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Hong Kong

Hong Kong Stocks Today (Nov 10, 2025): Hang Seng Jumps 1.6% as China CPI Turns Positive; Pop Mart and CNOOC Lead Gains

Hong Kong Stocks Today (Nov 10, 2025): Hang Seng Jumps 1.6% as China CPI Turns Positive; Pop Mart and CNOOC Lead Gains

Summary: Hong Kong equities rallied on Monday, November 10, 2025. The Hang Seng Index (HSI) climbed 1.55% to 26,649.06, powered by improving China inflation data and firmer global risk appetite. Energy, consumer and property-management names outperformed, while tech also advanced.  Xinhua News+1 Market Snapshot — Monday, November 10, 2025 Top intraday context: The rally followed a generally upbeat tone across global markets as investors priced in progress toward ending the U.S. government shutdown—lifting risk sentiment in Asia.  Reuters What Moved the Market 1) China inflation turned a corner—at least for nowFresh data showed China’s CPI rose 0.2% year-on-year in October, while producer-price deflation narrowed
WeRide (0800.HK) and Pony.ai (2026.HK) sink on Hong Kong debut as IPO wave tests robotaxi stocks

WeRide (0800.HK) and Pony.ai (2026.HK) sink on Hong Kong debut as IPO wave tests robotaxi stocks

Nov 6, 2025 — Hong Kong Chinese robotaxi developers WeRide and Pony.ai stumbled out of the gate in Hong Kong on Thursday, with both stocks sliding around 10% in early dealings despite raising a combined ~HK$9.1 billion (US$1.17 billion) in fresh capital. The weak start comes amid a rush of new listings and lingering doubts about the near‑term profitability of autonomous‑driving businesses. Reuters Key takeaways How the debuts priced—and why shares slid WeRide’s global offering was set at HK$27.10 per share for ~88.3 million shares, targeting ~HK$2.39 billion (US$308 million) in proceeds. Trading began today after the company’s 2024 Nasdaq
6 November 2025
June 2025 Crypto Market & Blockchain Industry Report: Mid-Year Trends and Outlook

Hong Kong’s Big Crypto Reset: HashKey’s IPO Rumors, “CaaS” Launch & SFC’s New Rules Could Redraw the Map (Nov 5, 2025)

Key facts (as of Nov 5, 2025) The in‑depth report 1) What just happened (Nov 3–5): rules, rails and real‑world pilots At Hong Kong FinTech Week, the SFC said licensed virtual‑asset trading platforms (VATPs) can tap global liquidity by sharing order books with overseas affiliates (subject to approval). It also relaxed the one‑year track‑record requirement for distributing certain tokens and HK‑regulated stablecoins to professional investors—measures aimed at deepening liquidity and broadening institutional access. Reuters+1 The HKMA simultaneously rolled out elements of “Fintech 2030”—including Ensemble upgrades to incubate real‑value tokenisation pilots, starting with tokenised money‑market funds. HKMA chief Eddie Yue put
Bitcoin Rebound, CBDC Ban, NFT Revival – Inside Crypto’s 48-Hour Whirlwind (Sept 23–24, 2025)

Hong Kong Just Opened the Liquidity Floodgates: HashKey’s CaaS launch, Kraken tie‑up and a $500M IPO plan supercharge the city’s crypto reboot

The in‑depth story A policy pivot to unlock liquidity Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) has taken its most market‑opening step since launching a full licensing regime for virtual‑asset trading platforms (VATPs): allowing licensed exchanges to link local order books to their overseas affiliates. SFC chief executive Julia Leung framed it as part of a “multi‑pronged” plan to integrate with global liquidity while preserving safeguards—delivery‑versus‑payment, prefunding at overseas VATPs, a Hong Kong reserve fund for compensation, and joint surveillance. sfc.hk Leung said the circular issued during FinTech Week would “enable licensed VATPs to share a global order book with
5 November 2025
Hong Kong Drone Laws 2025: Comprehensive Guide to Regulations and Requirements

Hong Kong Drone Laws 2025: Comprehensive Guide to Regulations and Requirements

Hong Kong’s drone regime is governed by the Small Unmanned Aircraft Order (Cap. 448G) under the Civil Aviation Ordinance, which took effect on June 1, 2022 and became fully enforced on December 1, 2022. The framework uses a risk-based classification with Category A1 for drones up to 250 g, Category A2 for 250 g to 7 kg, and Category B for over 7 kg up to 25 kg. Category A1 is exempt from registration and most licensing, while Category A2 requires drone and remote-pilot registration, and Category B requires CAD permission and advanced training. Registration is via the CAD Electronic
10 July 2025
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