Chinese stocks rose for the fourth straight trading day on Monday as liquidity concerns eased after the central bank resumed cash injections into the money market.
The Chinese stock market could face downside risks if external factors such as the ambitious economic package and tax reforms under US President Donald Trump's administration to boost the US economy fail to materialize, analysts said on Monday.
The Chinese are more likely to shop online than consumers from any other country, according to the latest survey by the International Post Corporation, a Brussels-headquartered association on postal services.
Yum China Holdings Inc, which had more than 7,500 outlets in China as at the end of last year, said it has plans to add about 600 stores in the country annually.
Credit China FinTech Holdings Ltd is planning more investments as it aggressively expands beyond its original loans and lease-financing businesses into online payments and peer-to-peer lending.
China will deepen supply-side structural reform in agriculture to develop the sector, according to a recent policy document.
Share prices of companies producing or selling gold have surged in the past few weeks thanks to rising demands for the metal as a safe haven for investors.
Gold will climb about 6 percent through the end of the year as investors seek a shelter from the rising political risk surrounding US President Donald Trump, according to Independent Strategy Ltd's David Roche, who has about 45 years of experience covering markets.
It took Choe Bu, a Korean living in the late 15th century, 135 days to make the trek from a tiny town on China's eastern coast to Beijing, capital of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and then back to his motherland.
When Shi Chao of the Zhejiang Provincial Museum was busy preparing last year for an exhibition on gold and silver jewelry and wares unearthed in the province, he found a line of words inscribed on a gold hairpin. The words read: zi jin zao, or made from self-provided gold.
"Do What You Love" is Adam Neumann's catchphrase and no-one who has visited a location of WeWork - the world's biggest co-working space operator - can fail to be impressed by the bon mot that can be found just about everywhere in the company's public spaces to inspire the start-up entrepreneurs, freelancers and self-employed professionals who gather there to work.
Brexit is about to make CEOs of some of Britain's biggest public companies a whole lot richer.
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