Open Account
Demo Account
About Us
Real-time Quotes & News
Market Analysis
Economic Calendar
Daily Market Analysis
Trading Platform
Platform Overview
How To Use
Terms
All Terms
Deposit & Withdrawal
Promotion
FAQ
Contact
繁
简
EN
User Login
Open Account
Demo Account
繁
简
EN
User Login
Open Account
Demo Account
About Us
About Aspire
Features of Aspire
Real-time Quotes & News
Real-time Quotes
Real-time News
Market Analysis
Economic Calendar
Market Analysis
Trading Platform
Meta Trader 5
Platform Features
Terms
All Terms
Deposit & Withdrawal
Promotion
FAQ
Contact
About Us
Terms
Metals Market
Trading Platform
Market Analysis
Promotion
FAQ
Contact
繁
简
EN
China State Construction reported new contract value for Jan-May 2026 of 1.8082 trillion yuan, down 1.8% YoY.
2026-06-17
China State Construction reported new contract value for Jan-May 2026 of 1.8082 trillion yuan, down 1.8% YoY.
Back
Other News
2026-06-18
Foreign investors net sold ¥531 bln of JGBs in the week to June 12; the prior week’s net sell was revised to ¥1,038.6 bln from ¥1,038.5 bln.
Foreign investors net sold ¥531 bln of JGBs in the week to June 12; the prior week’s net sell was revised to ¥1,038.6 bln from ¥1,038.5 bln.
2026-06-17
Following a US-Iran deal that has the Strait of Hormuz poised to reopen, Qatar has begun repositioning LNG carriers to the Middle East to prepare for higher exports. Vessel-tracking shows at least four Qatar-owned empty LNG carriers that were idle or
Following a US-Iran deal that has the Strait of Hormuz poised to reopen, Qatar has begun repositioning LNG carriers to the Middle East to prepare for higher exports. Vessel-tracking shows at least four Qatar-owned empty LNG carriers that were idle or diverted are now turning back toward the region, with Ras Laffan listed as their next port; a Qatar-chartered ship is also en route. Separately, four Qatar-linked tankers are anchored in the Gulf of Oman and may attempt transit through Hormuz into the Persian Gulf. Qatar has not sent empty ships into the Gulf since the February outbreak of war. The moves account for only a small portion of Qatar’s roughly 70-vessel fleet but signal readiness to lift shipments if the strait reopens.
Chat with us
, powered by
LiveChat