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Asian Value Stocks Trading At Estimated Discounts In July 2025

Asian Value Stocks Trading At Estimated Discounts In July 2025

Yahoo5 days ago
As of July 2025, Asian markets are witnessing a mix of modest gains and challenges, with Japan's stock markets showing slight increases despite political uncertainties and China's economic growth easing pressures for immediate stimulus. In this environment, identifying undervalued stocks becomes crucial as investors seek opportunities that offer potential value amidst fluctuating market conditions and evolving economic indicators.
Top 10 Undervalued Stocks Based On Cash Flows In Asia
Name
Current Price
Fair Value (Est)
Discount (Est)
Zhuhai CosMX Battery (SHSE:688772)
CN¥14.09
CN¥28.02
49.7%
SpiderPlus (TSE:4192)
¥508.00
¥993.55
48.9%
Shin Maint HoldingsLtd (TSE:6086)
¥1166.00
¥2320.85
49.8%
Polaris Holdings (TSE:3010)
¥218.00
¥431.56
49.5%
KeePer Technical Laboratory (TSE:6036)
¥3420.00
¥6784.50
49.6%
HL Holdings (KOSE:A060980)
₩40650.00
₩80385.88
49.4%
Hibino (TSE:2469)
¥2346.00
¥4674.18
49.8%
GEM (SZSE:002340)
CN¥6.74
CN¥13.27
49.2%
Forum Engineering (TSE:7088)
¥1208.00
¥2407.94
49.8%
cottaLTD (TSE:3359)
¥432.00
¥852.18
49.3%
Click here to see the full list of 261 stocks from our Undervalued Asian Stocks Based On Cash Flows screener.
Let's review some notable picks from our screened stocks.
Overview: Tsinghua Tongfang Co., Ltd. operates in digital information, civil nuclear technology, energy conservation and environmental protection, and technology and finance sectors, with a market cap of CN¥25.29 billion.
Operations: The company's revenue segments include digital information, civil nuclear technology, energy conservation and environmental protection, and technology and finance.
Estimated Discount To Fair Value: 45.5%
Tsinghua Tongfang is trading at a significant discount to its estimated fair value, with a current price of CN¥7.55 compared to the fair value estimate of CN¥13.86. Despite recent financial challenges, including a net loss of CN¥287.6 million in Q1 2025 and declining revenue, the stock's long-term prospects are buoyed by forecasted earnings growth exceeding 93% annually over the next three years, outpacing both industry and market averages in China.
SHSE:600100 Discounted Cash Flow as at Jul 2025
Overview: Fujian Longking Co., Ltd. manufactures and sells environmental protection equipment globally, with a market cap of CN¥15.66 billion.
Operations: The company's revenue segments include the manufacture and sale of environmental protection equipment worldwide.
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Find a Come-As-You-Are Seafood Oasis Tucked Inside a Minneapolis Industrial District
Find a Come-As-You-Are Seafood Oasis Tucked Inside a Minneapolis Industrial District

Eater

time2 hours ago

  • Eater

Find a Come-As-You-Are Seafood Oasis Tucked Inside a Minneapolis Industrial District

