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| | | The Australian stock market has received a positive lead from Wall Street, despite the turmoil in the financial sector. Major US indices finished over one per cent higher, although gold, silver, oil and copper were down. At 0737 AEST, the Sydney Futures ... |
| | | | ... was down 129 points to 4698, on a volume of 68,262 contracts. Investors ran for cover after the emergency sale of Wall Street stalwart Merrill Lynch to Bank of America for $US50 billion ($A61 billion) in stock and Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11 ... |
| | | | Australian markets have received a strong negative lead from Wall Street, after US shares went into a freefall on Monday over financial market uncertainty revolving around the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy and the fire sale of Merrill Lynch. At 0722 AEST ... |
| | | | Australian markets have received a mixed lead from Wall Street, although the price of oil fell again in a special trading session overnight whilst gold and silver rose. At 0722 AEST, the Sydney Futures Exchange's September Share Price Index contract ... |
| | | | ... cent to $18.65, while mid-tier New Guinea producer Oil Search lost 12 cents, or 2.11 per cent to $5.56. Stocks on Wall Street climbed overnight, as investors snapped up some of the financial sector's stronger players and pumped money into the materials ... |
| | | | Australian markets have received a strong lead from Wall Street equities overnight, which finished almost 1.5 per cent higher. Oil, silver and gold were down, while copper was marginally higher. At 0757 AEST, the Sydney Futures Exchange's September ... |
| | | | ... following investment bank Lehman Brothers' announcement of plans to sell off key assets after posting more losses. Wall Street rose marginally overnight, while oil, gold and silver continued their slide. Across the Tasman, the New Zealand Reserve Bank ... |
| | | | The Australian market has received a mixed lead, with Wall Street up -- albeit just marginally -- while oil, gold and silver were down again. Major European bourses fell as OPEC decided to cut oil production in what was interpreted as an attempt to ... |
| | | | The Australian stock market was awash in red at noon, down almost two per cent, mirroring heavy losses on Wall Street overnight on fears that the US's fourth-largest investment bank Lehman Brothers is running out of options to raise capital. At 1207 ... |
| | | | ... offshore investing is lost when the Australian equity market's performance, more often than not, runs parallel to that of Wall Street. Admittedly, institutional investors are aware of the performance comparison but are unable to take full advantage of ... |
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