Search Results | Showing 11 - 19 of 19 results for "PMI data" |
| | You wouldn't miss it even if you tried. Markit Economics did a dump - a dump of fresh PMI data, that is - but after a brief knee-jerk reaction from the financial markets, everything went back to where they were. As they should. This is because the November ... |
| | | ... Markets analyst Stan Shamu said the Australian share market was taking a breather ahead of the HSBC manufacturing flash PMI data due out at 1145 AEST on Thursday. "It's just mixed news across the board. A lot of materials stocks are struggling after ... |
| | | ... Markets analyst Stan Shamu said the Australian share market was taking a breather ahead of the HSBC manufacturing flash PMI data due out at 1145 AEST on Thursday. "It's just mixed news across the board. A lot of materials stocks are struggling after ... |
| | | ... that hard considering what's coming up the next couple of days," Mr Lucas said. "It is US (jobs) data week and we've got PMI data from across the globe." All the major stocks on the market were higher. BHP Billiton was leading the way, up 50 cents, or ... |
| | | ... numbers were likely distorted by the Lunar New Year. The Wall Street Journal Marketwatch quoted them saying that, the "... PMI data are heavily seasonally adjusted, but the seasonal adjustment is quite inaccurate due to the different timing of Chinese ... |
| | | ... 49.37 (1.36 per cent) to 3,675.74. "The major averages settled near their highs as better-than-expected manufacturing PMI data out of China, the eurozone, and the US helped entice investors into bidding up global equities," Briefing.com said in a market ... |
| | | ... Australian market looks set to open lower following falls on major international markets on the back of disappointing April PMI data for China and the eurozone and as some US earnings results missed expectations. At 0755 AEST on Tuesday, the June share ... |
| | | ... the commodity boom? It is demand from emerging markets and a big part of it is China." Referring to yesterday's poor PMI data weighing on the Australian dollar, Habel said that acknowledging the high exposure to China already existent within investor ... |
| | | ... unbalanced recovery would be better than a balanced recession" the other day? Well, yesterday's surprisingly negative PMI data has spurred speculation that China could join the others to form a "balanced recession". HSBC's China manufacturing PMI fell ... |
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