logo
Shinemage Group Appoints Maye Musk and Song Seung Heon as Brand Ambassadors for Oganacell

Shinemage Group Appoints Maye Musk and Song Seung Heon as Brand Ambassadors for Oganacell

Zawya16-06-2025

Hybrid DNA Brand Accelerates Globalization Strategy
HONG KONG SAR - Media OutReach Newswire - 16 June 2025 - On May 20, 2025, Premium derma-cosmetic brand Oganacell named Maye Musk as Cleansing/Mask Ambassador and Song Seung Heon as Brand Ambassador at its global launch in Hangzhou. The event showcased Oganacell's fusion of technology and skin aesthetics.
Ambassador Campaign
Maye Musk (Oganacell Cleanser/Mask Ambassador) fronts the "Dust It Off" campaign, stating: "Oganacell helps me reconnect with myself through cleansing rituals and gives me 20 minutes of relaxation everyday."
Song Seung Heon (Oganacell Brand Ambassador) noted: "Skin recalibration isn't fighting time, but letting skin find its rhythm."
Founder of Oganacell: Dr. Oh Gana champions "skin recalibration" through personalized regimens. Oganacell is building a worldwide skin database to redefine treatment standards. He says, "The differentiation of Oganacell is that our product research is based on our uinque client group. We have a variety of high-end clients from the royal families, the Chaebol families, Politicians, Governors and artists worldwide.
Innovative Products: R&D Head Jung Bok-kyung launched the DERX™ Oxygen Cleansing Series and V-mode Contour Recalibration Series – clinically proven formulas replicating in-office procedures.
Immersive Launch Experience
Global Impact: The event united 1,000+ top beauty professionals, influencers, buyers, and consumers from 10+ countries, reaching over 100 million globally, marking a definitive global beauty moment.
Highlights included:
· A "Future Skin Recalibration Space" with holographic consultations and interactive diagnostics.
· Oganacell dermatologist group live consultation.
· AI photo experiences.
Hangzhou not only marks the launch of the Oganacell brand and also the global journey of Shinemage Group.
Hashtag: #Oganacell
https://oganacell.com
https://www.instagram.com/oganacell?igsh=ODY1NGUzcG40NGY=
The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
Oganacell

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China's AI and semiconductor sector showing strong growth despite US export controls, report says
China's AI and semiconductor sector showing strong growth despite US export controls, report says

The National

time35 minutes ago

  • The National

China's AI and semiconductor sector showing strong growth despite US export controls, report says

China is making strides in semiconductor production deemed crucial for artificial intelligence despite US export controls and diffusion rules, a new report suggests. Recent semiconductor analysis focusing on China says since the start of the year, Beijing has taken inventory of and redistributed some of its semiconductor production tools acquired in recent years, and in turn put them under control of China-based companies best-placed to use them. One of those is Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (Smic), China's largest chipmaker, says the report from Jefferies, an investment banking and capital market firm based in New York. This move, according to the report, and other Beijing strategies, suggests US efforts to thwart China's progress in the continuing AI race have been less than effective. 'Smic is adding capacity in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing for advanced node capacity … they will have nearly 50,000 (microchip) wafers per month of capacity this year,' Jefferies says. Such a forecast runs counter to others by Jeffrey Kessler, US undersecretary of commerce for industry and security. 'Our assessment is that Huawei Ascend chip production capacity for 2025 will be at or below 200,000 and we project that most or all of that will be delivered to companies within China,' Mr Kessler said. He warned that China was working to blunt the impact of any US measures to slow its chip output. The Jefferies report notes that Huawei, which has had a laser-like focus on competing with US tech firms in the AI space, could ultimately be a benefactor of China's semiconductor infrastructure plans. 'If they increase their yield, they can reach serious numbers on Huawei Ascend 910C packages,' the report said. As another way to work around US export controls, Jefferies indicated China was using the semiconductor power of gaming PCs as 'AI inferencing workstations'. US AI tech giants such as Nvidia have been vocal about US export controls, which they have said will ultimately backfire and prevent American technology from reaching the rest of the world, therefore creating a vacuum that will be filled by Chinese companies. Microsoft has also come out swinging against strict US export controls designed to protect the country's lead in AI development, maintaining that they hurt US efforts far more than they help in the race for dominance in the sector. Then, of course, there's the recent developments of DeepSeek, a China-based generative AI chatbot that has boasted about achieving as much as ChatGPT but with far fewer resources. Sceptics have blamed strict US technology exports on that development. The Trump administration has tried to engage some of the countries that might be affected by US export policies, and co-operate on AI and semiconductor efforts. But it has not reversed the broad policy objectives put in place by the Biden administration that sought to keep US AI technology out of China. 'Even if the diffusion rules are abandoned, we are unlikely to see any move that would be more China friendly,' while a complete about face is unlikely, Jefferies said, Those in favour of strict American AI export policies might view the China semiconductor developments as proof of the need to increase enforcement and vigilance. Mohammed Soliman said the report indicates that AI competition and the burgeoning sector overall continues at rapid pace. 'You can see in the supplier data that China isn't slowing down,' said Mr Soliman, director of the strategic technology and cybersecurity programme at the Washington-based Middle East Institute think tank. The US 'tried to slow down's Beijing's AI trajectory, but what we're seeing here is resilience and a domestic ramp up', he said. 'The emerging bottleneck is not just semiconductors but the surrounding systems like electricity, cooling and land,' Mr Soliman added, referring to a portion of the Jefferies report that also gives China an advantage with its approach to AI and the country's ample energy supply.

