-- 3月の日本の失業率は前月の2.6%からわずかに上昇し、2.7%となったと、火曜日に発表された政府の統計によって明らかになった。
統計によると、季節調整済みの雇用者数は2月の6,827万人から6,815万人へとわずかに減少した一方、失業者数は前月の185万人から186万人へと増加した。
-- 3月の日本の失業率は前月の2.6%からわずかに上昇し、2.7%となったと、火曜日に発表された政府の統計によって明らかになった。
統計によると、季節調整済みの雇用者数は2月の6,827万人から6,815万人へとわずかに減少した一方、失業者数は前月の185万人から186万人へと増加した。
Shenzhen Dobot (HKG:2432) completed the A share listing filing to go public in China, the firm said in a statement to the Hong Kong bourse Monday.The robotics services company's shares fell nearly 1% in late morning trade Tuesday.The firm submitted application materials in regards to the proposed A share offering on the ChiNext Market of the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.The filing was accepted by the exchange, the firm said.
Daido Group (HKG:0544) aims to raise net proceeds of about HK$11.4 million through a subscription of new shares under its general mandate, according to a Monday Hong Kong bourse filing.Shares of the warehouse, logistics, and trading company rose nearly 14% in morning trade Tuesday.The company agreed to issue about 5.8 million subscription shares at HK$2.00 each.The subscription price represents a premium of about 13.6% to the stock's last close and about 14.3% to the five-day average closing price, the filing showed.Proceeds will be used mainly for debt repayment and general working capital.
Nine Entertainment (ASX:NEC) shares fell nearly 1% in recent Tuesday trade after the Australian government opened a consultation on draft legislation to establish a News Bargaining Incentive, a policy framework designed to force major digital platforms like Meta, Google, and TikTok to pay for Australian news content.Nine Entertainment is the publisher of The Australian Financial Review and has a current commercial agreement with Google, according to an AFR report.In a Tuesday statement announcing the consultation, the government said it encourages digital platforms to enter commercial deals with news publishers "as the preferred model." However, platforms who decide not to do so will be required to pay a charge as a proportion of their revenue, with the collected levies distributed back into the news media sector.The initiative, which comes after Meta said it would not renew its commercial deals, proposes a 2.25% tax on the revenue of tech companies that do not negotiate agreements, AFR reported.Submissions on the government's consultation close on May 18.