Except for that stock. Look at apple. A close above 114. 29 would make it a 800 stock on a presplit basis from the time it went back and we are there now at 115 and change. While snow and cold is here across much of the country, maybe the santa claus rally is also here, as well. Well be following all of that in this final hour of trading today. Keeping an eye on gold here. Coming up, Vladimir Putin now hoarding gold . New report says he is. Why . Well speak with will rind shortly in a first on cnbc interview. You wont want to miss this. Do we need the look at the video of him without shirts on . No. Viewer request. And as obamacarols out for year number two, the spotlight is not on the website but how the law was passed and whether or not the people intentionally deceived. The glib comments coming from one of the laws advisers continues to gather steam. We will have the latest on all of that coming up in a little bit here. Yes. Lets get straight to it with the Closing Bell Exchange. Th
Good morning, everyone, im scott mcgrew. One of the key drivers in Silicon Valley is Venture Capital, money to help grow your company in exchange for a piece of the pie. If the value were a living breathing thing then Venture Capital is its blood and sand hill road is its heart, which is what makes the company, appster, so mysterious started by two teenaged australians who havent taken a cent of outside money. The Company Growing so fast it will hire 150 people in San Francisco by the end of the month. The young men who share the title of ceo started their company in melbourne with 3,000. Last year, appster made 10 million in revenue. Josiah humphrey is one half of that team at appster, joined by Quentin Hardee the New York Times and alice trond of quartz. You started the company with 3,000 of your own money. I suppose if we are talking about this littlement amount of money, get specific australian or u. S. . Australian dollars. So 2300 u. S. There you go. And turned it into a company
Vietnamese startups, particularly in the largest cities, are witnessing significant international investments, reflecting the country’s rising prominence and commitment to innovation.
International venture capitalists are still optimistic on Vietnam’s startup scene amidst global headwinds. Vinnie Lauria, managing partner at Golden Gate Ventures, discussed with VIR’s Van Huong the future trends for venture capital funds and how the government could support startups.