Previous close | 24.21 |
Open | 23.94 |
Bid | 24.02 x 900 |
Ask | 24.09 x 800 |
Day's range | 23.74 - 24.67 |
52-week range | 8.23 - 33.78 |
Volume | |
Avg. volume | 7,947,767 |
Market cap | 9.152B |
Beta (5Y monthly) | 1.07 |
PE ratio (TTM) | N/A |
EPS (TTM) | N/A |
Earnings date | N/A |
Forward dividend & yield | N/A (N/A) |
Ex-dividend date | N/A |
1y target est | N/A |
(Bloomberg) -- Shares of China’s Bilibili Inc. and some Korean gaming companies surged after Beijing approved more imported titles in the latest sign of their easing grip on the video-game sector. Most Read from BloombergUS Studies Ways to Insure All Bank Deposits If Crisis GrowsUBS to Buy Credit Suisse in $3.3 Billion Deal to End CrisisJPMorgan Owned the LME ‘Nickel’ That Was Actually Bags of StonesMorgan Stanley Strategist Says Bank Stress Signals Bear Market EndVanguard Said to Shutter Busine
While Bilibili Inc. ( NASDAQ:BILI ) might not be the most widely known stock at the moment, it saw a double-digit share...
Shares of several Chinese stocks dropped Tuesday on weak economic data and as tensions between the U.S. and China continued to ratchet up. Shares of the video platform Bilibili (NASDAQ: BILI) were trading roughly 3.6% lower as of 11:30 a.m. ET, shares of the live-streaming company Huya (NYSE: HUYA) traded 3.7% lower, and shares of online tutoring company New Oriental Education & Technology Group (NYSE: EDU) were down by about 7.5%. Beijing has relaxed its "zero COVID" policies and ended its strict lockdowns in an effort to get China's economic growth back on track, but amid conflicting data, there has been a lot of debate about whether or not it can bounce back as fast as investors hope.