theceomagazine.com | 117
After reportedly being
livid about the Hong
Kong stock exchange
(HKEX) missing out on
the US$25 billion IPO
of Chinese ecommerce
giant Alibaba Group,
HKEX CEO Charles Li
has been pushing to
change the law in the
region to scrap the ‘one
share, one vote’ rule.
Many of China’s tech
billionaires prefer to
regain control of their
companies with a
dual-class share
structure and are
bypassing Hong Kong
in favour of listing
in the US.
BAD FOR THE ENVIRONMENT
Given the elusive nature of cryptocurrency,
it seems hard to fathom the amount of
energy it consumes on a daily basis. How
can something that doesn’t really exist,
except online, harm the environment?
The answer is mining. Bitcoin can only
exist while there are miners to validate
the transactions, and these miners need
to race to solve complex mathematical
puzzles to bid for the right to do so.
As bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies
surge in both price and popularity as an
investment option, enormous amounts of
electricity are needed to fuel the whole
thing. Vast banks of mining computers,
50% of which are said to be in coal-
consuming China, are churning 24/7 to
keep the bitcoin dream alive. According
to Digiconomist’s Bitcoin Energy
Consumption Index, the cryptocurrency
burns through 95,514,951KWh of
electricity per day, which would power
the entire country of Denmark.
C
A
P
T
U
R
ING^ CH
IN
E
S
E
U
NICO
R
N
S
“IF YOU LOOK AT
WHAT YOU HAVE IN
LIFE, YOU’LL ALWAYS
HAVE MORE. IF YOU
LOOK AT WHAT
YOU DON’T HAVE IN
LIFE, YOU’LL NEVER
HAVE ENOUGH.”
- OPRAH WINFREY
¥
36.45
(US$416,000)
MILLION
The highest amount paid for
a Bluefin tuna at Tokyo’s
famous New Year auction in
- Although the tuna was
huge, weighing in at 470kg,
that still equates to around
US$715 per kilogram.
News | INVEST