Search Results | Showing 1021 - 1030 of 2467 results for "Monetary" |
| | | ... Masaaki Shirakawa published a discussion paper titled, "One Year Under 'Quantitative Easing'" for the BOJ's Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies (IMES) on April 2002, discussing the effectiveness of the BOJ's "quantitative easing" policy implemented ... |
| | | | ... remain, for some time, below the levels that are expected to prevail in the longer run."...and the same old caveat, "monetary policy is by no means on a preset course." Rates could rise faster or slower depending on incoming data. "The same old story ... |
| | | | ... affirm the Reserve Bank of Australia's (RBA) positive take on the domestic labour market. In its February Statement on Monetary Policy, the Australian central bank noted that, "A concentration of economic activity in labour-intensive service sectors ... |
| | | | ... noted recent sharp moves in equity markets in Asia and oil price fluctuations as having a measurable impact on global monetary policy. "And Australia is not immune to that," she added. "Global markets in early 2016 highlighted key factors that will affect ... |
| | | | ... domestically focused companies would likely outperform their global peers. Japan continues to be supported by accommodative monetary policy which will serve as a tailwind to equities. Furthermore, the continued focus on corporate governance should bring ... |
| | | | ... -- with "scope for easier policy, should that be appropriate to lend support to demand" because, "current setting of monetary policy remained appropriate". It is indeed appropriate. "In Australia, the available information suggests that the expansion ... |
| | | | ... welcomed Super Mario Draghi's announcement that the European Central Bank (ECB) would "review and possibly reconsider our monetary policy stance at our next meeting in early March in order to secure a return of inflation rates towards levels below, but ... |
| | | | ... "whatever it takes" Mario started the ball rolling, announcing that the ECB would "review and possibly reconsider our monetary policy stance at our next meeting in early March in order to secure a return of inflation rates towards levels below, but close ... |
| | | | ... reason why financial markets welcomed last night's ECB announcement that it would "review and possibly reconsider our monetary policy stance at our next meeting in early March in order to secure a return of inflation rates towards levels below, but close ... |
| | | | ... made more pronounced by economic agents and financial markets anticipating rising inflation which, in turn, leads to monetary policy tightening to quell inflationary pressures - and acting/trading, accordingly. These days, cheaper oil has become bad. ... |
|