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Looking for Strong Returns? These 5 US Growth Stocks Could Be Perfect for Your Portfolio

Looking for Strong Returns? These 5 US Growth Stocks Could Be Perfect for Your Portfolio

Yahooa day ago

Have you ever wondered how to grow your investment portfolio to comfortably fund your retirement?
The answer is to park your money in well-run, high-quality companies that can demonstrate consistent growth.
Such promising growth stocks should see their share prices rise steadily over time, providing you with valuable capital appreciation and increasing the value of your nest egg.
Here are five growth stocks with solid market positions that are demonstrating healthy growth that you can add to your buy watchlist.
Veeva runs a software-as-a-service cloud platform for the life sciences industry.
The company serves over 1,000 customers, ranging from large pharmaceutical companies to emerging biotechnology firms.
For the first quarter of fiscal 2026 (1Q FY2026) ending 30 April 2025, Veeva saw revenue rise 16.7% year on year to US$759 million.
Operating profit surged 50.6% year on year to US$233.7 million while net profit climbed 41.2% year on year to US$228.2 million.
The business also churned out a positive free cash flow of US$871.2 million, 15% higher than a year ago.
For the quarter, Veeva achieved its revenue run rate goal of US$3 billion, showcasing growth across its Commercial and R&D Solutions.
Management believes the company is progressing well towards its 2030 goals to double revenue.
Last week, Veeva collaborated with Sarah Cannon Research Institute to drive speed and efficiency in oncology clinical trials, with the latter adopting Veeva's platform to ensure seamless data flow across its clinical teams and research sites.
MarketAxess provides a leading electronic platform that allows more than 2,000 firms to efficiently trade fixed income securities.
The company's platform provides a diversified pool of liquidity and generates cost savings for institutional investors and broker-dealers.
MarketAxess reported steady growth over the years, with revenue rising from US$718.3 million in 2022 to US$817.1 million by 2024.
Net profit went from US$250.2 million to US$274.2 million over the same period.
The business also generated healthy free cash flow over these three years.
For the first quarter of 2025 (1Q 2025), total revenue dipped by 1% year on year to US$208.6 million while operating profit slipped 4% year on year to US$88.4 million.
Net profit plunged 79% year on year to US$15.1 million because of a significantly higher tax expense.
Notwithstanding this, MarketAxess continued to generate free cash flow of US$12.7 million for the quarter, reversing the prior year's negative free cash flow of US$20.1 million.
Operationally, the company reported record average daily volume (ADV), up 31% year on year.
It also achieved record emerging market and Eurobonds ADV with an 11% year-on-year increase.
The company paid out a quarterly dividend of US$0.76, up from the previous year's US$0.74.
Domino's Pizza is one of the largest pizza chains in the world, with more than 21,300 stores located in over 90 countries.
The company reported an encouraging set of results for the first quarter of 2025 ending 23 March 2025.
Revenue inched up 2.5% year on year to US$1.11 billion, but operating profit dipped 0.2% year on year to US$210.1 million.
Net profit climbed almost 19% year on year to US$149.7 million.
Free cash flow for the quarter shot up 59.1% year on year to US$164.3 million.
A quarterly dividend of US$1.74 was declared and paid, higher than the US$1.51 per share paid out in the prior year.
Domino's Pizza recorded negative same-store sales growth of 0.5% for its US stores but logged a +3.7% same-store sales increase for its international stores.
Back in April, Domino's Pizza partnered with DoorDash (NASDAQ: DASH) to help fulfil orders on the latter's platform while tapping into DoorDash's customer base.
The US launch commenced in May 2025 and will be expanded to Canada later this year.
Asana provides a work management platform that helps more than 170,000 customers align their corporate teams to achieve organisational goals.
The company uses artificial intelligence (AI) to improve its customers' workflows and processes, which helps to improve efficiency and deliver results.
For 1Q FY2026, Asana reported an 8.6% year-on-year increase in revenue to US$187.3 million.
Gross profit improved by 8.7% year on year to US$168 million.
The business also churned out a positive free cash flow of US$4 million for the quarter, a turnaround from the negative free cash flow of US$4.3 million in the previous corresponding quarter.
Customers are also spending more on Asana's platform, with those forking out US$100,000 or more (on an annualised basis) increasing by 20% year on year to 728.
Last month, Asana signed its largest subscription agreement in history with a US$100 million-plus renewal over three years.
The company also launched Smart Workflow Gallery, a suite of AI-powered workflows designed to help organisations utilise AI to generate greater employee productivity.
PayPal is a payment processing company that helps to move money securely and efficiently and to make shopping simple, secure, and personalised.
For 1Q 2025, PayPal saw revenue inch up 1.2% year on year to US$7.8 billion.
Operating profit grew 31% year on year to US$1.5 billion while net profit leapt 45% year on year to US$1.3 billion.
The business generated a positive free cash flow of US$964 million for the quarter.
Operating metrics continued to improve, with total payment volume edging up 3% year on year to US$417.2 billion.
PayPal's number of active accounts also increased 2% year on year to 436 million.
Venmo, one of the products under PayPal's umbrella, recently introduced enhanced rewards in-store and more benefits to encourage more customers to use its service.
These rewards will apply to the Venmo Debit Card and Venmo Checkout.
Big Tech is spending hundreds of billions on AI, and the ripple effects are just beginning. Our new investor guide shows how AI is changing the way companies generate revenue, structure their business models, and gain an edge. Even if you already know the major players, this report reveals something far MORE important: The why and how behind their moves, and what it means for your portfolio. Download your free report now.
Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Telegram for the latest investing news and analyses!
Disclosure: Royston Yang does not own shares in any of the companies mentioned.
The post Looking for Strong Returns? These 5 US Growth Stocks Could Be Perfect for Your Portfolio appeared first on The Smart Investor.

