Two Taiwanese women are suing Merrill Lynch (Asia Pacific) Limited for unspecified damages, alleging the firm failed to prevent a now-jailed employee from defrauding them.
- Sun
- May 26, 2013
- Updated: 9:59am
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The rise in property prices over the past year has helped create more US dollar millionaires in Hong Kong than anywhere else in the world, up 33 per cent at 101,300, according to a report by...
Shares in Gome rose more than 8 per cent after China's second-largest home appliance retailer posted a higher-than-expected profit gain of 66 per cent in the first quarter.
The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) has reprimanded Merrill Lynch (Asia Pacific) and fined it HK$3 million for inadequate systems in relation to the sale of two index-linked notes to 72...
Hong Kong's rich may get even richer this year, while the number of local millionaires is expected to increase as capital markets pick up throughout the region, according to Merrill Lynch Global...
Property transactions have dropped despite the better-than-expected sale of two residential sites at a government auction last Tuesday.
The Securities and Futures Commission has fined two units of US investment bank Merrill Lynch HK$3.5 million after an executive's cover-up of losses in a trading account went undetected for...
Two companies owned by Japanese businessman Kozo Sugiura are suing investment bank Merrill Lynch and one of its employees over alleged losses of approximately HK$98 million last year.
Li Lang, the first mainland menswear designer to show a collection at Milan Fashion Week, is drawing up plans to raise about US$100 million in a Hong Kong share sale.
A group of foreign investors that battled for five months to salvage their cash from the financial wreckage of Asia Aluminum Holdings finally lost their fight yesterday.
Mainland sportswear retailer 361? International is following in the footsteps of its four biggest domestic rivals by seeking a market listing.
Merrill Lynch, the United States investment bank controversially acquired in January by Bank of America Corp, is planning to quit its investment in three Hong Kong properties.
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