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| | | ... Crimea and Georgia before it - or let Putin have it. Financial markets will continue to be on the defensive around until the big boys kiss and make up with finality. This is because the uncertainty it creates over the global outlook grows the longer ... |
| | | | ... use to make decisions is unstructured, and to me unstructured means unusable," she said. The answer to this, she said, is big data analytics. "You should be scared if you're not using big data analytics," she warned delegates. She said without big data ... |
| | | | ... cents to $38.57, while Rio Tinto had gained $1.04 to $67.79 and Fortescue Metals had lifted eight cents to $4.62. Among the big banks, Westpac was up 25 cents at $33.22, ANZ had lifted 29 cents to $32.73, NAB had picked up 27 cents to $34.19 and Commonwealth ... |
| | | | ... Putin at his "humanitarian mission" to Ukraine word. Good news (for now) on geo-politics aside, there's also good news on that big country that has been conspicuous in its silence on geo-politics - and its name is China. Weekend news reported that China's ... |
| | | | The next big wave of advice will come from a business model that is gaining traction overseas, but is yet to be fully embraced in Australia. For the early adopters, it could be the foundation of a sustainable and exciting growth for their practices. ... |
| | | | ... cents to $66.69 as it doubled its half-year profit in its results released after the market closed on Thursday. But the other big miners started the day down, with BHP Billiton falling 41 cents to $38.06 and Fortescue dropping six cents to $4.66. The ... |
| | | | ... where GDP has grown faster than anywhere in the world but the market has been one of the poorest performers," he said. "The big question is how you capitalise on growth stories," he finished. |
| | | | I'll be ROFL - rolling on the floor laughing - this morning if not for the fact that it's the big boys playing with nuke toys that are escalating their tit-for-tat aggression... even if they hurt themselves in the process. Instead, me, myself and I ... |
| | | | The Australian market looks set to open lower after international bourses extended their declines with investors still concerned over conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine and Argentina's debt default. At 0802 AEST on Monday, the September share ... |
| | | | ... and Fortescue up one cent to $4.70. Rio Tinto was down 10 cents to $65.72 before the release of its half year results. The big four bankers all opened in negative territory. Commonwealth Bank was down 20 cents at $81.51, Westpac was eight cents lower ... |
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