Search Results | Showing 1881 - 1890 of 3708 results for "China" |
| | | ... appointed an Asian markets veteran as research adviser. Based in Hong Kong, Nial Gooding will be providing advice on the China portion of the fund's portfolios. Gooding boasts 30 years industry experience and has worked across fixed income, equity and ... |
| | | | ... per cent, or 320.51 points, to 23,091.95. Shanghai fell 0.24 per cent, or 5.68 points, to 2,318.61 despite data showing China's exports had surged a much better-than-expected 21.8 per cent on year in February, even with the week-long Lunar New Year holiday ... |
| | | | ... for the third straight session overnight. The Dow added 33.25 points, or 0.23 per cent, to 14,329.49. Economic data from China is likely to influence the local market on Friday, with trade figures expected early in the afternoon, local time. More important ... |
| | | | ... in spite of the spooks that littered the journey on the way to where we are now. Sovereign debt crisis and euro collapse, China hard landing, double-dips, triple dips, 'new normal' (forever slow growth), Jasmine Revolution, Japanese earthquake/tsunami/nuclear ... |
| | | | ... HONG KONG - Asian markets climbed following a big sell-off in the previous session, with Shanghai leading the rebound as China's annual parliamentary gathering kicked off. Traders also took heart from a rally on Wall Street that saw the Dow close within ... |
| | | | ... The Aussie bourse is also following positive leads out of Wall Street, where markets looked through jitters in Asia about China's moves to tighten its property market. "It reflects the significant increase in volatility in the last couple of weeks with ... |
| | | | ... was America and fears of Fed unwinding. Last week it was Italy and scares of a European debt crisis flashback. This week, China's the culprit. It'll be slowing again. No, make that a hard landing while you're at it for what else could send most markets ... |
| | | | ... billion ($A83 billion) in spending cuts set to take effect in the world's biggest economy and concern grew about prospects for China, the second biggest. British stocks were also pulled lower by poor survey data that signalled a fresh recession on the ... |
| | | | ... believes that support US for Japanese business and the Japanese publics desire to overturn a negative view of their country in China will be supportive of pro-business policies. After more than 20 years of a protracted deflationary environment, inflation ... |
| | | | ... but the MSCI World Index remains up by 5.2% this year, outperforming those of the BRICs whose share markets, except for China's (up 1.9%), are all in the red this year to date. Russian shares declined by 0.3% while India's equity market is down 2.2%. ... |
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