Search Results | Showing 141 - 150 of 236 results for "Portugal" |
| | | ... its default occurred now...But Greece is not alone in its insolvency and a default by Athens could trigger defaults by Portugal, Ireland and possibly Spain." We already know that Uncle Sam's economy has slowed and that less than a week from now its bye-bye ... |
| | | | ... sure" but a real one. For the Eurozone has really no viable alternative but to pay the ransom. Greece and Ireland, and Portugal, and Spain and Italy - has it by the cojones. Just looked at what happened in financial markets yesterday when news spread ... |
| | | | ... per cent Debt as a percentage of GDP: 127.1 per cent 10 February 2010 -- Among the three governments -- Spain (Aaa), Portugal (Aa2) and Greece (A2) -- whose public finances are currently the focus of much market speculation, only Greece faces material ... |
| | | | ... - until they don't. This is not out of benevolence but because of fear that once Greece goes, there goes Ireland and Portugal and Spain and Italy - and soon, the entire Eurozone. Oh and in case you've forgotten QE2 is ending this month and emerging market ... |
| | | | ... beats printing the prospect of a Greek default in the headlines. The reasoning being that if Greek defaults, Ireland and Portugal and Spain and Italy are in the hock. And soon it'll be the entire Eurozone. Moody's is the torchbearer on this one - warning ... |
| | | | ... as hopes rose the European sovereign debt crisis can be solved after a 78 billion euros ($A104.71 billion) bailout for Portugal was signed off and talks continued over further help for Greece. In other markets, Singapore closed 0.15 per cent higher ... |
| | | | ... support the case for an imminent cash rate rise. Overnight (AEST), European finance ministers backed an EU-IMF bailout of Portugal worth 78 billion euros ($A104.45 billion). With Greece's debt woes still unresolved, Ms Ong said traders were less willing ... |
| | | | ... with the European sovereign debt crisis. European finance chiefs backed an EU/IMF bailout worth 78 billion euros for Portugal. This is good news. But financial markets don't want to hear any of this - oh, no! not in May! Instead, it's Greece and the ... |
| | | | ... Dominique Strauss-Khan could hit efforts to tame the eurozone debt crisis, as EU finance ministers met to discuss rescues for Portugal and Greece. While Europe's main indices initially dropped sharply on the news, as the day wore on they recovered somewhat ... |
| | | | ... stocks fell on Wednesday after an uninspiring overnight performance from Wall Street and a muted response to news that Portugal had agreed a multi-billion-dollar bailout deal. Seoul ended the day off 0.91 per cent, or 20.07 points, at 2,180.66, while ... |
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