Search Results | Showing 351 - 360 of 1647 results for "Commodity" |
| | | ... market collapse. In September, while Grexit went, it was quickly replaced with concerns over slowing China and slumping commodity prices and slowing global growth and low-flation. As our very own RBA governor Glenn Stevens put it after the Fed's no-lift ... |
| | | | ... and domestic economies." "Australia's services economy will be even more crucial as we move from one relying on high commodity prices to one that places a higher value on innovation and human capital," Chalmers said. Chalmers replaces retiring MP Bernie ... |
| | | | ... correction, Chinese equities recorded their biggest one-day dive since June 2007, Germany's bourse fell into a bear market, commodity prices were dropkicked to a 16-year low - reportedly triggered by China's devaluation of the yuan just over a week before ... |
| | | | ... China's one-week hiatus or the Fed's decision to maintain policy settings where they are or the resurgence in equity and commodity markets or all of the above but it seems the times. they're not a-changin'. This, at least, could be gleaned from two central ... |
| | | | ... saw that it wasn't good. Yes folks, financial markets were doing backflips again overnight on concerns over dropping commodity prices on concerns over slowing China. Those concerns grew after Beijing's National Bureau of Statistics reported that declining ... |
| | | | ... widening pretty sharply. There is fear defaults may be increasing. We think that's going to be happening in the energy and commodity space, without doubt, but this minor move up, let's say towards 3%, is not going to be enough to invalidate the movement ... |
| | | | ... 7.4% from 7.8% -- and Southeast Asia - down to 4.4% from 4.9%. And where the Fed (strong US dollar) and China (weak commodity demand), there surely are lower commodity prices and the ill effects they have on commodity exporting countries, including Australia. ... |
| | | | ... financial markets, continued capital flight out of China and emerging markets, an even stronger US dollar which depresses commodity prices even more, slowing the global economy and pressure on inflation. All these threaten to come back and bite Uncle ... |
| | | | ... to resume - as the Fed is still likely to hike at some point, the RBA is likely to remain under pressure to cut and commodity prices remain weak - so there is no change to my view that the $A will fall to around $US0.60 in the next 12 months or so." |
|