Search Results | Showing 3391 - 3400 of 5948 results for "Banks" |
| | | ... Spanish bond investors, not after Fitch Ratings went on a chopping spree once more. Fitch downgraded another 18 Spanish banks last night. I doubt that this is still news to anyone though. Too, markets were able to rally even after Fitch demoted Spain's ... |
| | | | ... previous day's losses while shrugging off the spectre of more turmoil in Europe. Commodities, industrial equipment makers and banks led the market higher, while United Technologies was the Dow's only loser, falling 0.3 per cent after announcing a new ... |
| | | | ... Billiton was down 33 cents, or 1.03 per cent, to $31.58 and Rio Tinto had fallen 77 cents, or 1.39 per cent, to $54.82. Banks and financial stocks made gains, with Westpac leading the big four lenders higher after adding 30 cents, or 1.47 per cent, to ... |
| | | | Despite an agreement reached to bailout Spanish banks, renewed fears over a Greek exit from the eurozone have caused further uncertainty. "Although news that Spain has requested money to shore up its banking system has been regarded as a positive development... ... |
| | | | ... needed -- 37 billion according to initial IMF estimates (upped to 60-80 bil two days later) - to recapitalise its bankrupt banks. Were it not for the Queen's Birthday holiday us, Australians all, would today be returning what we bought only yesterday. ... |
| | | | ... stocks and euro rally on news Spain will get up to 100 billion euros ($A128 billion) in eurozone loans for its troubled banks has fizzled out, with Spanish and Italian borrowing costs rising further. After posting solid gains early on Monday, London's ... |
| | | | ... one-year lending rate falling to 6.31 per cent. But, locally, financials were sold off, with Westpac leading the big four banks down, losing 19 cents, or 0.91 per cent, to $20.58. By 1032 AEST national turnover reached 262 million securities, worth $729.7 ... |
| | | | ... PBOC reduced borrowing costs - the first since 2008 - taking the benchmark lending rate down to 6.31% from 6.56% and handed banks more discretion in setting the rate they charge on loans and for those they pay on deposits. So why oh why? Why Uncle Ben ... |
| | | | ... more than 2.3 per cent after the European Central Bank said it would keep open its unlimited liquidity loans for euro zone banks at least through 2012. European stocks moved sharply higher, extending gains after recent heavy losses, on hopes EU leaders ... |
| | | | ... everywhere and the threat of an implosion in euroland have placed the Fed, perhaps even the ECB and other major central banks, back into play. We've all heard about the G7's pledge for a coordinated response to Europe's crisis. Yeah, yeah, another empty ... |
|