Search Results | Showing 141 - 150 of 248 results for "Tonight" |
| | | ... overseas lead. "I think we've reversed yesterday's slump," Mr Smith said. "(But) I have no doubt we're waiting for the US tonight and I think probably that's what Shanghai will be looking at, as well." Local stocks had no overnight lead from Wall Street ... |
| | | | "Sleigh bells ring, are you listening, In the lane, snow is glistening A beautiful sight, We're happy tonight. Walking in a winter wonderland.... Later on, we'll conspire, As we dream by the fire To face unafraid, The plans that we've made, Walking ... |
| | | | ... perhaps not. At least not with the US Federal Reserve trying to engineer a return to inflation in America through QE2. Later tonight, we'll find out how much the Fed will be paying to keep deflation away - US$500 bil? US$750 bil? US$1 tril? US$2 tril? ... |
| | | | ... the US Federal Reserve would soon engage in further monetary expansion. This speculation would gather more momentum if tonight's US overall non-farm payrolls report come in weaker than consensus expectations for zero growth in September. Private sector ... |
| | | | ... said investors seemed indifferent, with no material developments overnight to push the market higher. Data from the US tonight on jobless claims and existing home sales may provide some impetus, he said. On Wall street overnight, stocks closed lower ... |
| | | | ... of commentary from US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke on Tuesday night. "The FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) tonight release their commentary in terms of monetary policy. There may be a few people waiting to see what type of commentary Bernanke ... |
| | | | ... Open Market Committee (FOMC) will be asking themselves the same question when they sit and deliberate on monetary policy tonight. What they decide to do, or not do, is still anybody's guess. But gold's going gaga in the past few days suggests that financial ... |
| | | | ... financial and materials sectors. "There's probably a bit of nervousness ahead of this big GDP number they (the US) have got tonight and Bernanke's speech (US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke)," Mr Potter said. "I think a lot of people are taking ... |
| | | | ... "just below" 10,000. It would be back to where it was in March 2009 - somewhere around 6,500 points. We'll get more clues tonight whether we're really headed back into the abyss when Big Ben addresses world central bankers at Jackson Hole, Wyoming. He's ... |
| | | | ... bearing more funny money tomorrow! More free money whoopee! Wall Street rose last night salivating over expectations that tonight's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) would conclude with a kinder surprise - a.k.a. quantitative easing. ... |
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