New Zealand markets closed

KWEB Jan 2026 33.000 call

OPR - OPR Delayed price. Currency in USD
Add to watchlist
10.00+0.67 (+7.18%)
At close: 01:41PM EDT
Full screen
Previous close9.33
Open9.90
Bid9.00
Ask11.50
Strike33.00
Expiry date2026-01-16
Day's range9.60 - 10.03
Contract rangeN/A
Volume36
Open interest2.3k
  • Yahoo Finance Video

    It's not too late to play the China stimulus rally: Strategist

    Chinese stocks jumped after China’s central bank announced a stimulus package last week. Yan Wang, Alpine Macro chief emerging markets & China strategist, joins Julie Hyman and Josh Lipton on Market Domination to discuss how investors should be thinking about this rally. Wang says the “flurry of measures [announced] over the past couple of days” make it “ even difficult for us to keep pace with” and show the central bank is “ in a state of panic. They are clearly feeling the pressure that the economy is in a very deep, very stressed level. So they want to try to push the economy to accelerate.” He notes that the recent stimulus announcement is an important step for China’s monetary policymakers because it signals “they no longer see massive stimulus as a taboo,” as it had been since the global financial crisis. “I think that's one of the reasons why they hesitated so much in the past couple of years, even though the economy was slowing down. So now, clearly, kind of what I call an ideological straight jacket has been taken off. So that would allow them to be more preemptive in driving the economy.” “They made the policy statement, and the market has responded,” Wang says, explaining, “We need to begin to monitor whether these kinds of policy measures will have some kind of positive impact on the economy. That's something that, as a strategist, I think we need to realize that whatever they announce is one thing, but also whether the economy is able to respond is quite another.” Wang says for investors looking to benefit "the best bet is just to buy the benchmarks. Buy the domestic benchmark (000300.SS, 930748.SS) and also buy the MSCI (MME=F)... because the rising tide will lift all boats.” He adds, "if I have to pick some sectors, I would say to buy the laggards, the sectors that have been really beaten down in the past couple of years. For example, consumer discretionaries, tech sector, even the property developers. They are trading at such depressed levels, I think they may benefit the most from this revolutionary process.” For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Market Domination. This post was written by Naomi Buchanan.

  • Yahoo Finance Video

    There's more upside to China stocks, KraneShares CIO argues

    KraneShares CIO Brendan Ahern joins Morning Brief to discuss how investors can best play the China stock rally. "On Monday on the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchange, you had 5,000 stocks went up, four went down. So this is an everything going up [rally]," Ahem tells Yahoo Finance. He believes that investors will gravitate toward growth stocks, and highlights KraneShares's KWEB ETF (KWEB), which targets Chinese internet names. He explains, "People look at the e-commerce space because that's the transmission engine for domestic consumption as it occurs online." He notes that China can be thought of as two different markets: offshore and onshore. In other words, China's major markets can be split up between the offshore Hong Kong Stock Exchange and the mainland Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges. He explains that the onshore China market is more for Chinese investors while the offshore China market is more geared toward foreign investors. Ahern adds that KWEB is still 70% below its historical average in terms of its one-year forward P/E (price-to-earnings ratio), which shows "how depressed the evisceration of Chinese equities is as an asset class." Thus, he believes there is a lot more upside to China stocks, and believes the rally can continue. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Morning Brief. This post was written by Melanie Riehl

  • Barrons.com

    Chinese ETFs Tumble After Latest Rally. 2 Potential Reasons.

    The explosive rally in Chinese equities appears to have paused for now. China is suffering through a property crisis on the back of excessive borrowing and to counteract the pain, the Asian nation has launched a series of measures to revive its economy, including interest-rate cuts. KraneShares CSI China Internet exchange-traded fund, the largest China fund, was down 4.9% on Thursday.