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Analysts react to US-China trade agreement
Analysts react to US-China trade agreement

Yahoo

time33 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Analysts react to US-China trade agreement

SINGAPORE (Reuters) -U.S. and Chinese officials said they had agreed on a framework to put their trade truce back on track and remove China's export restrictions on rare earths while offering little sign of a durable resolution to longstanding trade differences. China's Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang said the two teams had agreed on implementing their Geneva consensus and would take the agreed framework back to their leaders. MARKET REACTION: Share markets and the dollar were guarded, with S&P 500 futures down 0.3%, while awaiting more detail of what was decided and whether it would stick. QUOTES: CHRIS WESTON, HEAD OF RESEARCH, PEPPERSTONE, MELBOURNE: "The devil will be in the details but the lack of reaction suggests this outcome fully expected. "While clearly a positive outcome, the lack of reaction in S&P500 futures, and the incremental moves seen in CNH or AUD, suggests achieving the framework on the Geneva agreement was fully expected – the details matter, especially around the degree of rare earths bound for the US, and the subsequent freedom for US produced chips to head East, but for now as long as the headlines of talks between the two parties remain constructive, risk assets should remain supported." LIN GENGWEI, CO-FOUNDER AND CEO, RAIN TREE PARTNERS, SINGAPORE: "Both sides have the pressure, and willingness to reach an agreement. This is temporary achievement in talks but will not alter the pattern of perennial Sino-U.S. rivalry. "The U.S. will not completely remove restrictions on chip exports to China, but may relax the curbs in response to pressure from both Beijing and the domestic semiconductor sector." MARK DONG, CO-FOUNDER OF MINORITY ASSET MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG: "This is positive news to the market. At least now there's a bottom line that neither side is willing to cross. "Going forward, both sides will move toward reducing the trade imbalance." ZENG WENKAI, CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER, SHENGQI ASSET MANAGEMENT, HONG KONG: "The market likely anticipated this — Trump is just TACO (Trump always chickens out)." "Look at how countries are negotiating with the U.S. these days; it's no longer like how Vietnam approached things early on. Japan and South Korea are taking a tougher stance. People have realised that kneeling gets you nowhere — in fact, it only invites more bullying." CHARU CHANANA, CHIEF INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, SAXO, SINGAPORE: "Markets will likely welcome the shift in tone from confrontation to coordination. But with no further meetings scheduled, we're not out of the woods yet. The next step depends on Trump and Xi endorsing and enforcing the proposed framework. "It's important not to mistake this tactical de-escalation for a full reversal of strategic decoupling. The underlying competition around technology, supply chains, and national security remains very much intact. New issues can always emerge, and the real test will be how far this "new old deal" is implemented." TAN XIAOYUN, FOUNDING PARTNER OF ZONSO CAPITAL, GUANGDONG: "Talks will continue under the agreed framework, and I believe the U.S. will give in more than China to reach a deal." "Under the current circumstances, the U.S. side faces more pressing challenges, while the Chinese side has more breathing space. China was defensive, but has turned offensive, leveraging on rare earth and market access. This marks a rebalancing in strength and clout." MICHAEL MCCARTHY, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, MOOMOO AUSTRALIA, SYDNEY: "I'll be watching to see how bonds trade today on the back of this. The currency markets are taking it in stride, and given the equity markets are back to all-time highs or thereabouts, it does appear that this was very much anticipated. "For weeks, there have been expectations of the deal. The delivery of it will likely be a market positive, with a weakening dollar and stronger equities, but it's not a step change." CAROL KONG, CURRENCY STRATEGIST, COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA, SYDNEY: "I think in this environment... any hints on progress on a potential trade agreement will be positive for markets. "It will still be very hard and it will take a long time for both sides to reach a comprehensive trade agreement. That sort of comprehensive deal usually takes years to be reached, so I'm skeptical that a framework reached at the meeting in London will be comprehensive. Tensions might be de-escalated for now, but they will certainly escalate again in coming months." RAY ATTRILL, HEAD OF FX STRATEGY AT NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK, SYDNEY: "It's way too early to say that we know we're in the midst of establishing a cast iron, new US-China trade agreement. The whole year has been littered with positive omens about reaching agreements and then we haven't really seen substantial progress or we've seen backsliding on things that were seemingly agreed so. "Our view is still that whatever does get agreed in the coming weeks and months, the baseline view is that we're going to end up with a global tariff situation which is far worse than existed prior to Trump's ascent to the presidency so we're still going to have a tariff environment we believe will be detrimental as far as global growth is concerned." TONY SYCAMORE, MARKET ANALYST, IG, SYDNEY: "If we keep the terms of the Geneva Agreement, we're looking at US tariffs on Chinese goods staying at 30% for a period of time and Chinese tariffs on US goods at 10%. So that's down from 145% and 125% respectively. That would be fantastic. "Now that for me was probably the market consensus ... and now people just trying to work out whether they're gonna buy or sell the US dollar and that's I think reflecting a bit of that indecision. "That's why U.S. equity markets are holding at this point of time. I still feel like they're overcooked and they need to pull back. It's just been a remarkable run and we're sort of pushing up now against the record highs from February, so for me, it would make sense for them to take a breather." DAVID CHAO, GLOBAL MARKET STRATEGIST, ASIA PACIFIC, INVESCO, HONG KONG: "The recent headlines that we've seen is that the US and China - they're ready to make a deal, I think from both sides, and that is a very good sign for markets as well as for policymakers in both countries. Because ultimately, cooler heads will prevail, and we think that the road has been laid for closer dialogue between the top leaders between the two countries. "Today's news about the US and China striking a potential deal on things like rare earths or access to semiconductors or jet engine equipment, that is a very good indication that we have moved through peak tariff uncertainty." Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Trump tariffs live updates: US, China agree on plan to ease trade tensions as US appeals court allows tariffs to remain in effect
Trump tariffs live updates: US, China agree on plan to ease trade tensions as US appeals court allows tariffs to remain in effect

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Trump tariffs live updates: US, China agree on plan to ease trade tensions as US appeals court allows tariffs to remain in effect