is a Minneapolis-based independent writer with an affinity for the Great Plains, who publishes place-based, narrative nonfiction stories in a variety of local, national, and international outlets. It's unlikely one would simply stumble upon Minneapolis' seafood hub. Wedged between Hiawatha and Minnehaha Avenues in Cedar-Riverside in a sprawling industrial area, you have to know it to find it. Yet, nestled among an Islamic center and a Somali restaurant, there it is — a grouping of United Noodles (an Asian market and grocery store), a Hawaiian restaurant, and Coastal Seafoods, one of the city's most inconspicuous yet delightful restaurants — all encased in a sprawling parking lot. In the 1980s a banker turned fishmonger Suzanne Weinstein opened Coastal Seafoods as a wholesale seafood business in Minneapolis, following it up with an outpost in St. Paul a few years later. Over time Coastal Seafoods expanded to add a market component as well. The retail sides of the stores are stocked with delights that span Thai charcoal, charcuterie supplies, Kewpie mayonnaise, local ice cream, and many, many sauces, oils, and other common and obscure seafood accouterments. Plus, of course, there's a well-curated selection of high-quality fish and seafood — all with an eye towards sustainability — that includes an array of East Coast and West Coast oysters, crab cakes, lobster tails, and more. But in the last few years, they expanded yet again to include a small, seafood slinging restaurant dubbed the Dive, tucked within each Coastal Seafoods location, which is what my seafood-loving husband and I came for. Coastal Seafoods is tucked into a more industrial pocket of Minneapolis. Cinnamon Janzer The market sells all kinds of shelf-stable ingredients and tinned fish. Cinnamon Janzer Coastal Seafoods is a fish market and store, and also operates a restaurant called the Dive. Cinnamon Janzer The Vibe After easily snagging one of many, many parking spaces in Coastal Seafoods' large lot complete with a patio composed of wooden picnic tables, we walked into the Minneapolis location's small but mighty retail and restaurant space. The first thing we saw was a dad ordering from the seafood counter along the back wall with his daughter outfitted in a bright pink sundress riding on his shoulders. That's the feeling here — an easy, relaxed, and welcoming energy that invites you to come as you are — and it carries over to the two-table, one-counter restaurant that's tucked behind a couple rows of dry goods opposite an entire wall dedicated to tinned fish. When we walked up, the one man running the restaurant show was enthusiastically engulfed in a poker tournament on his phone, which he happily chatted with us about as we struggled to decide what to order. Cinnamon Janzer The Food From fish and chips to tacos and one of the best burgers in town, Coastal Seafoods has got it going on. I went with the warm, buttered lobster roll and my husband ordered the item that delights him whenever he's able to encounter it in the Midwest — soft shell crab. With tip our total came to a hair over $70, which is far from a cheap early dinner, but the thing is that you get what you pay for here. The lobster roll comes on Japanese milk bread that's been delightfully toasted with Old Bay while the two sizable soft shell crabs slathered in Nashville hot sauce came complete with coleslaw and thick fries, a delicate blend of soft and crunchy, fresh, and overall just right and anything but a throwaway side. There's free water and at least two dozen sauces, from Japanese barbecue sauce to sriracha and other hot sauce iterations, to choose from as well as a help-yourself rice cooker (currently unplugged) along the window-side counter seating. But water isn't the only beverage option; a variety of sodas, kombuchas, sparkling flavored waters and more in single bottle and can forms can be purchased from the adjacent cooler to accompany your meal. The menu features everything from fish tacos to fish and chips. Cinnamon Janzer Help yourself to hot sauce. Cinnamon Janzer The Service Probably noticing the delight on my Thai husband's face when he saw Thai charcoal upon entering, a member of the Coastal Seafoods crew struck up conversation with him (the cook in our family) shortly after we walked in. They talked about what's offered and when, and we learned that Mondays are delivery days, so those are the days to be there — Sundays can get sparse. When I asked our cook/server about that empty and unplugged rice cooker next to the sauces, he and the same employee we spoke with earlier told us that it was a bit of a relic from when Coastal Seafoods served poke bowls, which it stopped doing when the Hawaiian restaurant opened up. But they also told us that it'll be fired up again in the fall when soup season hits and Coastal Seafoods brings back its fan-favorite gumbo, lobster bisque, and — new this year — she-crab soup that's comprised of only female crabs, which are considered to be sweeter than their male counterparts. The no-frills, but highly passionate service you'll get at Coastal Seafoods is relaxed, genuine, and eager in the way that anyone who finds at least some actual joy in what they do is happy to talk about what delights them. Hot Tip Talk to the staff! They're ready to share. One of the several seafood tidbits we learned on our visit was that every so often a scallop, thanks to an excess pigment in females, takes on an orange hue and the Japanese consider finding one to be lucky. The other thing to know is that there are specials every weekday at Coastal Seafoods: Mondays bring 20 percent off shrimp, Tuesdays offer a 20 percent discount for seniors and veterans, Wednesdays are 20 percent off crab, Thursday is 20 percent off whole fish, and Friday is 20 percent off for all students, educators, and healthcare workers. Something for everyone!

Millionaires multiply across the U.S., but most find it's not all mansions and champagne
Millionaires multiply across the U.S., but most find it's not all mansions and champagne

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Millionaires multiply across the U.S., but most find it's not all mansions and champagne

