Search Results | Showing 1141 - 1150 of 1260 results for "Eurozone" |
| | | ... decline. Prices paid, production, new orders, backlog of orders, supplier deliveries and employment all posted gains. The Eurozone's PMI increased to 52.4 last month - the highest since January 2008 --from 51.6 in December as European companies increase ... |
| | | | ... pressure for the past 10 days, weighed down by fears over the fate of debt-ridden economies in Greece and several other eurozone members as well as the prospect of tighter credit conditions in China. In London, the FTSE 100 index of leading shares added ... |
| | | | ... fine-tuning, not tightening) and there are the PIGIS' (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Italy, Spain) debt problem for the Eurozone. And news out overnight showed that the UK unconvincingly stepped out of recession after six straight quarters of contraction. ... |
| | | | ... scheduled to stop buying mortgaged-back securities and long-term US Treasuries by end-March. Talks of withdrawal in the Eurozone are gathering pace. It's the same for the UK, despite an economy still in retreat. It may not matter much for China and Australia ... |
| | | | ... Sentiment on European exchanges earlier in the day had been supported by the European Central Bank's decision to hold eurozone interest rates at a record low 1.0 per cent while starting a process to withdraw some of the special financial measures it ... |
| | | | ... highly probable. Still, others remain unconvinced. And so LUV was born. L - is for the developing market consensus on the Eurozone. The rationale? The European Central Bank (ECB) is becoming more and more impatient about withdrawing stimulus. At week's ... |
| | | | ... The rising yen is exacerbating the deflation in the country by making import prices cheaper. And now we also have the Eurozone. Yes, it too came out of recession in the third quarter. ECB President Trichet warned that, "there are still many uncertainties ... |
| | | | ... remains fluid. There's still a big question mark still hanging around the big economies of the US, the UK, Japan and the Eurozone. And this could still all end in tears. But while China -- the economy that matters most to Australia - continue to grow ... |
| | | | ... again, let's take a look at what's happening across the Atlantic. Like their counterparts in most part of the globe, Eurozone equities have welcomed the massive liquidity injections by both fiscal and monetary authorities. Equity markets in the Euro ... |
| | | | ... modest gains on Thursday, powered by positive US employment data and upbeat comments from the European Central Bank on eurozone growth prospects. In London, the FTSE 100 index rose 17.75 points, or 0.35 per cent, to close at 5,125.64. FRANKFURT - In ... |
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