Search Results | Showing 261 - 270 of 287 results for "South Korea" |
| | | ... spends around $3 billion dollars a year on Queensland coal and WA iron ore. Fed up with costly supply bottlenecks, South Korea's biggest steel maker has threatened to take its business elsewhere. More recently mining giant Rio Tinto issued a public threat ... |
| | | | ... Queensland's Premier Beattie to sort out the bottlenecks that are strangling the flow of resources to and from our ports. South Korea's biggest steel maker has already threatened to vote with its feet and take its business elsewhere if Australia fails ... |
| | | | ... bank's 2 per cent target for over a year. Central banks in most countries, with the exception of the United States and South Korea, have all continued raising interest rates throughout 2006 to temper inflation. This and strong corporate profits have ... |
| | | | ... exporters struggling to make ends meet, National Foods isn't one of them. According to Austrade, a change of menu in South Korea has resulted in a tenfold increase in cream cheese exports from Australia. Dunkin Donuts has recently developed a new bagel ... |
| | | | Some key data that the Reserve Bank of Australia will need for its decision on the next interest rate move, being retail trade activity, has just been released and it shows the January rebound of a revised 0.8 per cent which is nearly as high as its ... |
| | | | ... over this time." In Asia, Hong Kong was the most popular choice accounting for 12 per cent of investor money. Macau, South Korea and New Zealand fund flows trailed behind at 4 per cent, 2 per cent and 2 per cent respectively. John Talbot, the group's ... |
| | | | ... Softbank Corp jumped on a brokerage upgrade and steel maker JFE Holdings Inc gained after it said it was in talks with South Korea's Hyundai Steel Co on a broader tie-up. The Nikkei rose 48.53 points to close at 17,470.46. HONG KONG - Blue chips dipped ... |
| | | | ... support the reforms to the IMF membership which in the last few days has increased the voting shares of China, India, South Korea and Mexico. South Korea now has 0.77 per cent of the voting rights which is about half what Australia has although it now ... |
| | | | ... over the next decade. The current meeting of the IMF has all but agreed to strengthen the voting rights of China, South Korea, Turkey and Mexico although 24 developing countries have expressed concerns that there will still be inadequate representation ... |
| | | | ... growth and we see US real estate improving." He also pointed to significant opportunities in other markets, such as South Korea and Germany, but warned a manager needed the resources and the depth to capitalise. Kraska saw few opportunities in the Australian ... |
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