Newspaper icon
The latest issue of Financial Standard now available as an e-newspaper
READ NOW

Search Results

Showing 321 - 330 of 412 results for "Kingdom"

Danger, Will Robinson!

BENJAMIN ONG  |  THURSDAY, 23 APR 2009
... rising by 0.5 per cent. The danger I speak of is the action taken by the UK Treasury in its annual budget. In unveiling the Kingdom's budget, Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling announced that the Treasury would raise taxes on people earning ...

The biggest loser

BENJAMIN ONG  |  MONDAY, 16 FEB 2009
... than forecasts for a 2.6 per cent decrease in Japanese real GDP and the 2.8 per cent contraction predicted for the United Kingdom. However, given its fourth quarter economic scorecard, Eurozone growth for 2009 may yet be revised lower. But with the economic ...

Worst of the worst

BENJAMIN ONG  |  FRIDAY, 30 JAN 2009
... countries to contract by 2 per cent this year. Of these developed countries, the IMF foresees that the economy of the United Kingdom would suffer the worst contraction. It expects UK real GDP growth of minus 2.8 per cent in 2009 - revised from negative ...

Market Wrap - Midday

AAP  |  FRIDAY, 23 JAN 2009
... MORE rlm/pe Mr Potter said the domestic financial sector had been spooked by talks of bank nationalisation in the United Kingdom. "It's doing nothing for confidence," he said. At 1205 AEDT, National Australia Bank had lost 58 cents, or 3.2 per cent ...

Gung Hay Fat Choy

BENJAMIN ONG  |  FRIDAY, 23 JAN 2009
... off - a year of Harvest. This is comforting to hear especially given the recent statistics released out of the 'Middle Kingdom.' China's economic growth reportedly fell to 6.8 per cent in the fourth quarter of last year. This is a sharp slowdown from ...

China syndrome

BENJAMIN ONG  |  THURSDAY, 11 DEC 2008
... by the global financial crisis has knocked out the economies of the United States, the Eurozone, Japan and the United Kingdom to name a few. By its sheer size and ongoing industrialisation and urbanisation, China was widely expected to withstand these ...

Four Bad 'Bers'

BENJAMIN ONG  |  MONDAY, 1 DEC 2008
... real and that their stockings remain filled with toxic debts. This week the central banks of the Eurozone, the United Kingdom and Australia will meet to deliberate on monetary policy settings for their respective economies. Given the persistent and worsening ...

The good oil

BENJAMIN ONG  |  WEDNESDAY, 12 NOV 2008
... continue to slow in the coming months. This is not surprising given that the big economies of the United States, the United Kingdom, the Eurozone and Japan are on the precipice of a recession. In addition, even China is feeling the pinch. Slower economic ...

Mine's bigger than yours

BENJAMIN ONG  |  MONDAY, 10 NOV 2008
... cent. Partial fourth quarter indicators and anecdotal evidences suggest that further weakness lie ahead for the United Kingdom. This implies that interest rates there are set to fall further. When this happens, particularly when the BoE's policy rate ...

The luckier country

BENJAMIN ONG  |  THURSDAY, 23 OCT 2008
... contrasts with market expectations for a recession in the economies of the United States, Japan, the Eurozone and the United Kingdom, among others. But despite this benign forecast for Australia, there is still a risk that into a recession the country ...