% with TPW rising 2.9% and travel stocks also in demand, CTD up 1.9% and FLT up 1.5%. KGN fell on disappointing results, off 8.9%. Tech stocks rose, with TNE the standout, up 11.3%, beating expectations and hitting new records. The All-Tech Index is up %. Resources mixed, iron ore miners gave up early gains, and gold miners too started well but wilted with NST down 1.4% and NEM off 11.4%. Coal stocks are flat, oil and gas mixed, and uranium slightly weaker. In corporate news, OFX crashed 34.6% after a huge run yesterday and a trading halt. On the economic front, the RBA cut rates to 3.85% lowest in two years. China eased rates back too. Asian markets were positive with CATL listing in HK today. European futures pointing to a solid opening. Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
Czym są międzynarodowe akredytacje i dlaczego SGH tak mocno o nie zabiega? O ich znaczeniu, prestiżu i wpływie na przyszłość uczelni Kamil Kuć rozmawia z prof. Marcinem Wojtysiakiem-Kotlarskim – osobą odpowiedzialną za kluczowe procesy akredytacyjne na SGH.
Kamil Kuć rozmawia z dr Izabelą Rudzką z Kolegium Nauk o Przedsiębiorstwie SGH o tym, jak kobiety postrzegają kwestie mieszkaniowe i jakie mają priorytety przy wyborze miejsca do życia. Głos kobiet w debacie o mieszkalnictwie coraz częściej staje się kluczowy.
Wall St ended the last trading week on a high after better-than-expected nonfarm payrolls data for April eased recession fears and lifted the S&P500 to its longest winning streak in over 2-decades. The S&P500 gained 1.5% on Friday, the Dow Jones rose 1.4% and the Nasdaq ended the day up 1.51%. Payrolls in the US grew by 177,000 in April, well above the 133,000 economists were expecting in a sign the labour market remains strong despite recession fears amid the Trump tariff turmoil.Across the European region on Friday, markets closed higher on better-than-expected economic data and on trade war de-escalation between China and the US. The STOXX 600 rose 1.7%, Germany's DAX added 2.62%, France's CAC rose 2.33% and, in the UK, the FTSE100 ended the day up 1.17%.Asia markets ended the week in the green as trade talks between China and the US continue to make progress. Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 1.74%, India's Nifty 50 rose 0.21%, Japan's Nikkei added 1.04%, and South Korea's Kospi Index ended the day up 0.12%.Locally on Friday, the ASX200 ended the week on a high a gain of 1.1% boosted by strength among tech stocks following a strong night for the Nasdaq on Thursday night despite gloomy earnings out of Amazon, Block and Apple.Corporate Travel Management (ASX:CTD) tumbled 9.2% on Friday after saying it expects to report lower revenue and earnings growth due to the initial impact of tariffs on client demand, while Block sank 25.9% after the digital payments provider lowered its full year guidance. What to watch today:On the commodities front this morning, oil is trading 3.6% lower at US$56.24/barrel, gold is up 0.14% at US$3244/ounce and iron ore is down 1.07% at US$98.19/tonne.The Aussie dollar has further strengthened against the greenback to buy 64.53 US cents, 93.38 Japanese Yen, 48.56 British Pence, and 1 New Zealand dollar and 8 cents.Ahead of Monday's trading session, the SPI futures are anticipating the ASX will open the day up 0.4% to extend on last week's gains.Trading Ideas:Bell Potter has raised the 12-month price target on Woolworths Group (ASX:WOW) from $30.75 to $31.85 and maintain a hold rating on the supermarket giant following the release of the company's Q3 results including 3.2% YoY sales growth on a group level, while Australian food revenues rose 3.6% and Australian B2B business revenues rose 6.4%. NZ food sales rose just 1.8% YoY and W Living sales fell 2.6% YoY. The reason for the maintenance of the hold rating is that Woolworths is currently trading on a multiple consistent to Coles and the analyst feels it is difficult to see the catalyst to return the rating to a premium compared to Coles at present.And Bell Potter has reduced the rating on SGH (ASX:SGH) from a buy to a hold and have reduced the 12-month price target on the company from $57 to $54.50 following a mixed outlook in the company's operating divisions. While equipment orders are lifting, aggregate prices are falling and the construction market remains flat in recent months. Trading on a 20.3x FY26 PE, the analyst believes SGH is currently fairly valued.