Gold rises on weaker dollar; investors await US jobs data
Gold rises on weaker dollar; investors await US jobs data

Khaleej Times

time2 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Gold rises on weaker dollar; investors await US jobs data

Gold edged higher on Monday, supported by a weaker U.S. dollar, while investors hunkered down for U.S. economic data due later this week for signals on the Federal Reserve's policy path. Spot gold rose 0.5% at $3,287.64 per ounce as of 1047 a.m. EDT (1447 GMT) after reaching its lowest point since May 29 earlier in the session. The yellow metal was up for the second straight quarter, rising 5.2%. U.S. gold futures was up 0.4% at $3,299.40. "A weaker dollar today is providing a bit of support. But we're still within the well-defined range that has dominated since the middle of May," said Peter Grant, vice president and senior metals strategist at Zaner Metals. The dollar fell against the yen and hit its lowest in almost four years against the euro, as market optimism over U.S. trade deals bolstered bets for earlier interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. However, "Easing of geopolitical tensions and trade worries put some pressure on gold. So,it continues to coil within that range. I still think that we're going to see new all-time highs. $3,800 is a likely objective for the second half of the year," Grant added. On the trade front, the U.S. and China resolved issues over rare earth minerals and magnet shipments last week, renewing hopes for further talks between the two superpowers. Elsewhere, Canada scrapped its digital services tax targeting U.S. tech firms late Sunday to revive stalled trade negotiations with the U.S. Gold, traditionally considered a hedge during times of uncertainty, also thrives in a low-interest rate environment. Investors now await the U.S. ADP employment data, due Wednesday, and Thursday's initial jobless claims data for hints on the central bank's potential policy path. Spot silver was flat at $35.97 per ounce, while platinum eased 0.5% to $1,332.05, and palladium dropped 2.1% to $1,109.78. All the three-metals were headed for gains so far this quarter.

Dollar sags as optimism over US trade deals boosts bets on Fed easing
Dollar sags as optimism over US trade deals boosts bets on Fed easing

Zawya

time3 hours ago

  • Zawya

Dollar sags as optimism over US trade deals boosts bets on Fed easing

The dollar slid on Monday against the yen and was pinned at its lowest in almost four years against the euro, as market optimism over U.S. trade deals bolstered bets for earlier interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. The dollar also languished near a four-year low against sterling and a trough of more than a decade versus the Swiss franc after the White House neared a deal with China, while Canada scrapped a digital services tax to restart stalled talks. Investors interpreted Fed Chair Jerome Powell's testimony to U.S. Congress last week as dovish, after he said rate cuts were likely if inflation did not spike this summer because of tariffs. Bets for at least one quarter-point reduction by September have risen to 93.3%, CME Group's FedWatch Tool shows, from about 83% a week earlier. The Fed's rate-setting committee also meets next month, but does not gather in August. A string of data reports are expected out of the U.S. this week including a key jobs report that could influence market expectations on what the central bank's next move might be. "The balance of risks remains tilted to the downside for the dollar, but our calls for only a gradual slowdown in payrolls and an inflation bump in the coming months imply that markets have overshot on dovish pricing," said Francesco Pesole, an FX strategist at ING. Pesole said that any disappointment in the data this week could prompt another round of dollar selling. An additional weight on the dollar came from Donald Trump's continued assault on Powell, after the U.S. president said on Friday he would "love" it if the Fed chief resigned before his term ends in May. Trump also said he wanted to cut the benchmark rate to 1% from 4.25% to 4.5% now, and reiterated that he planned to replace Powell with a more dovish Fed chairperson. Investors are also keeping an eye on Trump's massive tax cut and spending bill now facing the Senate, which could add $3.3 trillion to the national debt over a decade, according to a Congressional Budget Office estimate. The dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against six major counterparts, is on track for its biggest drop in the first six months to a year since the era of free-floating currencies began in the early 1970s. The index was last flat at 97.181, staying close to a more than three-year low it hit last week. The dollar declined 0.2% to 144.315 yen, while the euro was little changed at $1.1728, not far from a level touched last week that marked its highest since September 2021. The greenback also weakened 0.2% against the Swiss franc and last fetched 0.7970 francs, after dipping on Friday to 0.7955, its lowest level since the Swiss National Bank unexpectedly removed a cap on the currency's value against the euro in January 2015. Sterling was flat at $1.3710, hovering close to Thursday's peak of $1.37701, unseen since October 2021. TRADE DEALS On Friday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Washington and Beijing had resolved issues around shipments of Chinese rare earth minerals and magnets to the United States, further modifying a May deal in Geneva. He also said trade deals with other countries could be done by the U.S. Labor Day holiday on September 1, suggesting some wiggle room on Trump's July 9 deadline to reach deals or face aggressive so-called "reciprocal" tariffs. "Tariff noise is likely to pick up this week as the July 9 deadline approaches. Some minor deals may be announced this week, but we do not think any deals with the EU, China, or Japan are likely to be struck," said Win Thin, global head of markets strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman. Both the yuan and the Canadian dollar were marginally higher following the news on trade deals. (Reporting by Kevin Buckland and Johann M Cherian; Editing by Jamie Freed, Clarence Fernandez, Saad Sayeed and Joe Bavier)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store