Search Results | Showing 151 - 160 of 247 results for "Mario" |
| | | ... worrying. What about the tumble in commodities? There are two ways to look at it. The bearish way: Big Ben's QE3, Super Mario's OMT and action man Kuroda's bigger and wider APP are failing in their quest at reflation. This and, of course, the fall out ... |
| | | | ... help the market settle on a direction. LONDON - European stock markets have slumped again after European Central Bank boss Mario Draghi said there were risks to eurozone economic growth and as investors kept a close watch over escalating Korean tensions. ... |
| | | | ... again, reinforces that aged-old adage on Wall Street, "don't fight the Fed". No, you wouldn't want that -- not when Super Mario "whatever it takes" Draghi's fighting alongside Uncle Ben. It's because of him that benchmark bond yields in the PIS - Portugal ... |
| | | | ... those horror Grexit stories and speculations to appreciate its potential impact on the financial markets. As ECB president Mario Draghi said earlier this month, "Cyprus's economy is a small economy but the systemic risks may not be small." Ergo, Super ... |
| | | | ... and the rise of the anti-austerity parties. But we now have the ECB's Outright Monetary Transactions (OMTs) and the Super Mario's "whatever it takes" pledge - reasons why Italian government bonds didn't spike as much this time around. Admittedly, economic ... |
| | | | ... a significantly visible improvement in the labour market. I don't have to remind you that only last week, ECB President Mario Draghi almost said the same thing, "Our monetary policy remains accommodative... We are far from having an exit in mind". Soon ... |
| | | | ... they're far, far below last year's high of 7.2% and all a,-4 billion worth Italy planned to sell, sold. And why not? Super Mario is here. Last night, ECB President Mario Draghi left no room for interpretation when he said that, "Our monetary policy remains ... |
| | | | ... said in an e-mail. "Such a scenario would be the worst-case outlook." How quickly markets forget. They've forgotten Super Mario's (Draghi not Monti) pledged to whatever it takes and backed up by OMTs. How quickly markets forget fresh French President ... |
| | | | ... now, I thought. Are the days of wine and roses going? Gone? Turns out it was all because of this statement by ECB President Mario Draghi: On the exchange rate, the first thing is that the appreciation is, in a sense, a sign of the return of confidence ... |
| | | | ... open lower following the lead of international markets overnight after comments from European Central Bank (ECB) president Mario Draghi. At 0646 AEDT on Friday, the March share price index futures contract was DOWN 11 points at 4,883. In comments at ... |
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