Kamil Kuć rozmawia z prof. dr. hab. Markiem Bryxem – ekspertem SGH od rynku mieszkaniowego – o tym, jakie są preferencje mieszkaniowe młodych ludzi w Polsce. Na podstawie świeżych wyników ankiety i konferencji z 14 maja, próbujemy odpowiedzieć na pytanie: czy pokolenie Z marzy jeszcze o własnym M?
The ASX 200 was a mirror of yesterday with CBA and gold miners down today and the rest of the market up. The index closed up 104 points at 7920(1.3%). In the banks, CBA fell 2.5% with NAB the standout up 3.2% with the Big Bank Basket down to $258.77 (-0.8%). MQG leapt 5.3% with other financials back in demand, PNI up 6.0% and GQG up 7.1%. REITs also doing well with GMG rallying 3.0% and VCX up 2.7%. Industrials firmed across the board, WES up 1.8%, ALL rising 4.4% and SGH up 3.2%. Healthcare stocks also saw gain, TLX up 12.5% on a sales update. Tech stocks better, WTC put in 5.5% with XRO up 2.9% and the All-Tech Index up 3.5%. Resources were generally firm, BHP up 3.3% with FMG rallying 2.7%, LYC fell 7.6% on possible Chinese de-escalation, gold miners too saw some profit taking across the board, with NST down 9.6% and EVN falling 10.9% as NEM dropped 7.0%. Uranium stocks had a lovely day out, PDN reassured the markets with a production update, up 24.6%, and Spott has been buying the sector; DYL is up 12.0% with oil and gas stocks also doing well, STO is up 6.1% with WDS putting on 3.6%. On the corporate front, IFL revealed FUM and rallied 4.5% with CTT falling 24.4% on reporting weak demand in US on tariff uncertainty. On the economic front, new business activity in Australia's private sector rose at the fastest pace in three years. Asian markets firmed with Japan up 1.9%, HK up 2.2% and China up 0.3%. 10-year yields eased slightly to 4.26%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
ASX 200 gives up gains to close down 3 points at 7759 as US futures turn down on Nvidia news. Banks as usual a safe place to be, the Big Bank Basket up to $252.55 (1.0%). WBC up 1.5% and MQG unchanged. Financials mixed, ZIP rising 16.2% on a very positive update and upgrades. REITS firmed with SCG up 1.2% and VCX up 0.5% whilst GMG fell 0.5%. Industrials were weaker, SGH down 1.5%, GYG fell 3.5% and FLT off 2.3%. Retail stocks eased back, LOV down 2.5% and AX1 off 6.3%. Tech fell, the All-Tech Index dropped 0.6% as WTC announced Richard White had a new role. Same as the old role really. XRO fell 1.2%. Resources were slipping again, iron ore miners fell, BHP down 1.2% with RIO off 2.7% and FMG falling 2.4%, Gold miners soared as quarterlies are pointing to the cash piling up, GMD up 8.4% and EVN kicking 1.3% higher again. Energy stocks under pressure, WDS down 2.3% and WHC falling 7.4% with uranium stocks once again on the nose, the fallout continues, PDN down 4.6% and BOE off 4.6%. In corporate news, BOQ up 5.5% on higher margins, SGR trading again unchanged as the rescue plan continues to play out. KAR up 1.6% after raising expenditure guidance. In economic news, Chinese GDP beat estimates. Locally building activity fell, the total number of dwelling units commenced fell 4.4% to 41,911 dwellings. Asian markets under pressure, Japan down 1.3%, HK off 2.3% and China off 0.7%. 10-year yields rose to 4.34%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
O tym, czy jeden polityk może zatrzymać globalną walkę o klimat, rozmawia Kamil Kuć z dr. Mariuszem Lipskim – ekspertem ds. transformacji energetycznej i polityki klimatycznej z SGH. W odcinku: Omnibus, Net Zero, rachunki za prąd i wielka gra mocarstw o zieloną przyszłość.
