Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 15 results for "Yum" |
| | ... exposures," Mitchell said. "Some of the e-commerce beneficiaries like Alibaba, or a high quality restaurant operator like Yum China, which operates the KFC and Pizza Hut business in China. It's the largest chain restaurant operator in China." Mitchell ... |
| | | ... between 15 to 35 global securities. "Companies such as Alphabet (the owner of Google), Apple, Microsoft, Nestle, PayPal and Yum! Brands are world leaders in their fields that have no equivalents on the ASX. Australians are familiar with these names because ... |
| | | ... holding up to35 global securities. "Companies such as Alphabet (the owner of Google), Apple, Microsoft, Nestle, PayPal and Yum! Brands are world leaders in their fields that have no equivalents on the ASX. Australians are familiar with these names because ... |
| | | ... between 15 to 35 global securities. "Companies such as Alphabet (the owner of Google), Apple, Microsoft, Nestle, PayPal and Yum! Brands are world leaders in their fields that have no equivalents on the ASX. Australians are familiar with these names because ... |
| | | ... Yes Bank, ICICI Bank and ITC, Mexico's Walmart De Mexico, Universal Robina in the Philippines, Mr Price in South Africa and Yum China and AIA in China. |
| | | ... cashless society; and the share of global advertising spend moving online. Rounding out the top five positions, investment in YUM!, the owner of KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, is a play partly on the growth in consumption in China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia ... |
| | | ... Composite Index advanced 34.56 (0.86 per cent) to 4,031.52. Sterling results from Michael Kors Holdings and restaurant chain Yum Brands gave investors occasion to buy after stocks lost more than two per cent on Monday. Mace Blicksilver, director of Marblehead ... |
| | | ... Remember that number bandied about at which China could grow no less or there'll be riots on the streets of Beijing and other yum cha-eating cities because many millions will lose their jobs? That number was 8.0%. What happened to this number? Well hello! ... |
| | | In my book last week has gotta be one of the boring-est weeks of 2012. But with most equity markets ending on the plus side, boring is good enough for me. Reports that the US economy created 163,000 jobs in July - better than the 100K expected - sent ... |
| | | The still-unfolding disaster in Japan is sapping the optimism off financial markets. Stock markets rallied yesterday but it looks like they'll be down again today. Volatility is the order of today and would remain so for as long as strong aftershocks ... |
|