Search Results | Showing 361 - 370 of 777 results for "Greece" |
| | | ... "fear" index. It closed at 18.97 last night - below the plus 21 reading when speculations of a default in small country Greece was rife and the above 30 print back in November when bigger countries Spain and Italy were thought to soon need a bailout. ... |
| | | | ... points, to 20,562.31 and Shanghai lost 0.94 per cent, or 22.04 points, to end at 2,334.44. Fears that Spain could follow Greece, Ireland and Portugal in needing a bailout sent the cost of the country's debt above six per cent for the first time since ... |
| | | | ... quarter production report. In Australia, the market on Monday closed lower as investors fear that Spain may follow debt-laden Greece down the slippery slope. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index fell 21.0 points, or 0.49 per cent, to 4,302.3 points, while ... |
| | | | ... races, and that certainly caught the market's eye," he said. "Spain now appears the most likely candidate to be the next Greece. "So, overall, global sentiment continues to deteriorate, risk appetite has pared back, equity markets fell, and so did the ... |
| | | | ... closed at just 16.44 overnight - that's not fear. Even it's intra-day high of 17.74 is lower than the plus 20 posted when Greece was in the midst of negotiating its bailout in early March. Having said that Friday night's US non-farm payrolls report for ... |
| | | | ... developed world. Australia's central government debt at 100th place compares to Japan in second place with debt at 210% of GDP, Greece in fourth place at 165%, Singapore in 10th place at 118%, Germany in 22nd place at 82%, the UK in 23rd place at 80% ... |
| | | | ... early trading tone on Wall Street last night. The bloggeratis reported that it's because of Standard & Poor's comment that Greece may need to restructure its debt again "down the road". To this I say "duh"! Is there still anyone out there thinking that ... |
| | | | ... important to re-examine that traditional thinking of just being equity heavy, because if we do see another GFC-like crisis and Greece could be the catalyst for that, it's important to ensure portfolios remain very diversified and very conservative and ... |
| | | | ... year. The other was a minute 0.17% decline in the week ended 10 Feb - the week the question, "will they, won't they," about Greece's second bailout became the stuff of headlines. And speaking of headlines, last Friday's headlines were all about Wall ... |
| | | | ... cash or the 2.3% yield offered by 10-year Treasuries. While the bugbear that is Europe is seemingly at peace now after Greece got its second bailout, there's still Murphy's Law to worry about. Just last night, German Chancellor Angela Merkel reminded ... |
|