MONEY FM 89.3 - Prime Time with Howie Lim, Bernard Lim & Finance Presenter JP Ong
TIIM Healthcare is transforming emergency care with AI-powered solutions that support faster, more accurate triage decisions. Their flagship product, aiTriage, leverages heart rate variability and artificial intelligence to detect high-risk patients early. With support from the National Health Innovation Centre (NHIC), TIIM Healthcare has successfully launched clinical trials and built vital partnerships with hospitals like SGH and NUH, accelerating adoption and driving real-world impact in healthcare delivery. On The Right Business, Hongbin Jeong speaks to Prof Marcus Ong, Senior Consultant and Clinician Scientist at the Department of Emergency Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, and Dr Pauline Erica Tay, Director at the National Health Innovation Centre, Singapore, to find out more. Presented by: Hongbin Jeong Produced and Edited by: Alexandra Parada (alexparada@sph.com.sg) and Nadiah Koh Want to get featured on our show? Drop me an email today!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It was a solid start to the week, with the ASX 200 up 102 points to 7749 (1.3%). Strong banks and resources are taking us up. The Big Bank Basket rallied to $248.77 (+1.6%). CBA was up 1.7%, and WBC was up 1.6%. Insurers also better with MQG flat as some downgrades coming through. REITs rallied hard, GMG up 2.4% and SCG up 1.8%. Industrials were better but lagged, WES up 1.1% and SGH up 2.7% with the supermarkets flat, retail rose, LOV up 2.4% and JBH rallying 2.4%. Travel stocks were a little better, tech doing well, WTC up 3.1% and XRO rising 2.3% with the All-Tech Index up 2.1%. TLS slipped a little. In resources, iron ore miners rose, BHP up 2.7%, RIO up 1.4% with the gold miners pushing up although gold saw some profit taking. NEM up 4.5% with EVN up 2.6%. MIN had a good day as some shorts covered again, PLS rallied 3.3% with IGO up 3.2%. Oil stocks inched up WDS up 1.1% and STO up 1.8% with uranium and coal stocks better, WHC up 4.8% and DYL up 3.9%. In corporate news, NEU jumped 21.1% on a positive end point for its Phase III trial. DEG up 1.6% as GOR will vote in favour of the NST deal. Nothing locally on the economic front. Asian markets better, Japan up 1.6%, HK up 2.1% and China 0.3% higher. 10-year yields steady around 4.41%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 rose 167 points to 7510 in a Tuesday turnaround. Buoyed by hopes that the tariffs are still negotiable and the US futures showing a good start at least. The market rallied across the board with a special shout out to resources with BHP up 2.3% and FMG gaining 3.5%. Gold miners were also better despite bullion falling as quarterlies beckon. NST ran 5.0% ahead, EVN bounced 5.0% and NEM up 2.7%. Lithium stocks rallied on hopes for more EV stimulus in China, PLS up 5.4% and LTR up 8.1%, short covering helped. In the uranium space, BOE saw shorts in play up 11.0% and WDS rallied 3.3% with STO up 5.4%. Coal stocks also did well, WHC up 8.7%. Banks were solid with the Big Bank Basket up to $237.69 (+2.2%). CBA up 2.8% and MQG bouncing another 3.8%. Financials generally much stronger, GQG up 6.2% and XYZ up 8.6%. ZIP announced a $50m buyback and rallied 6.7%. RETs firmed, GMG up 0.4%. Industrials were strong across the board, WES up 3.0% with JBH up 3.4% and REA doing well up 4.6%. SGH rallied 4.3% with healthcare stocks also in demand, COH up 1.2% on tariff relief, SIG up 5.3%. Tech also doing well, WTC up another 5.0% with XRO up 4.3% and the All-Tech Index up 4.5%. In corporate news, GYG said it was on track for dividend payment. WPR also better on capex required to convert stores with VEA. In economic news, Consumer sentiment fell, the RBNZ has a temporary governor in Christian Hawkesby. Asian markets recovered along China was muted after talking tough on a fightback. 10 -year yields rallied to 4.23%. Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
Czy technologia może mieć gust? O tym, jak sztuczna inteligencja pomaga nam wyglądać dobrze i czuć się pewnie, rozmawia Kamil Kuć z Hubertem Kondrackim i Aleksandrą Banach — studentami studiów podyplomowych SGH oraz twórcami aplikacji „DressCode”.
