Search Results | Showing 1151 - 1160 of 3562 results for "European" |
| | | ... positive note after the Easter break. "The pipe-opener was the American market last night, which was pretty solid given that European markets were closed," Mr Heffernan said. "The American market is powered by the fact that we've got the reporting season ... |
| | | | ... to the London team. AMP Capital has started a global external and internal recruitment process and in the meantime the European portion of the team's coverage and exposures will be managed by existing secondary analysts on Europe along with the whole ... |
| | | | ... sales jumped 1.1 per cent, better than expected. Citi's first-quarter earnings also bested analyst forecasts. LONDON - European stock markets closed higher, recouping earlier losses as traders shook off concerns about the crisis in Ukraine on the back ... |
| | | | ... day when Chinese trade data disappointed and suggested more weakness in the world's second-biggest economy. LONDON - European stocks ended mixed after a topsy-turvy trading session, as weak Chinese data outweighed a triumphant return to the bond markets ... |
| | | | ... fund managers to more easily distribute their products across Europe and Asia to offshore investors.A According to the European Fund and Asset Management Association, UCITS product structures represent 71% of the total European funds management industry. ... |
| | | | ... not much happened last week. Yes Virginia, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) kept policy unchanged - as expected. The European Central Bank (ECB) guided forward but also stayed on the sidelines. US non-farm payrolls added another 192K in March from ... |
| | | | ... the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) - something that, arguably, Australians need even more than United States and European investors, because of the comparatively small size of the Australian market. "Investors in the developed world, which is now ... |
| | | | ... got it wrong. Think it's safe to say that these two economists (or four, in case they aren't the same two) expected the European Central Bank (ECB) to announce that it's 24-member Governing Council has decided to ease monetary policy in the region this ... |
| | | | ... global financial crisis started in 2008. Milan soared by 1.38 per cent and Madrid by 1.42 per cent. As expected, the European Central Bank kept its gunpowder dry again, holding its key "refi" interest rate at an all-time low of 0.25 per cent for the ... |
| | | | ... per cent to 9,623.36. Madrid slid 0.26 per cent and Milan slumped 1.02 per cent after posting strong gains on Tuesday. "European markets were directionless today, in anticipation of the European Central Bank rate announcement and press conference tomorrow," ... |
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