As a child, Heidi Barley watched her family pay for groceries with food stamps. As a college student, she dropped out because she couldn't afford tuition. In her twenties, already scraping by, she was forced to take a pay cut that shrunk her salary to just $34,000 a year. But this summer, the 41-year-old hit a milestone that long felt out of reach: She became a millionaire. A surging number of everyday Americans now boast a seven-figure net worth once the domain of celebrities and CEOs. But as the ranks of millionaires grow fatter, the significance of the status is shifting alongside perceptions of what it takes to be truly rich. 'Millionaire used to sound like Rich Uncle Pennybags in a top hat,' says Michael Ashley Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point Capital Advisors, a wealth management firm in El Segundo, California. 'It's no longer a backstage pass to palatial estates and caviar bumps. It's the new mass-affluent middleweight class, financially secure but two zeros short of private-jet territory.' Inflation, ballooning home values and a decades-long push into stock markets by average investors have lifted millions into millionairehood. A June report from Swiss bank UBS found about one-tenth of American adults are members of the seven-digit club, with 1,000 freshly minted millionaires added daily last year. Thirty years ago, the IRS counted 1.6 million Americans with a net worth of $1 million or more. UBS — using data from the United Nations, World Bank, International Monetary Fund and central banks of countries around the globe — put the number at 23.8 million in the U.S. last year, a nearly 15-fold increase. The expanding ranks of millionaires come as the gulf between rich and poor widens. The richest 10% of Americans hold two-thirds of household wealth, according to the Federal Reserve, averaging $8.1 million each. The bottom 50% hold 3% of wealth, with an average of just $60,000 to their names. Federal Reserve data also shows there are differences by race. Asian people outpace white people in the U.S. in median wealth, while Black and Hispanic people trail in their net worth. Barley was working as a journalist when her newspaper ended its pension program and she got a lump-sum payout of about $5,000. A colleague convinced her to invest it in a retirement account, and ever since, she's stashed away whatever she could. The investments dipped at first during the Great Recession but eventually started growing. In time, she came to find catharsis in amassing savings, going home and checking her account balances when she had a tough day at work. Last month, after one such day, she realized the moment had come. 'Did you know that we're millionaires?' she asked her husband. 'Good job, honey,' Barley says he replied, unfazed. It brought no immediate change. Like many millionaires, much of her wealth is in long-term investments and her home, not easy-to-access cash. She still lives in her modest Orlando, Florida, house, socks away half her paycheck, fills the napkin holder with takeout napkins and lines trash cans with grocery bags. Still, Barley says it feels powerful to cross a threshold she never imagined reaching as a child. 'But it's not as glamorous as the ideas in your head,' she says. All wealth is relative. To thousandaires, $1 million is the stuff of dreams. To billionaires, it's a rounding error. Either way, it takes twice as much cash today to match the buying power of 30 years ago. A net worth of $1 million in 1995 is equivalent to about $2.1 million today, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. A seven-figure net worth is, to some, as outdated a yardstick as a six-figure salary. Nonetheless, 'millionaire' is peppered in everything from politics to popular music as shorthand for rich. 'It's a nice round number but it's a point in a longer journey,' says Dan Uden, a 41-year-old from Providence, Rhode Island, who works in information technology and who hit the million-dollar mark last month. 'It definitely gives you some room to breathe.' No other country comes close to the U.S. in the sheer number of millionaires, though relative to population, UBS found Switzerland and Luxembourg had higher rates. Kenneth Carow, a finance professor at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business, says commonalities emerge among today's millionaires. The vast majority own stocks and a home. Most live below their means. They value education and teach financial responsibility to their children. 'The dream of becoming a millionaire,' Carow says, 'has become more obtainable.' Jim Wang, 45, a software engineer-turned finance blogger from Fulton, Maryland, says even if hitting $1 million was essentially 'a non-event' for him and his wife, it still held weight for him as the son of immigrants who saved money by turning the heat off on winter nights. The private jets he envisioned as a kid may not have materialized at the million-dollar threshold, but he still sees it as a marker that brings a certain level of security. 'It's possible, even with a regular job,' he says. 'You just have to be diligent and consistent.' The resilience of financial markets and the ease of investing in broad-based, low-fee index funds has fueled the balances of many millionaires who don't earn massive salaries or inherit family fortunes. Among them is a burgeoning community of younger millionaires born out of the movement known as FIRE, for Financial Independence Retire Early. Jason Breck, 48, of Fishers, Indiana, embraced FIRE and reached the million-dollar mark nine years ago. He promptly quit his job in automotive marketing, where he generally earned around $60,000 a year but managed to stow away around 70% of his pay. Now, Breck and his wife spend several months a year traveling. Despite being retired, they continue to grow their balance by sticking to a tight budget and keeping expenses to $1,500 a month when they're in the U.S and a few hundred dollars more when they travel. Hitting their goal hasn't translated to luxury. There is no lawn crew to cut the grass, no Netflix or Amazon Prime, no Uber Eats. They fly economy. They drive a 2005 Toyota. 'It's not a golden ticket like it was in the past,' Breck says. 'For us, a million dollars buys us freedom and peace of mind. We're not yacht rich, but for us, we're time rich.' Sedensky writes for the Associated Press.

