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Adaptive Optics Market Regulations And Competitive Landscape Outlook To 2033

Posted by Latest Market Trends on April 23, 2024 at 2:16pm 0 Comments

The global adaptive optics market is poised for an extraordinary ascent, projected to surge from its 2023 valuation of US$ 1.6 billion to a staggering US$ 14.5 billion by 2033. This remarkable trajectory underscores the increasing significance of adaptive optics technology on a global scale.



Undergoing a transformative journey, the adaptive optics market is buoyed by recent statistics showcasing its immense potential. With noteworthy sales revenue of US$ 1.1 billion achieved by the… Continue

Chinese regulators held talks with global financial institutions to ease jitters caused

Chinese regulators held talks with global financial institutions to ease jitters caused

China's securities regulator met with top financial institutions including BlackRock, Fidelity, and JPMorgan on Wednesday in an attempt to calm fears that Beijing was cracking down on US-listed Chinese companies, according to a new Financial Times report.To get more China business news, you can visit shine news official website.
The meeting, led by China Securities Regulatory Commission vice-chair Fang Xinghai, tried to reassure US institutional investors that China was proceeding with business as usual. In particular, Fang told the US attendees that Beijing's hard line on private tutoring businesses was a one-off situation, according to a source within the meeting who spoke with the FT.
Chinese regulators didn't expect their crackdown - which tanked shares in ride-hailer Didi Chuxing before spreading to private tutors and other sectors - to spook investors as much as it did, said the person on the call.
After the call was first reported, Hong Kong-listed Chinese shares enjoyed a much-needed boost, pushing the Hang Seng tech index up 8%.Yet many of the attendees were not reassured. Commenting on the Hang Seng bounceback, one trader at a Chinese brokerage told the FT: "Is there conviction behind this? No, not really."
One enduring source of worry is the VIE corporate structure. VIEs, short for variable interest entity, is a not-legally-recognized workaround that lets Chinese companies list overseas.
Questions about whether VIEs would be allowed going forward were "not answered definitively," a source told the FT.
"The Chinese government is not completely tone-deaf to international investor sentiment," said one person on the call. "These policies are not coming from the CSRC, they're coming from much higher up. It's clear there will be more to come, that's obvious to everyone," they added.

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