Asia shares modestly lower as investors wary of Fed's plans

South Korea's Kospi gained 0.1 per cent to 2,025.97, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 dipped 0.5 per cent to 5,406.40. Hong Kong's Hang Seng slipped 0.6 per cent to 23,093.51 and the Shanghai Composite index fell 0.1 per cent to 3,062.53. The SET of Thailand ... ( read original story ...)

Hong Kong stocks slip on profit taking

Hong Kong shares slipped in morning trade on Monday as profit-takers moved on following a rally at the end of last week. The Hang Seng Index fell 0.5 percent, to 23,107 after about 90 minutes of trading. But in Shanghai, the benchmark composite index was ... ( read original story ...)

Stories of HSBC lions roar to life in the bank’s latest app

Established brands are no exception. In its latest branding effort, HSBC has launched a new mobile app, “HSBC in Hong Kong: A Virtual Story”, to bring to life the history of Hong Kong and HSBC. The app uses augmented reality to show a mosaic map of ... ( read original story ...)

Hong Kong Stocks Sink Most in Asia as Developers Drop With Yuan

The Hang Seng Index was the best performer in the third quarter among Asian equity benchmarks tracked by Bloomberg. “One of the factors affecting Hong Kong is the interest-rate ... The curbs came after Deutsche Bank AG warned last month that China ... ( read original story ...)

Why Mainland China Money Into Hang Seng Will Dwindle: Merrill

Bank of America Merrill Lynch‘s equity strategist David Cui, a China bear, thinks mainland Chinese investors will lose interest in the Hong Kong stock market as we approaches year-end. Readers of this blog know that the Hang Seng rally seen this year has ... ( read original story ...)

BOC Hong Kong : Statement on Fraudulent Website

BOC Hong Kong (Holdings) Limited, BOCHK's holding company, is listed on the main board of the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong, with stock code "2388", ADR OTC Symbol "BHKLY". Page 1 of 1 BOC Hong Kong (Holdings) Ltd. published this content on 14 October 2016 ... ( read original story ...)

Hong Kong Property's Sweet Edge

The aggression isn't surprising, considering how much more room Hong Kong banks in general have to lend: BOC Hong Kong's loan-to-deposit ratio is 69 percent versus 93 percent for Singapore's largest lender DBS. The end game for Hong Kong and Singapore is ... ( read original story ...)