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Toyota Tsusho Corp (9TO.SG)

Stuttgart - Stuttgart Delayed price. Currency in EUR
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58.50+1.50 (+2.63%)
At close: 08:02AM CEST
Full screen
Previous close57.00
Open58.50
Bid58.00 x 0
Ask59.50 x 0
Day's range58.50 - 58.50
52-week range37.00 - 63.50
Volume0
Avg. volume6
Market capN/A
Beta (5Y monthly)N/A
PE ratio (TTM)N/A
EPS (TTM)N/A
Earnings dateN/A
Forward dividend & yieldN/A (N/A)
Ex-dividend dateN/A
1y target estN/A
  • GuruFocus.com

    Toyota Tsusho Corp's Dividend Analysis

    Toyota Tsusho Corp (TYHOF) recently announced a dividend of $125 per share, payable on a date yet to be announced, with the ex-dividend date set for 2024-03-28. As investors look forward to this upcoming payment, the spotlight also shines on the company's dividend history, yield, and growth rates. Using the data from GuruFocus, let's look into Toyota Tsusho Corps dividend performance and assess its sustainability.

  • Reuters

    Lithium miners surge as Allkem-Livent tie up fuels M&A hopes

    Shares in Australian-listed lithium miners jumped on Thursday after a $10.6 billion merger in the sector raised expectations for more consolidation among producers of the key metal in electric vehicle batteries. The tie up between Allkem Ltd and Livent announced on Wednesday will create the world's third-biggest producer of lithium for which demand is expected to soar more than five-fold by 2030 amid the energy transition. Consolidating disparate lithium producers may lead to smoother supply chains for carmakers such as Tesla Inc., General Motors and BMW that are increasingly hungry to secure supplies.

  • Reuters

    Toyota Tsusho fears other countries may follow Chile and curb raw minerals exports

    Japanese trading house Toyota Tsusho Corp is concerned that there may be more moves by countries like Chile to restrict exports of raw minerals such as lithium, its chief financial officer said on Thursday. Chile's President Gabriel Boric said last week he would nationalize the country's lithium industry, the world's second largest producer of the metal essential in electric vehicle batteries, to boost its economy and protect its environment. "Like what happened in Chile, there could be more cases of restrictions on export of raw materials due to growing nationalism in emerging countries," CFO Hideyuki Iwamoto told a news conference.