While analysts last year correctly forecast Macao casinos would suffer a first-ever revenue drop, prospects for 2015 are looking as uncertain as a coin toss.
If the sweet aroma of jasmine tea was savored in every corner of the planet, nobody would be happier than the residents of Fuzhou.
The year-end stock market rally has sucked in billions of yuan of new money from hundreds of thousands of investors, ending a slump of many years.
Undoubtedly one of the catch-phrases that Chinese stock investors like to hear most is "opening up".
The last few months of 2014 witnessed the return of large-cap stocks. Next year will be a continuation of 2014, and the market will likely confound skeptics.
On Nov 30, 2013, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said that the nation would resume initial public offerings in January 2014 after a freeze lasting longer than one year. A reform plan for new listings was carried out.
This year has started amid a climate of considerable global economic uncertainty.
The Chinese mainland stock market saw 125 initial public offerings in 2014, raising 78.7 billion yuan ($12.86 billion), consultancy Deloitte said.
In China's fast-growing meteorite market, buyers of all kinds are lining up for the outer space rocks ranging from big-spending investors desiring the ultra-expensive to young fashionist as seeking jewelry decorated with fragments of the outer-space gems.
Stephen Roach, former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia and author of Unbalanced: The Codependency of America and China
Chinese financial institutions are making great strides in London, a place where they can compete and learn alongside the best of their respective industries in their internationalization process, says Maggie Zhao, a partner in the London office of Clifford Chance LLP, a global law firm.
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