The ASX 200 tried hard but ultimately failed falling 192 points to 7668 (2.4%) for a 4.0% loss for the week. It feels like a lot more. After the drubbing of the iron ore stocks yesterday, all held up better than the market, BHP down only 0.5% and FMG off 0.6%. Elsewhere copper and base metal stocks were slashed, S32 down 5.4% with NIC off 8.0% and MIN falling 9.9%. Lithium once again under pressure, PLS down 4.9% and LTR off 3.1%. Oil and gas stocks were under serious pressure on OPEC+ moves, WDS fell 9.1% and STO down 9.4%. Uranium stocks found little support, BOE up 2.7% and PDN down only 0.7%. Some big moves in JHX down 7.8% and DNL (IPL in old money) dropping 8.2% Gold miners were mixed. GOR up 2.4% and RMS gaining 2.1% but NEM down 2.5%. Banks gave up the unequal struggle with the Big Bank Basket down to $246.87(-1.9%) and ANZ down 3.7%. MQG fell a huge 9.0% with financials under pressure. A report of hacking of some superfund managers did not help. MPL rose 1.1%. At least it wasn't them this time. WOW and COL rose on defensive aspects, retail stumbled and REITs falling, GMG down 5.0%, WES fell 2.5% and SGH off 5.3%. Healthcare stocks eased. In corporate news, ANN bounced 3.0% after saying it would fully offset tariff rises. Nothing on the economic front. NFP in the US tonight. Asian markets muted, China and HK closed for a holiday, Japan down 3.6%Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
Z jednej strony są pracownicy, którzy obawiają się, że ich zawody znikną, a oni sami zostaną zastąpieni przez sztuczną inteligencję. Z drugiej - są zawody, w których nie chcemy pracować. Co roku resort pracy publikuje listę zawodów deficytowych, jest na niej ponad 20 profesji. Czyją odpowiedzialnością jest znalezienie równowagi na rynku pracy? Jak zarządzać zasobami ludzkimi? Czy dobrym pomysłem jest lista zawodów chronionych przed wpływem sztucznej inteligencji? W ostatnim odcinku w ramach cyklu Lepsza praca rozmawiamy z Andrzejem Zybałą, profesorem SGH, kierownikiem Katedry Polityki Publicznej. Praca. Chcemy, by była po prostu lepsza, bo wiele od niej zależy: pieniądze, relacje, sukcesy, porażki, nawet zdrowie. Twórzcie z nami warunki do lepszej pracy. Piszcie: listy@wyborcza.pl.
W imieniu organizatorów Instytutu Rozwoju Wsi i Rolnictwa PAN oraz Naczelnej Dyrekcji Archiwów Państwowych mamy przyjemność zaprosić do udziału w interdyscyplinarnym seminarium naukowym pt.: Okruchy zarazy - wiejskie społeczności i ich instytucje [5 października 2020 r.]Program seminarium:Prof. dr hab. Maria Halamska, IRWiR PAN - O projekcie „Wiejskie okruchy pandemii" (10 min)Joanna Chojecka, Zastępca Dyrektora Naczelnej Dyrekcji Archiwów Państwowych - O projekcie „Archiwa Pandemii A.D. 2020" (10 min)Dr hab. Hanna Krajewska, Dyrektor Archiwum PAN w Warszawie - Pandemie w historii świata (10 min)Dr hab. Sławomir Kalinowski, IRWiR PAN - Koronawirus w Polsce - od paniki do negacji (10 min)Mgr Dominika Zwęglińska-Gałecka, IRWiR PAN - Samorządy lokalne a pandemia: różne doświadczenia (15 min)Prof. dr hab. Jacek Kurczewski, UW, Dr