Millionaires multiply across the US, but most find it's not all mansions and champagne
Millionaires multiply across the US, but most find it's not all mansions and champagne

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Millionaires multiply across the US, but most find it's not all mansions and champagne

NEW YORK (AP) — As a child, Heidi Barley watched her family pay for groceries with food stamps. As a college student, she dropped out because she couldn't afford tuition. In her twenties, already scraping by, she was forced to take a pay cut that shrunk her salary to just $34,000 a year. But this summer, the 41-year-old hit a milestone that long felt out of reach: She became a millionaire. A surging number of everyday Americans now boast a seven-figure net worth once the domain of celebrities and CEOs. But as the ranks of millionaires grow fatter, the significance of the status is shifting alongside perceptions of what it takes to be truly rich. 'Millionaire used to sound like Rich Uncle Pennybags in a top hat,' says Michael Ashley Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point Capital Advisors, a wealth management firm in El Segundo, California. 'It's no longer a backstage pass to palatial estates and caviar bumps. It's the new mass-affluent middleweight class, financially secure but two zeros short of private-jet territory.' Inflation, ballooning home values and a decades-long push into stock markets by average investors have lifted millions into millionairehood. A June report from Swiss bank UBS found about one-tenth of American adults are members of the seven-digit club, with 1,000 freshly minted millionaires added daily last year. Thirty years ago, the IRS counted 1.6 million Americans with a net worth of $1 million or more. UBS — using data from the United Nations, World Bank, International Monetary Fund and central banks of countries around the globe — put the number at 23.8 million in the U.S. last year, a nearly 15-fold increase. The expanding ranks of millionaires come as the gulf between rich and poor widens. The richest 10% of Americans hold two-thirds of household wealth, according to the Federal Reserve, averaging $8.1 million each. The bottom 50% hold 3% of wealth, with an average of just $60,000 to their names. Federal Reserve data also shows there are differences by race. Asian people outpace white people in the U.S. in median wealth, while Black and Hispanic people trail in their net worth. Barley was working as a journalist when her newspaper ended its pension program and she got a lump-sum payout of about $5,000. A colleague convinced her to invest it in a retirement account, and ever since, she's stashed away whatever she could. The investments dipped at first during the Great Recession but eventually started growing. In time, she came to find catharsis in amassing savings, going home and checking her account balances when she had a tough day at work. Last month, after one such day, she realized the moment had come. 'Did you know that we're millionaires?' she asked her husband. 'Good job, honey,' Barley says he replied, unfazed. It brought no immediate change. Like many millionaires, much of her wealth is in long-term investments and her home, not easy-to-access cash. She still lives in her modest Orlando, Florida, house, socks away half her paycheck, fills the napkin holder with takeout napkins and lines trash cans with grocery bags. Still, Barley says it feels powerful to cross a threshold she never imagined reaching as a child. 'But it's not as glamorous as the ideas in your head,' she says. All wealth is relative. To thousandaires, $1 million is the stuff of dreams. To billionaires, it's a rounding error. Either way, it takes twice as much cash today to match the buying power of 30 years ago. A net worth of $1 million in 1995 is equivalent to about $2.1 million today, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. A seven-figure net worth is, to some, as outdated a yardstick as a six-figure salary. Nonetheless, 'millionaire' is peppered in everything from politics to popular music as shorthand for rich. 'It's a nice round number but it's a point in a longer journey,' says Dan Uden, a 41-year-old from Providence, Rhode Island, who works in information technology and who hit the million-dollar mark last month. 'It definitely gives you some room to breathe.' No other country comes close to the U.S. in the sheer number of millionaires, though relative to population, UBS found Switzerland and Luxembourg had higher rates. Kenneth Carow, a finance professor at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business, says commonalities emerge among today's millionaires. The vast majority own stocks and a home. Most live below their means. They value education and teach financial responsibility to their children. 'The dream of becoming a millionaire,' Carow says, 'has become more obtainable.' Jim Wang, 45, a software engineer-turned finance blogger from Fulton, Maryland, says even if hitting $1 million was essentially 'a non-event' for him and his wife, it still held weight for him as the son of immigrants who saved money by turning the heat off on winter nights. The private jets he envisioned as a kid may not have materialized at the million-dollar threshold, but he still sees it as a marker that brings a certain level of security. 'It's possible, even with a regular job,' he says. 'You just have to be diligent and consistent.' The resilience of financial markets and the ease of investing in broad-based, low-fee index funds has fueled the balances of many millionaires who don't earn massive salaries or inherit family fortunes. Among them is a burgeoning community of younger millionaires born out of the movement known as FIRE, for Financial Independence Retire Early. Jason Breck, 48, of Fishers, Indiana, embraced FIRE and reached the million-dollar mark nine years ago. He promptly quit his job in automotive marketing, where he generally earned around $60,000 a year but managed to stow away around 70% of his pay. Now, Breck and his wife spend several months a year traveling. Despite being retired, they continue to grow their balance by sticking to a tight budget and keeping expenses to $1,500 a month when they're in the U.S and a few hundred dollars more when they travel. Hitting their goal hasn't translated to luxury. There is no lawn crew to cut the grass, no Netflix or Amazon Prime, no Uber Eats. They fly economy. They drive a 2005 Toyota. 'It's not a golden ticket like it was in the past,' Breck says. 'For us, a million dollars buys us freedom and peace of mind. We're not yacht rich, but for us, we're time rich.' ___ Matt Sedensky can be reached at msedensky@ and

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