Search Results | Showing 1331 - 1340 of 3708 results for "China" |
| | | ... quantitative easing initiatives implemented over the last few months: "We're seeing it in Europe, Japan and, oddly enough, in China. These markets are really beginning to pick up steam, while in the US QE has just wound down, so you have the opposite ... |
| | | | ... could be worth up to $200 billion by 2030," he said. "This would represent a tenfold increase on current levels, making China Australia's largest source of FDI. This investment is creating Australian jobs. And it is allowing us to upgrade infrastructure ... |
| | | | ... stimulus measures. HONG KONG - Asian markets have finished higher on Thursday, with Shanghai rallying on hopes for further China stimulus while Japanese shares were boosted by a weaker yen as the US dollar reversed earlier losses. The gains follow a ... |
| | | | ANZ chief executive Mike Smith believes any deflationary effect on China in the near future will be "quite limited". The comment came at a recent Bloomberg event attended by some of Australia's top business leaders, and where Smith addressed ANZ's plans ... |
| | | | ... trouble. Australians all, let's not rejoice for the bad news is piling up on us... one after the other. There's slowing China - GDP decelerated to 7.0% in the first quarter from 7.4% in 2014 - and is pushing the price of our number one export, iron ore ... |
| | | | ... 19,869.76 and Sydney fell 0.64 per cent, or 38.15 points, to 5,908.4. Seoul rose 0.39 per cent, or 8.24 points, to 2,119.96. China said its economy expanded 7.0 per cent in the first three months of 2015, slightly better than forecast in an AFP survey ... |
| | | | ... prices. Lennox said afternoon trade would largely depend upon Chinese GDP and production figures. Official figures out of China just after noon AEST showed that its economy expanded seven per cent year-on-year in the first quarter, slumping to a new ... |
| | | | ... share market has opened lower in the wake of negative offshore leads and lingering disappointment over trade figures out of China. "Offshore leads weren't great. In combination with that, there's a little bit of negativity from the China data from yesterday," ... |
| | | | Crrr-unch! That's the sound of China's trade numbers collapsing. And it was a thunderous thud, Virginia. The country's trade surplus shrank to US$3.08 billion in March from $60.6 bil in February and expectations for a US$40 bil print. With imports dropping ... |
| | | | ... In foreign exchange, the European single currency fell to $US1.0583 ($A1.38) from $US1.0599 late in New York on Friday. China's customs administration said exports fell by a surprising 15 per cent year-on-year in March, while imports tumbled 12.7 per ... |
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