Stocks photograph

Stocks

Use attributes for filter !
Scientific nameMatthiola
Family Brassicaceae
Higher classification Mustards
Order Mustards and allies
Rank Genus
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2399246
Send edit request

About Stocks


Matthiola, is a genus of flowering plants in the mustard family. It was named after Pietro Andrea Mattioli. This genus contains about 48 to 50 species of annual, biennial and perennial herbaceous plants and subshrubs. Many are cultivated for their heavily scented, colorful flowers.

SVB: Banking stocks remain under pressure

SVB: Banking stocks remain under pressure
Mar 14,2023 7:30 am

... An index of Japanese banking Stocks, known as the Topix Banks Index, plunged by 7...

Sri Lanka: Relief and anxiety as limited fuel supplies resume

Sri Lanka: Relief and anxiety as limited fuel supplies resume
Jul 11,2022 5:10 pm

... " In late June, the authorities suspended sales of petrol and diesel for non-essential vehicles in an attempt to preserve the country s dwindling fuel Stocks...

Sri Lanka: President Rajapaksa to resign after palace stormed

Sri Lanka: President Rajapaksa to resign after palace stormed
Jul 9,2022 8:50 pm

... Sri Lanka: The basicsLast week, the authorities suspended sales of petrol and diesel for non-essential vehicles in an attempt to preserve the country s dwindling fuel Stocks...

Caviar sales soar as more people get a taste for posh fish eggs

Caviar sales soar as more people get a taste for posh fish eggs
Jan 6,2022 4:39 am

... Long considered a delicacy, the industry was historically centred on wild Stocks in the Caspian Sea, which is today surrounded by Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iran and Azerbaijan...

Can I get a free flu jab?

Can I get a free flu jab?
Oct 17,2021 2:22 am

... If you are getting your vaccine on the NHS, experts say you will be offered the one that is most effective for you - depending partly on your age and taking into account vaccine Stocks...

US mulls retaliation to French tech tax

US mulls retaliation to French tech tax
Feb 16,2020 8:48 am

... Prime Minister Boris Johnson has also backed the idea, calling out the so-called FAANG Stocks - Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google - as paying virtually nothing ...

Top stockpicker's flagship fund to be wound up

Top stockpicker's flagship fund to be wound up
Feb 16,2020 7:09 am

... What is the Woodford fund? A stockpicker - or fund manager - analyses the potential of different Stocks to try to decide whether or not they will make a good investment...

Las Vegas shooting victim to reach $735m settlement of MGM Resorts

Las Vegas shooting victim to reach $735m settlement of MGM Resorts
Feb 16,2020 6:49 am

......

Caviar sales soar as more people get a taste for posh fish eggs

Feb 16,2020 6:11 am

When high-end restaurants around the globe had to close their doors during the Covid lockdowns, things didn't look good for The World 's Caviar producers.

Add glitzy events being cancelled, and cruise liners not being able to leave port, and you might think that it spelled disaster for the sellers of wincingly expensive fish eggs.

But the reality has been very different. Online sales are booming as the well-heeled increasingly eat their Caviar At Home .

" I think people in lockdown wanted to enjoy themselves, and everybody decided to spend money on Caviar , either At Home , or in restaurants [when they were able to open again], " says Carla Sora, general manager of Italy's Agroittica Lombarda, Europe 's largest Caviar farm.

But what exactly is Caviar ? It is the salt-cured eggs of numerous species of the Sturgeon fish. Long considered a delicacy, the industry was historically centred on wild Stocks in the Caspian Sea , which is today surrounded by Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iran and Azerbaijan.

But by 2006, severe overfishing in the Caspian of almost all wild Caviar from The Sea . This is still enforced by the Switzerland-based Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.

The ban led to a big growth in the farming of Sturgeon around The World specifically for the production of Caviar . As a result, almost all of the Caviar sold legally worldwide is now from farmed Stocks - Sturgeon reared in man-made lakes and ponds.

This global farmed Sturgeon industry was worth €750m ($848m; £640m) in 2019, according to The Most recent figures from Norwegian firm Kontali, which monitors the worldwide fish farm sector. Meanwhile, the European Union

Ms Sora says that sales at Agroittica Lombarda soared Last Year , especially in the US, where they doubled.

