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Juliane Zielonka

  • Healthcare
  • Technology

Born in Bielefeld, she studied German, English and psychology. The emergence of the Internet in the early '90s led her from university to training in graphic design and marketing communications. After years of agency work in corporate branding, she switched to publishing and learned her editorial craft at Hubert Burda Media.

She discovered the world of the stock market in 1998. With her passion for innovation and digitalization, she focused on companies from the technology and healthcare sectors early on.

Analyzing fundamentals, business models and their scalability is as much her passion as thinking into complex future scenarios. Since 2019, she has regularly organized stock exchange roundtables and attended international investment events to deepen and pass on her knowledge.


Commented by Juliane Zielonka

Commented by Juliane Zielonka on February 3rd, 2022 | 11:56 CET

dynaCERT, AMD, Alibaba - Clean air for big growth

  • Innovations
  • Technology
  • Hydrogen

Pictures of the truck protest convoys in Canada also illustrate on the sidelines the extent of air pollution caused by CO2 exhaust gases. The company dynaCERT, also from Canada, offers its patented retrofit solution for combustion engines to counter these emissions and has enormous growth potential. AMD continues to grow through its merger with Chinese Company Xilinx. Alibaba continues to expand its business with cloud solutions. We take a look at three exciting candidates.

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Commented by Juliane Zielonka on

Altech Advanced Materials, Volkswagen, FREYR Battery - Investment opportunity in the future energy storage market

  • Technology
  • Batteries
  • renewableenergies
  • Electromobility

The booming energy storage market will bring investments of USD 620 billion over the next 22 years, according to BloombergNEF. In this context, the focus shifts to Heidelberg-based Altech Advanced Materials AG, which specializes in emission-free energy storage solutions. Their innovative approach to generating energy from an abundant raw material in Europe - salt - is worth highlighting. Volkswagen is also striving for seamless supply in the electrification market and is re-sorting its semiconductor supply chains with the help of German taxpayer money. At Norway's FREYR Battery, quarterly results are in, surprising analysts.

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