hab. Arkadiusz Ptak, IRWiR PAN - Władza lokalna w stanie niezwyczajnym (15 min)Dr hab. Paweł Kubicki, SGH, Dr Łukasz Posłuszny, UWr - Z wiejskich pamiętników pandemicznych (10 min)Dr Konrad Burdyka, IRWiR PAN - Amoralny familizm? O relacjach rodzinno-sąsiedzkich w czasie pandemii (10 min)Dr Sylwia Michalska, IRWiR PAN - Udomowienie szkoły: nauczyciele, rodzice i uczniowie wobec niespodziewanych wyzwań (10 min)Ks. Dr Wojciech Sadłoń, UKSW, Dyrektor Instytutu Statystyki Kościoła Katolickiego - Parafia i wierni: wyzwania w czasie pandemii (15 min)Prof. dr hab. Maria Halamska, IRWiR PAN - Prowadzenie dyskusji i podsumowanieZnajdź nas: https://www.youtube.com/c/WszechnicaFWW/https://www.facebook.com/WszechnicaFWW1/https://anchor.fm/wszechnicaorgpl---historiahttps://anchor.fm/wszechnica-fww-naukahttps://wszechnica.org.pl/#irwir #pandemia #wieś #polskawieś #covid
Czy ekologia i ekonomia mogą iść w parze, czy też gospodarka obiegu zamkniętego to luksus dostępny tylko dla najbogatszych? O wyzwaniach i korzyściach związanych z modelem cyrkularnym rozmawiamy z:
The ASX 200 rose 91 points to 7919 (1.2%) as the Fed soothes nerves. Banks did well with the Big Bank Basket up to $238.79 (+1.9%). MQG bouncing hard, up 3.8% as a market player. Other financials also doing well, GQG up 2.8% and NWL rallying 4.6%. CGF put in a stellar day up 5.7%. REITs also rallying hard, GMG up 2.8% and SCG up 2.5% with industrials seeing bargain hunters. ALL up 2.3%, CPU up 2.2% and SGH doing better up 1.9%. Retail showing signs of life, JBH up another 3.1% with WES up 0.9% and WEB rising 3.9%. MYR struggling after the recent robo update. Tech better, WTC up 2.5% and XRO doing well as the All -Tech Index rose %. Resources out of favour today. BHP down 1.1% and FMG tumbling another 3.3%. Gold miners better as bullion held records, NST up 3.1% and GMD up 3.2% with GOR bouncing back 2.1%. Lithium stocks saw the shorts stay their hand, LTR down 4.8% and PLS off 2.5%. MIN continue to disappoint, down 2.1%. Uranium stocks finding buyers again. DYL up 5.2% and BOE up 8.4%. Have we seen the bottom here? In corporate news, NANrose 14.0% after US regulators approved its tool designed to clean endoscopes. ARU bumped 2.7% higher on an offtake deal and CWY jumped 2.0% on an acquisition. TPG also got the Vocus nod, up 5.9%. On the economic front, unemployment came in at 4.1%. Pretty much in line. Asian markets saw some profit taking. Japan down 0.3%, China off 0.4% and HK down 1.2%. 10-year yields slipped to 4.38%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
Starzejące się społeczeństwo to nie tylko demografia, ale realne wyzwanie dla systemu opieki długoterminowej, który do 2050 roku musi sprostać wzrostowi zapotrzebowania o jedną trzecią. Jakie rozwiązania są możliwe, kto najbardziej odczuje skutki zmian i jak Polska powinna przygotować się na nadchodzące dekady? O polityce społecznej i wyzwaniach opieki długoterminowej rozmawiamy z prof. SGH Pawłem Kubickim, Kierownikiem Katedry Polityki Społecznej SGH. Rozmawiał Kamil Kuć.
