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Nomura Holdings, Inc. (NSE.F)

Frankfurt - Frankfurt Delayed price. Currency in EUR
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5.37-0.04 (-0.70%)
At close: 09:50PM CEST
Full screen
Previous close5.41
Open5.46
Bid5.37 x N/A
Ask5.55 x N/A
Day's range5.37 - 5.46
52-week range3.00 - 6.14
Volume600
Avg. volume2,128
Market cap16.173B
Beta (5Y monthly)0.70
PE ratio (TTM)24.41
EPS (TTM)0.22
Earnings dateN/A
Forward dividend & yield0.13 (2.41%)
Ex-dividend date28 Sept 2023
1y target estN/A
  • Bloomberg

    UBS, Nomura Battle to Win Rates Sales to Europe’s Ultra Rich

    (Bloomberg) -- UBS Group AG and Nomura Holdings Inc. are making a push to sell sophisticated fixed-income products to the ultra wealthy in Europe, competing against firms such as BNP Paribas SA.Most Read from BloombergDubai Grinds to Standstill as Cloud Seeding Worsens FloodingChina Tells Iran Cooperation Will Last After Attack on IsraelWhat If Fed Rate Hikes Are Actually Sparking US Economic Boom?Tesla Asks Investors to Approve Musk’s $56 Billion Pay AgainPowell Signals Rate-Cut Delay After Run

  • Reuters

    Nomura aims to boost US credit portfolio to $50 billion in 5-10 years, executive says

    Nomura Holdings aims to expand its U.S. credit portfolio to $50 billion within 10 years and may seek small acquisitions to beef up its private credit business, the top Japanese investment bank's U.S. asset management chief said. The goal is line with Nomura's strategy to increase investments in private markets and diversify sources of revenue to cushion the impact from wild fluctuations in the performance of its global trading business. "We want to definitely grow this (U.S. credit) business collectively, quite substantially over the next five to 10 years to $50 billion or more" in assets under management, Robert Stark, who heads the U.S. asset management business, told Reuters in an interview.

  • Reuters

    Nomura aims to boost US credit portfolio to $50 bln in 5-10 years, executive says

    Nomura Holdings aims to expand its U.S. credit portfolio to $50 billion within 10 years and may seek small acquisitions to beef up its private credit business, the top Japanese investment bank's U.S. asset management chief said. The goal is line with Nomura's strategy to increase investments in private markets and diversify sources of revenue to cushion the impact from wild fluctuations in the performance of its global trading business. "We want to definitely grow this (U.S. credit) business collectively, quite substantially over the next five to 10 years to $50 billion or more" in assets under management, Robert Stark, who heads the U.S. asset management business, told Reuters in an interview.