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| | | The Australian stock market was higher at noon, with banks and mining stocks following a firm lead from Wall Street. At 1200 AEST, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was up 80.9 points, or 1.85 per cent, at 4,451.0 points, while the broader All Ordinaries ... |
| | | | ... delivered to the financial world at the Fed's annual monetary symposium held in Jackson Hole, Wyoming on 27 August 2010. Wall Street stopped... listened... and rejoiced. Neither the US Commerce Department's slicing of its second quarter GDP growth estimate ... |
| | | | ... Exchange, the September share price index futures contract was 22 points weaker at 4,319 on volume of 5,504 contracts. On Wall Street overnight, stocks ended lower after early gains faded from a better report on jobless claims. The Dow Jones Industrial ... |
| | | | ... who when faced with a predicament - any predicament - exclaims, "We'll never make it! We're doomed!" So it is with Wall Street and its view of the US economy these past few days. Pessimism has taken the Dow back down below 10,000 while we slept. And ... |
| | | | The Australian market has received mixed leads from offshore trading overnight. Wall Street stock indices ended lower, as did precious metals, but base metals and oil were up. At 0745 AEST on the Sydney Futures Exchange, the September share price index ... |
| | | | ... inventory of unsold new homes, up from 8.0 months in June. Nevertheless, the shock factor appears to have diminished. Wall Street closed above the zero line overnight. Thankfully, someone somewhere is seeing some good in these awful housing stats. This ... |
| | | | Prospects are looking up for the Australian market when it opens on Thursday morning, with a late surge on Wall Street ending in a positive finish to the day's trade after earlier losses. Precious metals and oil were higher, too, although base metals ... |
| | | | ... 4,332 on volume of 16,006 contracts. CMC Markets market analyst David Taylor said the Australian market had taken on Wall Street's overnight jitters. "We're sick of hearing the same old story out of the US economy and leading into today's session. We ... |
| | | | Another week, another bad start for Wall Street as the bears continue to loiter the financial playground, scaring the bulls away from the equities roller coaster ride and directing them into the bond market fun house. With no major data release out ... |
| | | | Australian markets have received mixed leads from overseas trade overnight. Wall Streets key indices were lower, but commodities were mixed. European markets were higher. At 0652 AEST on the Sydney Futures Exchange, the September share price index contract ... |
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