The ASX dropped hard and bounced a little closing down 72 points at 7890 (0.9%) after touching 7818. Banks were the turnaround story with the Big Bank Basket down to $240.73 (0.2%). MQG suffered as US investment banks have sunk. Other financials were also sold down hard, GQG off 3.2% and XYZ falling 6.3% with insurers slipping lower as government warns on Alfred issues. REITs fell back to earth, DGT dropped 7.4% on a broker downgrade, as HMC fell 9.7% too, SCG off 0.9%. Industrials slipped across the board, QAN fell 8.9% with it ex-dividend too, SGH down 3.2% and CPU falling 3.6%. Retail under pressure, JBH down 2.5% and TPW sliding 3.7%. Travel stocks took their cue from Delta Airlines, CTD off 0.5% and FLT falling 3.6%. Tech was also on the nose for obvious reasons, WTC down only 1.9% after bouncing hard off the lows, XRO saw no real bounce with the All-Tech Index down 4.0%. Resources was an interesting space. BHP and RIO both rallied hard, gold miners fell hard despite bullion prices picking back up. NST fell 1.9% and NEM dropped 2.6%. Lithium stocks under pressure as usual, oil and gas stocks better, WDS up 1.2% and uranium remains under a toxic cloud. In corporate news, NIC saw a large block trade causing a drop of 19.9% combined with possible tax changes. ASB in a trading halt as it seeks $200m at 380c together with a founder partial sell down. PNV lost its CEO and more value, GYG fell 2.2% on details of recently released escrow stock. In economic news, consumer confidence rose in March. In Asia, Japan down 1.3%, HK off 0.8% and CSI China off 0.6%. 10-year yields 4.36%. Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
Tłumaczył Jakub Borowski –główny ekonomista banku Credit Agricole, SGH w Warszawie
The debate on steel & aluminium tariffs rages on as the PM makes a call to Donald Trump; and uptick in business & consumer confidence could signal a better time for retailers; bank deal to help keep regional branches open; only 1 in 4 Australians celebrate Valentines Day, but will you be talking super with your loved one?; and Evan Lucas joins us for the Market Wrap as CSL, SGH, SWM and BRG report. Host: Deb Knight Executive Producer: Tom Storey Technical Producer: Liam Achurch Publisher: Nine RadioSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Wall Street showed signs of recovery after a volatile week, with tech stocks leading the gains. US steel and aluminum shares climbed as investors reacted to fresh tariffs announced by President Trump. Meanwhile, McDonald's reported stronger international sales, boosting investor confidence. In Europe, markets hit record highs, driven by gains in the FTSE. Oil prices continued to climb despite lingering trade war concerns, while gold soared past $2,900 amid renewed tariff threats. Aluminium also reached a three-week high on fresh US import tariffs. Looking ahead, Aussie shares are expected to rise on Tuesday, with CLS and SGH earnings in focus and the Aussie dollar is also showing slight gains against the US dollar. The content in this podcast is prepared, approved and distributed in Australia by Commonwealth Securities Limited ABN 60 067 254 399 AFSL 238814. The information does not take into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Consider the appropriateness of the information before acting and if necessary, seek appropriate professional advice.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Maciej Zientara to wizjonerski przedsiębiorca, anioł biznesu i inwestor z niemal 30-letnim doświadczeniem na polskim rynku kapitałowym oraz 20-letnim w branży nieruchomości. Jako założyciel i siła napędowa Supernova Group, realizuje międzynarodowe projekty inwestycyjne i nieruchomościowe w Polsce, Chorwacji, na Cyprze i w USA, w tym przedsięwzięcia hotelowe i technologiczne. Mimo pragmatycznego podejścia do inwestowania, nie stroni od odważnych decyzji, inwestując w sztuczną inteligencję i przełomowe technologie, które mają potencjał kształtować przyszłość. Partner zarządzający w JRH ASI SA i główny akcjonariusz Soho Development, nadzorował ponad 100 inwestycji kapitałowych oraz spektakularne przejęcia z programu NFI. Supernova Group, pod jego kierunkiem, zrealizowała ponad 50 projektów o wartości przekraczającej 500 mln EUR, a obecnie zarządza portfelem inwestycyjnym wartym ponad 100 mln EUR. Absolwent SGH w Warszawie oraz programów na IESE Business School, Stanford University i IMD, łączy kreatywność z inżynierią finansową, wyznaczając nowe standardy na rynkach inwestycyjnych. Członek Mensy, miłośnik dobrego jedzenia i wina, aktywny sportowiec i mentor, ciągle otwarty na nowe wyzwania. Maciej Zientara to fascynująca postać polskiego biznesu, której historia pokazuje, że sukces często idzie w parze z odwagą podejmowania ryzyka i umiejętnością dostrzegania szans. Pierwszy milion zarobił w wieku 28 lat na inwestowaniu w akcje pracownicze podczas transformacji gospodarczej w Polsce. Jednak to, co wyróżnia jego historię, to nie sama kwota, ale filozofia podejścia do biznesu i życia. Zientara rozpoczął swoją karierę od nietrafionego wyboru - technikum elektronicznego, które ukończył mimo świadomości, że to nie jego droga. Ta pierwsza "porażka" paradoksalnie otworzyła mu drzwi do SGH, gdzie zdobył wykształcenie, które wykorzystał w późniejszej karierze w bankowości inwestycyjnej. Przez lata pracował w czołowych instytucjach finansowych, m.in. w Banku Handlowym i BRE Banku, gdzie uczestniczył w największych transakcjach M&A w Polsce. Jednak przełomowym momentem była decyzja o samodzielności i zainwestowaniu całego majątku w wykup lewarowany NFI. To ryzykowne posunięcie przyniosło mu wielokrotny zwrot z inwestycji. Dziś, w wieku 50 lat, Maciej nie zwalnia tempa. Po sukcesach w nieruchomościach i bolesnych doświadczeniach z biznesem hotelowym podczas pandemii, skierował swoją uwagę na venture capital. Inwestuje w projekty związane ze sztuczną inteligencją, wierząc, że to ostatnia wielka fala technologiczna, na której może jeszcze popłynąć. Jego filozofia biznesowa opiera się na kilku kluczowych zasadach: nieustannym wychodzeniu ze strefy komfortu, współpracy z ludźmi o komplementarnych umiejętnościach i traktowaniu pieniędzy jako narzędzia, nie celu samego w sobie. "Nazywaj czego nie umiesz" - powtarza, podkreślając wagę świadomości własnych ograniczeń i umiejętności dobierania odpowiednich partnerów.
