Search Results | Showing 1341 - 1350 of 2932 results for "Little" |
| | | ... 16072 overnight, which is a fresh all time high, while the S&P 500 lost 2.3 points to 1802. Meanwhile, he said there was little major news to move to market and stocks were likely to trade sideways over the next few days. "A lack of headline risk, company ... |
| | | | ... predicted six months before) and to 3.6% (from 4.0%) in 2014. Like I said, so what else is new? Perhaps what's new is that little piece of "data" that received little attention from the press overnight - the US employment cost index (ECI). US Bureau ... |
| | | | ... 1,787.87, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite lost 17.52 (0.44 per cent) at 3,931.55. Stocks traded in a narrow range amid little concrete news and some profit taking after the strong runup since mid-October. JPMorgan's shares gained 0.7 per cent to ... |
| | | | ... transitional session with weak volumes and no great macroeconomic news," said Renaud Murail of Barclays Bourse. "The market had little to bite into." The euro rose to $US1.3427 from $US1.3407 late in New York on Monday. HONG KONG - Asian shares closed ... |
| | | | ... billion-a-month bond-buying program. "It's been a very confusing morning for markets so far and, overall, it looks destined for a little bit of pullback heading into the weekend," IG market strategist Stan Shamu said. Among the local banks, Westpac was ... |
| | | | ... Westpac 31 cents stronger at $34.47. "There was some reassessment of the selling in the banks yesterday, thinking that went a little bit oversold," Mr Farnham said. Telstra was half a cent firmer at $5.145 after the telco giant announced it would list ... |
| | | | ... Standard in June that it was turning away institutional client money because of aggressive fee demands. "We know there is very little upside from cutting fees to get money in the door," Platinum chief investment officer Andrew Clifford said. Superannuation ... |
| | | | ... of processes so that bankers can spend more time with customers." However, this is largely conjecture, as NAB has given little away about the reason for the steady stream of job shedding and offshoring, saying it is a result of "restructuring" to focus ... |
|