< b > Abroad < br > < span class = "section-news" > 1. Goldman Sachs: China's overseas IPO market has recovered and will continue. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 2. Goldman Sachs: China's infrastructure building activity has recovered, which may boost commodity demand. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 3. Barclays: The Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points each in June and September this year. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 4. Bank of America: February PCE data is expected to go in the "wrong direction". < br > < span class = "section-news" > 5. Capital Economics: Modest PPI data contains signs of sticky consumer inflation. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 6. Netherland International: The dollar faces a shock from the risk of a US government shutdown. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 7. Royal Bank of Canada: Growth concerns caused by tariff uncertainty temporarily offset inflation concerns. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 8. Royal Bank of Canada: The Bank of England may "hold its ground" in March to maintain a gradual pace of rate cuts. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 9. Capital Economics: European industry cannot expect the planned stimulus measures to turn things around quickly. < br > < b > Domestic < br > < span class = "section-news" > 1. CITIC Securities: It is expected that the national maternity subsidy policy may be implemented. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 2. CITIC Securities: It is expected that the tin supply gap will be further enlarged in 2025, and the tin price is expected to exceed 300,000 yuan/ton. < br > < span class = "section-news" > 3. CITIC Securities: The coal industry is expected to improve, and the style has helped the sector rise.
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