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Chart: Asian market data for Monday, May 25, 2026On May 25th, to strengthen the supervision of the platform economy and regulate platform operations during the "6.18" shopping festival, the Beijing Municipal Administration for Market Regulation recently convened a joint meeting on online market supervision, holding talks and providing guidance to 17 key platform companies. The Beijing Municipal Administration for Market Regulation required strict implementation of the requirements for comprehensive rectification of "involutionary" competition, prohibiting irrational large-scale subsidy promotions during the "6.18" period, regulating pricing and advertising practices, and strengthening food safety risk prevention and control.On May 25th, the highest 7-day annualized yield of Tencent Wealth Managements "Current Account +" was 1.5120%, and the lowest was 0.7120%. The highest 7-day annualized yield of WeChat Pays "Lingqian Tong" was 1.0270%, and the lowest was 0.0030%. The highest 7-day annualized yield of Alipays "Yuebao" was 1.0500%, and the lowest was 1.0000%.On May 25th, at the International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS 2026), He Tingbo, Director of Huawei and President of its Semiconductor Business Unit, stated that the Kirin mobile phone chip, slated for release this fall, is the first to adopt logic folding technology, resulting in a significant performance improvement. He Tingbo said, "The Kirin 2026 mobile phone chip represents the first successful implementation of logic folding technology. In the next ten years, we will continue to move towards full folding, and even more layers of folding, continuously optimizing the entire stack performance from devices and circuits to chips and systems."The yield on Japans 5-year government bond fell 2.0 basis points to 1.980%.

According to Australian Retailer Woolworths, Inflation Is Driving Home Dining

Haiden Holmes

Feb 22, 2023 14:10

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Woolworths Group Ltd, a leading Australian retailer, said that an inflation-driven move away from dining out aided in boosting sales, driving its shares higher after its half-year earnings above expectations despite cost challenges.


Since COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 prompted supermarket hoarding, Woolworths and its smaller competitor Coles Group (OTC:CLEGF) Ltd have witnessed significant fluctuations in Australian customer behavior. As lockdowns were lifted in 2021, and again in 2022, sales slowed as rising energy and labor costs pushed up shelf prices.


Woolworths said on Wednesday that cost-of-living constraints, including skyrocketing electricity prices and nine interest rate rises since May, are now beginning to benefit stores as consumers choose for in-home consumption.


Since the beginning of 2023, food sales have increased 6.5%, roughly in step with inflation, compared to just 2.4% in the six months leading up to the end of December, the business reported.


"The shift from eating in restaurants to eating at home has become more evident," said Chief Executive Brad Banducci to reporters.


He stated that a growing number of clients from all demographic groups are now preparing meals at home since eating out is becoming more expensive.


The company's net profit before significant items increased 14% to A$907 million ($622 million), above the Visible Alpha consensus estimate of A$877 million. The majority of the increase was attributable to employee back pay linked to a prior salaries miscalculation.


Similar to Tuesday's announcement of Coles' interim results, Woolworths' profit increase was aided by a dramatic drop in COVID-19-related expenditures.


At midday, Woolworths shares were up 2%, compared to a 0.3% decline in the overall index, as analysts hailed the potential of profit margin expansion at a business vulnerable to rising supplier prices.


Phillip Kimber, a retail analyst at E&P Financial, wrote in a client note, "The momentum in the core Australian Food industry remains strong, with sales growth rates above expectations in early 2H23."


Woolworths declared an interim dividend of 46 Australian cents per share, up from 39 Australian cents per share the previous year.