Search Results | Showing 141 - 150 of 209 results for "Hole" |
| | | ... hints of QE and/or ECB bond purchases - until TGIF when us all will be allowed to peer at what's at the other side of the hole, Jackson Hole, that is. But while the headlines continue to be littered with negative stories about the European sovereign ... |
| | | | ... minutes are set for release this week, methinks financial markets would be more eager to see what's at the other side of the hole - the Jackson Hole symposium, that is - at the end of this month. But if global dynamics stay the way they are, don't expect ... |
| | | | ... and the S&P 500 centimetered down by 0.01%. And I thought last week was the boring-est week of the year? Next stop Jackson Hole symposium at the end of August where Big Ben could pre-announce the much-awaited launch of the QE3 - like he did QE2 two years ... |
| | | | The ASX has finalised new listings rules for small and medium sized companies following industry feedback on original proposals released in April. The ASX yesterday said the amendments strike a more complete balance between protecting shareholder interest ... |
| | | | ... $250bn in tax revenues every year. The report's author told the BBC that the study was like "measuring the size of a black hole", and that his findings were conservative. The Price of Offshore Revisited was written for the Tax Justice Network by James ... |
| | | | ... spree, driving up the value of American equities. Bush-era tax cuts also end on 31 December, creating a $600bn budget black hole dubbed 'the fiscal cliff' that if not dealt with, has some analysts predicting as much as three to five percentage points ... |
| | | | ... just last night, the Cypriots. Then again, if the situation is so dire, that there's no way Europe can dig itself out of the hole they buried themselves in, why have stock markets fallen by only so much. The S&P 500 closed 1.6% lower last night and the ... |
| | | | ... to worry about. Europe being cactus had already been priced in long time ago. Japan has never really come out of the black hole it dug for itself since the mid-1990s. China's seemingly resurgent inflation is mainly due to rocketing food prices and is ... |
| | | | ... austerity measures being imposed on Athens risk a recession so deep that Greece will not be able to climb out of the debt hole over the course of a new three-year, 170 billion euros bail-out." Think FT meant US$ but why quibble over the currency sign ... |
| | | | ... point, there are more doubts than benefits. Remember Greece's reported 6% of GDP fiscal deficit that turned out to be a 12% hole and recently, Papandreou's referendum/no referendum backflip? And then there's Evangelos Venizelos, the country's finance ... |
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