Meanwhile, US firm Sterling Caviar , owner of four farms in California, and the largest Caviar producer in the country, said its sales were up 10% in 2021. In the UK, the sole Sturgeon farmer, Exmoor Caviar , sold out of all of its then stock at the end of 2020.

Kontali analyst, Maren Boe, says that online sales have " been the saving grace" for producers since The Arrival of the coronavirus pandemic.

" By selling smaller tins of Caviar , both in shops and online, producers have been able to sell to consumers looking to increase everyday luxury by buying Caviar to consume At Home , " she says.

Sterling owner, Eugene Fernandez, says that its online sales soared 60% Last Year , helped by launching a new website in August. He thinks that Caviar fans now want to Eat It on a more regular basis.

" I think going forward the Caviar market will probably be Less of an occasional product for holidays, and more something that's bought regularly, " he says.

Ms Sora adds that producers in the US and Europe have also benefitted from Less Caviar exports coming from China, whose farms account for 70% of global production. China's domestic consumption of Caviar has soared in recent years, at the same time as there might have been some staff shortages caused by the pandemic.

is a new series exploring how businesses, trade, economies and working life are changing fast.

But why is Caviar so expensive? At Exmoor, its cheapest tin costs £14, but that only gets you 10 grams - Less than a teaspoon's worth. By contrast, its most expensive costs £4,800 for one kilogram.

Much of The High cost is down to the fact that female Sturgeon take a long time to reach egg-laying maturity. For the Siberian Sturgeon , the main species farmed at Exmoor, this takes between four and five years. For the White Sturgeon at Agroittica Lombarda The Females don't start laying eggs until they are 14 years old.

Critics of Sturgeon farms, such as People for The Ethical Treatment of Animals, argue that farming any fish is cruel, as it keeps them in an artificially confined space. The Female sturgeons are also generally killed before their eggs are harvested.

" Caviar is something no-one needs, " says Sascha Camilli, Peta's senior PR coordinator. " On fish farms, sturgeons are smashed together to swim in crowded, barren tanks, or netted areas polluted with the waste from thousands of fish. "

The Caviar industry counters that the Sturgeon meat is also sold for eating, that farmed Stocks can bolster critically endangered wild numbers, and that the welfare of the fish has to be their main priority.

Exmoor's chief executive Kenneth Benning says that, despite the recent boom, there is no certainty that Caviar sales will continue to rise so strongly because demand for the expensive premium product is greatly affected by economic uncertainty.

" The reality is that disposable income is [likely] going to be Less , particularly in the UK, " he says. " There's a lot of people Out There in The World who basically cannot justify spending £20 on a 10 gram tin.

" We've been on an upward trajectory, but I think that that's from the marketing perspective, and from building customers who've come back to buy The Product again. "

By contrast, Mr Fernandez expects growth to continue to grow rapidly, and Sterling intends to acquire a further 240 acres of land to expand its existing farms.

" We'll do a roll up of another five or 15 farms over The Next three to Four Years and take The Company public, " says Mr Fernandez. " This is going to be a hot sector for The Next five to 10 Years - at least. "

At Exmoor, the plans for The Future are more high tech - it has filed a patent for the development of lab-grown Caviar from Sturgeon stem cells. This technology is already under development for other fish, such as tuna.

" With cellular aquaculture, we believe we can produce The Egg we need within 40 days, " says Mr Benning. " If we had excess demand, we could meet it in a moment.

" In a room that is Less than 300 square meters, we can produce more Caviar than the entire annual global production. If you can provide the products, it's the same genetic material and it doesn't involve the captivity or killing of an animal - it's a no-brainer. "

If all goes to plan, Exmoor - which is working with partners in Switzerland, Germany and Eastern Europe - intends to launch its cell-cultivated Caviar in 2023.

But would this mean the end of the farmed Sturgeon industry? Mr Benning doesn't think so. He says that Some People will always want to buy natural rather than lab-grown Caviar .



Source of news: bbc.com

Stocks Photos

Next Profile ❯