China Water Affairs Group Ltd
XMUN:CUBB
Decide at what price you'd be comfortable buying and we'll help you stay ready.
|
C
|
China Water Affairs Group Ltd
XMUN:CUBB
|
HK |
|
Smith & Nephew PLC
NYSE:SNN
|
UK |
|
T
|
Telefonica SA
OTC:TELFY
|
ES |
|
Biogen Inc
NASDAQ:BIIB
|
US |
|
Karora Resources Inc
TSX:KRR
|
CA |
|
T
|
TAG Immobilien AG
XHAM:TEG
|
DE |
|
Tantalus Systems Holding Inc
OTC:TGMPF
|
CA |
|
Olympia Financial Group Inc
F:H1B
|
CA |
|
P
|
Proto Labs Inc
F:PRZ
|
US |
|
Norbit ASA
OTC:NBITF
|
NO |
|
Tesmec SpA
OTC:TSMCF
|
IT |
|
A
|
American Superconductor Corp
F:AMS1
|
US |
|
First Nordic Metals Corp
F:HEG0
|
CA |
|
B
|
Bank of America Corp
SGO:BAC
|
US |
|
Brunello Cucinelli SpA
F:8BU0
|
IT |
|
B
|
Boom Logistics Ltd
ASX:BOL
|
AU |
|
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp
OTC:NPPXF
|
JP |
|
Aftermath Silver Ltd
F:FLM1
|
CA |
|
T
|
TJX Companies Inc
F:TJX
|
US |
China Water Affairs Group Ltd
China Water Affairs Group is a China-based water utility business. It builds, owns, and runs water supply and wastewater treatment projects, then sells treated water and sewerage services to cities, local governments, industrial users, and households in the areas it serves. It also takes part in related water infrastructure work such as pipeline networks and project development. The company makes money mainly from charging for water supply and sewage treatment. In some projects it can also earn construction and connection fees tied to building or expanding local water networks. That means its income comes from essential public services rather than from consumer branding or discretionary spending. What makes this business different is that it sits in the middle of a long-life local utility network. Once a city or district depends on its pipes, treatment plants, and service agreements, the company becomes part of everyday municipal infrastructure. For investors, that makes it a utility-style business focused on regulated, local demand and long-term service contracts.
China Water Affairs Group is a China-based water utility business. It builds, owns, and runs water supply and wastewater treatment projects, then sells treated water and sewerage services to cities, local governments, industrial users, and households in the areas it serves. It also takes part in related water infrastructure work such as pipeline networks and project development.
The company makes money mainly from charging for water supply and sewage treatment. In some projects it can also earn construction and connection fees tied to building or expanding local water networks. That means its income comes from essential public services rather than from consumer branding or discretionary spending.
What makes this business different is that it sits in the middle of a long-life local utility network. Once a city or district depends on its pipes, treatment plants, and service agreements, the company becomes part of everyday municipal infrastructure. For investors, that makes it a utility-style business focused on regulated, local demand and long-term service contracts.