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Could Agricultural Bank of China Limited (HKG:1288) be an attractive dividend share to own for the long haul...
3143.HK BMO Hong Kong Banks ETF – tracks the NASDAQ Hong Kong Banks Index; 3145.HK BMO Asia High Dividend ETF – tracks the NASDAQ Asia ex Japan Dividend Achievers Index; 3147.HK CSOP SZSE ChiNext ETF – tracks the SZSE ChiNext Index; 3150.HK Global X Japan Global Leaders ETF – tracks the FactSet Japan Global Leaders Index
Hong Kong portal; This is a list of companies on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEx), ordered numerically by stock code. The names of the companies appear exactly as they do on the stock exchange listing. This is not an exhaustive list, but reflects the list that appears on HKEx's Hyperlink Directory. [1]
The Hong Kong securities market can be traced back to 1866, but the stock market was formally set up in 1891, when the Association of Stockbrokers in Hong Kong was established. [8] It was renamed as The Hong Kong Stock Exchange in 1914. By 1972, Hong Kong had four stock exchanges in operation.
In 1998, the Hong Kong SAR Government acquired a substantial portfolio of Hong Kong shares to sustain linked exchange rate during the Asian Financial Crisis.To minimise disruption to the market, the Government chose to launch the IPO of the exchange-traded fund, "the Tracker Fund of Hong Kong", in 1999 as the first step in its disposal programme.
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar ... This is a list of publicly traded companies that offer their shareholders the option to be paid with scrip dividends ...
Ho Sin Hang, chairman of the Hang Seng Bank, conceived the idea of creating the Hang Seng Index as a "Dow Jones Index for Hong Kong". [4] [5] Along with Hang Seng Director Lee Quo-wei, he commissioned Hang Seng's head of Research Stanley Kwan to create the index in 1964, [4] the index was initially used for internal reference in the Hang Seng Bank, they debuted the index on November 24, 1969.
Its Hong Kong–based distribution business, Sims Trading, was sold to CITIC Pacific. In June 2002, the 61-store Woolworths chain in New Zealand acquired in 1990, was sold for US$337 million. In 2004, the Group's Hong Kong ice manufacturing business which began in 1918 was sold for US$107 million.