The US and China agreed to a framework and implementation plan to ease trade tensions on Tuesday. 'We have reached a framework to implement the Geneva consensus,' US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said. The commerce secretary indicated the deal should resolve issues between the two countries on rare earths and magnets. Representatives will now take the proposal to their respective leaders for approval. The progress comes after two days of trade talks between the US and China in London. The high-stakes negotiations follow Trump's call with Xi Jinping last week, which both leaders framed as positive. Tensions between the two countries had been rising since they reached a temporary truce in mid-May in Geneva. Both countries accused the other of breaching the agreement while ratcheting up pressure on other issues. Meanwhile, though Trump's most sweeping tariffs continue to face legal uncertainty, on Tuesday, the president received a favorable update. A federal appeals court held a decision saying his tariffs can temporarily stay in effect. The US Court of International Trade had blocked their implementation last month, deeming the method used to enact them "unlawful." Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet The latest twists and turns in Trump's trade policy come as the president pushes countries to speed up negotiations. The US sent a letter to partners as a "friendly reminder" that Trump's self-imposed 90-day pause on sweeping "reciprocal" tariffs is set to expire in early July. White House advisers have for weeks promised trade deals in the "not-too-distant future," with the only announced agreement so far coming with the United Kingdom. US and Indian officials held trade talks this week and agreed to extend those discussions on Monday and Tuesday ahead of the July 9 deadline. New tariffs are coming into play: Effective Wednesday, June 4, Trump doubled tariffs on steel and aluminum from 25% to 50%. Here are the latest updates as the policy reverberates around the world. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Rick Newman reports: Read more here. US-China talks stretched on Tuesday, and they may continue into Wednesday, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters outside of Lancaster House in London, where delegations from both countries are meeting. "I think the talks are going really, really well," Lutnick said. "We're very much spending time and effort and energy — everybody's got their head down working closely." "I hope they end this evening," he added, "but if they need be, we'll be here tomorrow." The teams from China and the US, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, have been holding negotiations since Monday. The London summit followed a phone call between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Stocks rose to near session highs following Lutnick's comments on an otherwise fairly muted day in markets. Read more here. From Reuters: Read more here. Banking fees and trading revenue for one of the world's largest investment banks is expected to climb this quarter despite the concerns that surround US tariffs, Citigroup's (C) head of banking Vis Raghavan said on Tuesday. Raghaven added, that M&A activity continues to be active but the IPO market has been "stagnant." Reuters reports: Read more here. The World Bank cut its global growth forecast for 2025 on Tuesday by 0.4 percentage point to 2.3%. The international financial institution, which provides loans to governments said that high tariffs and uncertainty were a "significant headwind" for nearly all economies. Reuters reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Alexis Keenan reports: Read more here. On Tuesday, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said trade negotiations with China were going well, as the two sides met in London for a second day of talks. Reuters reports: Read more here. The CEO of Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (FCX), North America's top producer of copper has warned that tariffs could hurt an industry that President Trump is trying to help. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Maruti Suzuki has cut near-term production targets for its maiden electric vehicle e-Vitara by two-thirds because of rare earths shortages, a document showed, in the latest sign of disruption to the auto industry from China's export curbs. India's top carmaker, which said on Monday it had not seen any impact yet from the supply crisis, now plans to make about 8,200 e-Vitaras between April and September, versus an original goal of 26,500, according to a company document seen by Reuters. It cited "supply constraints" in rare earth materials that are vital in making magnets and other components across a range of hi-tech industries. Read more here. Both the US and China are finding new tools to use as bargaining chips within trade negotiations. Here's an example of just some of them: Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. The de-escalation in trade tensions likely contributed to an improvement in US small-business confidence in May. However, uncertainty remained due to the overall economic outlook. Reuters reports: Read more here. Chinese stocks fell on Tuesday ahead of the second day of trade negotiations between the US and China. Investors are cautious as the two biggest economies seek to resolve some contentious issues. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. As US-China trade negotiations resume in London on Tuesday, both sides are eager to rebuild the truce established in May. While, the US has tightened controls on AI chip exports, China may be holding the most valuable card in these talks. CNN reports: Read more here. Advertising firm, WPP said on Tuesday that global advertising revenue is expected to grow 6% this year, lowering its earlier target of 7.7% due to the uncertainty surrounding US trade policies. Reuters reports: Read more here. Bloomberg reported that trade talks between the US and China will resume tomorrow morning at 10 a.m. in London after six hours of negotiations on Monday. US officials were looking for a "handshake" on Monday, National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett told CNBC, as the two sides look to ease tensions over tech and rare earths. President Trump weighed in on the progress, telling reporters on Monday: "We are doing well with China. China's not easy. ... I'm only getting good reports.' Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, meanwhile, said it was "good meeting" and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick called the talks "fruitful," sending an upbeat signal on the talks' progress. The Chinese delegation, led by Vice Premier He Lifeng, did not comment on the talks. From Bloomberg: Read more here. The number of ocean containers from China bound for the US fell precipitously in May when President Trump's 145% tariffs on Chinese goods were in effect. Supply chain technology company Descartes said Monday that seaborne imports from China to the US dropped 28.5% year over year, the sharpest decline since the pandemic, per Reuters. Overall, US seaborne imports fell 7.2% annually in May to 2.18 million 20-foot equivalent units. The decline snaps a streak of increases fueled by companies frontloading goods to avoid higher duties, which has kept US seaports, such as the Port of Long Beach, busy. "The effects of U.S. policy shifts with China are now clearly visible in monthly trade flows," Descartes said in a statement. Read more here. In today's Chart of the Day, Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer writes that tariff headlines have been rattling markets to a lesser degree than they did in April, despite an escalation of trade tensions recently: Sign up for the Morning Brief newsletter to get the Chart of the Day in your inbox. US import costs of steel and aluminum are expected to rise by more than $100 billion after President Trump doubled tariffs on the metals to 50% this week. That is expected to impact automakers such as Ford (F), as well as importers for a variety of goods, from baseball bats to aircraft parts. The Financial Times reports: Read more here. Tariffs have brought challenges for many, but Century Aluminum (CENX) and top recycler Matalco stand to benefit from President Trump's metal import duties as domestic prices rise. Reuters reports: Read more here. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Rick Newman reports: Read more here. US-China talks stretched on Tuesday, and they may continue into Wednesday, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters outside of Lancaster House in London, where delegations from both countries are meeting. "I think the talks are going really, really well," Lutnick said. "We're very much spending time and effort and energy — everybody's got their head down working closely." "I hope they end this evening," he added, "but if they need be, we'll be here tomorrow." The teams from China and the US, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, have been holding negotiations since Monday. The London summit followed a phone call between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Stocks rose to near session highs following Lutnick's comments on an otherwise fairly muted day in markets. Read more here. From Reuters: Read more here. Banking fees and trading revenue for one of the world's largest investment banks is expected to climb this quarter despite the concerns that surround US tariffs, Citigroup's (C) head of banking Vis Raghavan said on Tuesday. Raghaven added, that M&A activity continues to be active but the IPO market has been "stagnant." Reuters reports: Read more here. The World Bank cut its global growth forecast for 2025 on Tuesday by 0.4 percentage point to 2.3%. The international financial institution, which provides loans to governments said that high tariffs and uncertainty were a "significant headwind" for nearly all economies. Reuters reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Alexis Keenan reports: Read more here. On Tuesday, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said trade negotiations with China were going well, as the two sides met in London for a second day of talks. Reuters reports: Read more here. The CEO of Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (FCX), North America's top producer of copper has warned that tariffs could hurt an industry that President Trump is trying to help. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Maruti Suzuki has cut near-term production targets for its maiden electric vehicle e-Vitara by two-thirds because of rare earths shortages, a document showed, in the latest sign of disruption to the auto industry from China's export curbs. India's top carmaker, which said on Monday it had not seen any impact yet from the supply crisis, now plans to make about 8,200 e-Vitaras between April and September, versus an original goal of 26,500, according to a company document seen by Reuters. It cited "supply constraints" in rare earth materials that are vital in making magnets and other components across a range of hi-tech industries. Read more here. Both the US and China are finding new tools to use as bargaining chips within trade negotiations. Here's an example of just some of them: Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. The de-escalation in trade tensions likely contributed to an improvement in US small-business confidence in May. However, uncertainty remained due to the overall economic outlook. Reuters reports: Read more here. Chinese stocks fell on Tuesday ahead of the second day of trade negotiations between the US and China. Investors are cautious as the two biggest economies seek to resolve some contentious issues. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. As US-China trade negotiations resume in London on Tuesday, both sides are eager to rebuild the truce established in May. While, the US has tightened controls on AI chip exports, China may be holding the most valuable card in these talks. CNN reports: Read more here. Advertising firm, WPP said on Tuesday that global advertising revenue is expected to grow 6% this year, lowering its earlier target of 7.7% due to the uncertainty surrounding US trade policies. Reuters reports: Read more here. Bloomberg reported that trade talks between the US and China will resume tomorrow morning at 10 a.m. in London after six hours of negotiations on Monday. US officials were looking for a "handshake" on Monday, National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett told CNBC, as the two sides look to ease tensions over tech and rare earths. President Trump weighed in on the progress, telling reporters on Monday: "We are doing well with China. China's not easy. ... I'm only getting good reports.' Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, meanwhile, said it was "good meeting" and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick called the talks "fruitful," sending an upbeat signal on the talks' progress. The Chinese delegation, led by Vice Premier He Lifeng, did not comment on the talks. From Bloomberg: Read more here. The number of ocean containers from China bound for the US fell precipitously in May when President Trump's 145% tariffs on Chinese goods were in effect. Supply chain technology company Descartes said Monday that seaborne imports from China to the US dropped 28.5% year over year, the sharpest decline since the pandemic, per Reuters. Overall, US seaborne imports fell 7.2% annually in May to 2.18 million 20-foot equivalent units. The decline snaps a streak of increases fueled by companies frontloading goods to avoid higher duties, which has kept US seaports, such as the Port of Long Beach, busy. "The effects of U.S. policy shifts with China are now clearly visible in monthly trade flows," Descartes said in a statement. Read more here. In today's Chart of the Day, Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer writes that tariff headlines have been rattling markets to a lesser degree than they did in April, despite an escalation of trade tensions recently: Sign up for the Morning Brief newsletter to get the Chart of the Day in your inbox. US import costs of steel and aluminum are expected to rise by more than $100 billion after President Trump doubled tariffs on the metals to 50% this week. That is expected to impact automakers such as Ford (F), as well as importers for a variety of goods, from baseball bats to aircraft parts. The Financial Times reports: Read more here. Tariffs have brought challenges for many, but Century Aluminum (CENX) and top recycler Matalco stand to benefit from President Trump's metal import duties as domestic prices rise. Reuters reports: Read more here.