O prawyborach w KO mówiła prof. Małgorzata Molęda-Zdziech - kierowniczka Katedry Studiów Politycznych w Instytucie Studiów Międzynarodowych Kolegium Ekonomiczno-Społecznego SGH.
- Sprawa zatrzymania Jacka Sutryka ma charakter polityczny, bo o sprawie Collegium Humanum było głośno od lat i nagle teraz został zatrzymany w trakcie kampanii prezydenckiej. Ta afera biegnie niezależnie od barw politycznych jej absolwentów z dyplomami MBA, w poprzek polskiej sceny politycznej - powiedział w Polskim Radiu 24 dr Mirosław Oczkoś, ekspert ds. wizerunku politycznego z SGH.
O sytuacji politycznej w Lewicy mówiła prof. Małgorzata Molęda-Zdziech - kierowniczka Katedry Studiów Politycznych w Instytucie Studiów Międzynarodowych Kolegium Ekonomiczno-Społecznego SGH.
Słuchasz regularnie? Rozważ zostanie Patronem: https://patronite.pl/radionaukoweŚwietny odcinek? Może jednorazowe suppi? https://suppi.pl/radionaukowe***– Żeby ZUS upadł, to musiałoby upaść polskie państwo, musiałoby zbankrutować – mówi zdecydowanie dr Janina Petelczyc z Katedry Ubezpieczenia Społecznego SGH pytana o pogląd, że nie warto odprowadzać składek, bo i tak instytucja nie przetrwa. Dane wskazują, że od 2030 roku, powinien zniknąć deficyt finansowy ZUS-u, a z czasem będzie coraz stabilniej. To pokłosie tego, jak jest skonstruowany system emerytalny w Polsce.Aktualnie wysokość naszej przyszłej emerytury zależy od dwóch czynników: jak długo będziemy pracować i jak wysokie odprowadzać składki. Ktoś, kto pracuje na etacie i nieźle zarabia, nie ma powodu, by martwić się o przyszłą emeryturę, nawet jeśli ma teraz 30-40 lat. Taki system ma oczywiście wadę: pogłębia nierówności społeczne. O solidną emeryturę trudniej kobietom (bo krócej pracują, statystycznie mniej zarabiają i częściej zajmują się niepłatną pracą np. opiekuńczą), osobom słabo zarabiającym oraz unikającym (z własnej woli lub nie) oskładkowania.Czy ZUS rzeczywiście szczególnie uciska prowadzących jednoosobową działalność? Według danych statystycznych osoby z JDG należą do najbogatszych w Polsce, a ryczałtowa składka to dla większości z nich drobny koszt. – Najlepszym rozwiązaniem tej sytuacji byłoby powiązanie składki z dochodem osób prowadzących działalność – mówi dr Petelczyc. W ten sposób przedsiębiorcy, którzy nie zarabiają dużo, nie byliby obarczeni stałym większym kosztem ZUS-u, a ci lepiej zarabiający odkładaliby na lepsze emerytury dla siebie i bardziej solidarnie dokładaliby się do systemu (bo aktualnie przeciętna składka osoby na JDG to 48% przeciętnej składki osoby na etacie).Przed polskim systemem emerytalnym sporo wyzwań. Najczęściej mówi się o demograficznych, ale w systemie składkowym ten aspekt nie ma aż tak dużego znaczenia. Ważniejsze są wyzwania społeczne. – Musimy podwyższyć wiek emerytalny – przekonuje ekonomistka. Żyjemy coraz dłużej i w coraz lepszym zdrowiu, większość z nas nie wykonuje ciężkich prac. To nie jest jedyna potrzebna zmiana, przed którą wzdrygają się politycy. Trzeba też zrównać wiek emerytalny kobiet i mężczyzn. – To jest naprawdę ekstremalnie niesprawiedliwe dla obu płci – wskazuje dr Petelczyc.W odcinku rozmawiamy też o historii systemów