Search Results | Showing 1041 - 1050 of 1625 results for "Chinese" |
| | | ... cent, or 266.85 points, to 17,989.35 while Shanghai slumped 3.27 per cent, or 78.98 points, to 2,333.41. The mainland Chinese market was weighed by disappointment that leaders had failed to ease monetary policy despite easing inflation and slowing economic ... |
| | | | ... families across the country, helping underpin confidence and supporting Australian jobs." Meanwhile, the OECD predicted that Chinese growth would ease to 8.5 per cent from 9.3 per cent this year, before climbing back to 9.5 per cent in 2012. "Weaker ... |
| | | | ... by retails sales data from the United States over the post-Thanksgiving weekend showing a record amount of money spent. Chinese shares closed up 0.12 per cent. The Shanghai Composite Index, which covers both A and B shares, gained 2.81 points to 2,383.03 ... |
| | | | ... virtuous cycle for the US economy and perhaps then, Americans would stop pointing their fingers at Australians (and the Chinese) for their woes. If not. There's still tumbling Europe to take the fall. ================================= Meet Ben Ong, Financial ... |
| | | | ... and abroad - due to weakness in Europe and US. So what? Exactamondo! The ministry still expects a soft landing for the Chinese economy as this level of industrial output corresponds to GDP growth in the order of between 8% and 9% from 9.2% this year ... |
| | | | ... lonely day for financial markets over the past 24 hours as more bad news gushed out from, almost everywhere. Remember Chinese Vice-Premier Wang Qishan statement that, "An unbalanced recovery would be better than a balanced recession" the other day? Well ... |
| | | | ... speculation. Big trouble... but not in little China. At the annual US-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade (JCCT), Chinese Vice-Premier Wang Qishan warned that, "The one thing that we can be certain of, among all the uncertainties, is that the ... |
| | | | ... The warnings highlighted the possible knock-on effects for Asian investors. Shanghai dealers were little moved by the Chinese central bank's announcement that it would "fine-tune" monetary policy, raising hopes that credit restrictions imposed in the ... |
| | | | ... "There are a number of reasons for this but fundamentally what we are seeing is continued demand and customers such as the Chinese buying commodities everyday while equity investors are taking a far more momentum-driven view. "That has created a spike ... |
| | | | The demise of Europe, the rapid incline of Chinese growth and where Australia stands in all of this, were key topics of discussion for economists at the ASFA conference. According to Mark Thirlwell, director of international economy program, Lowy Institute ... |
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