Powering the AI Revolution: Investbanq Accelerates Digital Breakthrough in WealthTech
Powering the AI Revolution: Investbanq Accelerates Digital Breakthrough in WealthTech

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Powering the AI Revolution: Investbanq Accelerates Digital Breakthrough in WealthTech

SINGAPORE, June 11, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Investbanq, the AI-powered wealth operating system for family offices, asset managers, and banks, has secured US$3 million in Pre-Series A funding. The round drew participation from Constructor Capital, Orvel, Big Sky Capital and several other prominent investors, underscoring growing investor demand for next-generation WealthTech infrastructure. Investbanq recently captured global attention by winning Meet The Drapers, the international startup show judged by venture capitalist Tim Draper, and by receiving Global Private Banker's "Best WealthTech - AI" award, reaffirming its technological leadership and global market potential. About Investbanq Investbanq is the next-generation wealth management platform, enabling banks, asset managers, and family offices to transition into AI-driven WealthTech players. Its WealthOS product allows efficient management of the rapidly growing capital pools of affluent millennials and other digitally native investors across Asia and the MENA region "The number of individuals requiring advanced Wealth Management was growing for 50 years, and will be exponentially accelerated by GenAI," said Dr. Serg Bell, Founder and Chairman of Constructor Capital. "Investbanq's dynamic and adaptive AI engine creates diversified portfolios in real time, completes onboarding in days, not months, and lowers long-standing barriers for those wanting to access private-market opportunities." Investbanq is headquartered in Singapore, with additional offices in Kazakhstan and the UAE. The startup has completed the EBRD Star Venture program and is now enrolled in both the NVIDIA Accelerator and First Rate Connect—evidence of strong expert backing and the platform's global potential. "We want to help create a world where anyone can master, grow, and pass on their wealth with confidence and clarity," said Oz Zhiyenkul, Co-founder and CEO of Investbanq. "We are pleased that investors sharing our vision for the future of WealthTech have placed their trust in Investbanq," added Tk Kantayev, Co-founder and COO. Key Investors Key investors include Constructor Capital, Big Sky Capital, Orvel, and notable Kazakhstani investor Yerkin Tatishev, all of whom backed the company's strategy for rapid scaling and technological differentiation. "I've known Olzhas for over 30 years and have seen him grow, learn, tackle complex challenges, and consistently deliver. When he shared Investbanq with me, I had no doubt — it reflected his character: structured, strategic, and responsible. I invested because I believe in him and the team he's built" remarked Yerkin Tatishev, Chairman of the Board at Kusto Group. "We see Investbanq as a transformative force in wealth management for HNWI in emerging markets, where traditional private banking solutions are often inaccessible or outdated. By combining personalised, AI-powered advisory services with strategic regulatory coverage across Singapore, Dubai, and Kazakhstan, Investbanq addresses a clear market gap," said a spokesperson from Orvel. Investbanq will use the funds to expand its team, enhance its platform with advanced asset management tools and automation, and accelerate growth across Asia and the MENA. About Investbanq Co-founded by Oz (Olzhas) Zhiyenkul and Tk (Talgat) Kantayev, Singapore-based Investbanq aims to redefine the future of wealth management by building a more inclusive, modular, and AI-native financial infrastructure. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Investbanq Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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