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| | | ... aside Wednesday's comments from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen on the timing of interest-rate hikes and focused on jobless claims data and manufacturing figures that both beat market estimates. On the local market, in the resources sector at 1029 ... |
| | | | ... This becomes especially true when you consider recent macro releases. Better-than-expected US retail sales and weekly jobless claims; improved German trade with both exports and imports growing at their fastest pace in nearly two years in January; better-than-expected ... |
| | | | ... jobs report. At 0820 AEDT on Friday, the March share price index futures contract was up nine points at 5,450. US initial jobless claims for the week ending March 1 fell more than expected, by 26,000 to a three-month low of 323,000. Analysts project ... |
| | | | ... fastest overall improvement in U.S. manufacturing business conditions since May 2010." To be sure, other indicators - weekly jobless claims, leading index - also suggested that the going is going good for the US. But what about the disappointing Philly ... |
| | | | ... also trod water ending at 9,660.05 points, while the CAC 40 in Paris climbed 0.24 per cent to 4,341.10 points. Britain's jobless rate firmed to 7.2 per cent in the quarter to December, official data showed, easing pressure on the Bank of England to raise ... |
| | | | It's the weather, stupid! This was how Wall Street interpreted last disappointing data on retail spending and weekly jobless claims. 'Twas a convenient excuse (rationale?), particularly last night when a skyful of snow dropped on the East Coast about ... |
| | | | ... time (August last year), this wasn't expected to be crossed until early 2016 at the latest. But like America's, Britain's jobless rate (7.1% in November) is one downtick away from the threshold. Like the Fed, it still thinks it's too soon to raise interest ... |
| | | | ... Don't go expecting the Fed to raise interest rates anytime soon. Forget the January employment report that showed the jobless rate falling to 6.6% because "the recovery in the labor market is far from complete" and that the Fed "would be looking at a ... |
| | | | ... in January from 6.7% in the previous month and 7.0% the month before. The good thing about last month's decline in the jobless rate is that it can't be 'blamed' on the participation rate - it increased to 63.0% from 62.8% in December. Also, take a look ... |
| | | | ... the US economy is going. At least that's the interpretation markets gave to the greater than expected 20K decline in US jobless claims to 331K in the week ended last week. Markets expected a fall to 335K from 351K the week before last week or a decline ... |
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