Latest news with #政治
Yahoo
08-07-2025
- Automotive
- Yahoo
馬斯克組黨與特朗普反面 Tesla市值一夜蒸發XXXX億元
美國電動車巨企特斯拉(Tesla)行政總裁馬斯克,與總統特朗普反面升級,並在上周六在社交平台X宣布組織新政黨「美國黨」,挑戰美國兩黨的政治體制。消息令到Tesla股價在周一開市後急挫,全日跌6.8%或21.41美元,報293.94美元,市值蒸發約690億美元(約5,416億港元)。 韋德布什證券公司知名特斯拉分析師Daniel Ives表示強烈擔憂。他指出,馬斯克選擇在「特斯拉的關鍵時期」(crucial period for the Tesla story)高調進軍政壇,這一舉動「完全背離了特斯拉投資者和股東的期望」(exactly the opposite direction that Tesla investors/shareholders want him to take)。 Daniel Ives強調,這已導致投資者群體出現明顯的「疲憊感」(a sense of exhaustion),擔心馬斯克的政治活動將分散其對核心業務的專注力。 特斯拉第二季交付38.4萬輛,同比跌14%,低於市場預期,連續兩季下降,與馬斯克5月中聲稱的業務復甦預測不符。股價年內累跌27%,分析指,Tesla之前被抵制潮與馬斯克政治分心或為因素。 原文刊登於 AM730 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


Associated Press
02-07-2025
- Politics
- Associated Press
Minority government of Japan PM faces tough test in upper house election; AP explains
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's goal is a simple majority. Half of the 248 seats for six-year terms in the upper house are being decided, and the LDP and its junior coalition partner Komeito would need to win 50 combined. That's on top of their 75 seats that are not being contested in this election. That would be a retreat from their current number of 141 seats, but Ishiba has told reporters his goal is one that must be achieved.


South China Morning Post
21-05-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
Can Japan's Ishiba weather political storm after rice remark buries farm minister?
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba accepted the resignation of his agriculture minister on Wednesday over a tone-deaf remark about rice donations – a political blunder that analysts say could further erode public trust in his leadership ahead of two make-or-break elections this summer. Taku Eto stepped down less than 24 hours after Ishiba insisted he would not dismiss him, following public outcry over comments in which the minister boasted that he never needed to buy rice because supporters regularly sent him sacks of it. The gaffe , made during a speech in Saga city on Sunday, drew fierce criticism at a time when Japanese households are grappling with rice shortages and soaring prices. Critics said the remark illustrated how out of touch the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) had become, as families across the country ration a staple many now find increasingly unaffordable Japanese agriculture minister Taku Eto enters Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's office in Tokyo on Wednesday to tender his resignation. Photo: Kyodo The resignation adds to a string of political headaches for Ishiba, whose approval rating is tumbling amid economic anxiety, diplomatic tensions and growing divisions within his own party.