emerytalnych. Zdaniem naukowczyni, ubezpieczenia społeczne są niesamowitym osiągnięciem cywilizacyjnym ludzkości. Różne zawodowe formy takich ubezpieczeń pojawiały się już od starożytności, ale centralny, kierowany przez państwo system to pomysł niemal współczesny. Polski system, finansowany ze składek osób biorących w nim udział, jest oparty na zasadach wymyślonych w 1889 roku w Cesarstwie Niemieckim. Drugim typowym modelem jest model brytyjski, częściowo finansowany z podatków. Obecnie zabezpieczenie emerytalne posiada aż 77% osób na świecie, w Polsce niemal 100%.Poza tym w odcinku usłyszycie też, co się stało z pieniędzmi z OFE, dlaczego dobrowolne składki to nie jest dobry pomysł, jak covid wpłynął na wysokość emerytur w Polsce i czym jest pomarańczowa koperta. Temat jest obarczony mnóstwem mitów, często celowo podkręcanych przez populistów, a u nas fakty wyłożone jasno i z sensem. Zapraszam!----Obiecany w odcinku link do artykułu dr Petelczyc nt emerytur dla Ukraińców https://oko.press/emerytury-dla-ukraincow
W dzisiejszym odcinku bez wątpienia króluje temat sztucznej inteligencji, a gościem audycji jest Maciej Jarząb, który pracował nad AI, zanim to było modne.Firma Braight Technologies, której jest founderem i CEO, zrewolucjonizowała rynek, wprowadzając technologię scoringu behawioralnego. Jednym słowem oferuje soft do oceny ryzyka kredytowego osób na podstawie ich zachowań pozafinansowych w sieci.Z Maciejem Jarząbem rozmawiamy między innymi o tym, jak to się stało, że po studiach ekonomicznych na SGH trafił do wielkiego świata start-upów i AI, jak wyglądała jego droga do międzynarodowego sukcesu, jak to jest sprzedać firmę funduszowi, ale wciąż w niej pracować oraz dlaczego najlepsze pieniądze pochodzą od… klientów. Maciej opowiada także, jak AI zmienia i zmieni w niedalekiej przyszłości nasz codzienny świat. Rozmawiamy o autonomicznych autach, o samoobsługowych sklepach, o wydłużeniu życia, o wielkiej szansie dla edukacji, a także o technologii VR i tym, czym dla nas będzie.Z tego odcinka dowiesz się również: Jak przetrwać start-upowe porażki i przejść przez Dolinę Śmierci? Jak sprzedać firmę do inwestora, ale w niej pozostać? Dlaczego dane do najdroższy i najbardziej pożądany element? Czy warto konkurować z gigantami technologicznymi? Jak mądrze wspierać start-upy i czym jest ekosystem funduszy. Jeśli interesuje Cię świat technologii, start-upów i sztucznej inteligencji, zapraszamy do wysłuchania wywiadu z Maciejem Jarząbem!
S&P Futures are flat to lower this morning with the focus on tomorrow's inflation report. Minneapolis Fed Kashkari indicated that he is concerned that the recent rise in oil prices will keep inflation higher. Israel is looking to start offensive action in Rafah. Economic calendar is quiet this morning. After the bell today are earnings reports from SGH, PSMT & WDFC. President Biden is schedule to make remarks on the Care Economy this morning and meets with Japan's Prime Minister this evening. In Europe markets are higher as market react to economic data and prepare for this week's ECB announcement. Oil prices are lower this morning as tensions in the Middle East are falling.