Search Results | Showing 21 - 30 of 153 results for %22China Construction Bank%22 |
| | ... 3.0% it predicted earlier, citing downside risks that include: Brexit uncertainties and rising corporate credit levels in China. |
| | | ... already deals or deals still being negotiated, with Thailand, Singapore, New Zealand, Chile, ASEAN, Malaysia, Korea, Japan, China and the US. Indonesia has a population of more than 255 million, 10-times that of Australia, and its middle class of 45 ... |
| | | ... detail, it's worth noting that there are already 360 HSR trains operating around the world although these are dominated by China, Japan, France, Germany and Spain, according to the US HSR Association. The US HSRA reports that in 2015 1.6 billion passengers ... |
| | | ... Future readings should reveal the first order impact of Brexit on these sectors. PBOC fixes yuan down The People's Bank of China (PBOC) once again recalibrated the yuan's exchange versus the US dollar, fixing the mid-point of the yuan's trading band ... |
| | | ... to digest the dramatic shift in the cost of energy over the past 18 months, adding that the waning construction boom in China has "left a lasting impact on real estate values and bank balance sheets, raising questions on how the country will fuel future ... |
| | | ... three largest banks in the world continued to be Beijing-based Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, China Construction Bank Corp and Agricultural Bank of China, with total year-end 2015 assets calculated at US$3.421 trillion, US$2.826 trillion and ... |
| | | ... to US$939.6 million in the year to February. Shipments to the United States increased by 1.6% over the year but those to China and Hong Kong dropped by 11.6% and 0.3%, respectively. |
| | | ... to US$939.6 million in the year to February. Shipments to the United States increased by 1.6% over the year but those to China and Hong Kong dropped by 11.6% and 0.3%, respectively. |
| | | ... growth is likely to be a little better than expectations as we saw in the second half of 2015 though any further slowdown in China would impact confidence. Bovingdon added: "Conditions are good for consumers. Jobs growth is good and costs are reducing ... |
| | | Greece's former Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, spoke recently in Sydney and argued that economic unrest in China is a sign that "the GFC is still with us." Speaking at a Macquarie Graduate School of Management event in Sydney, Varoufakis said that ... |
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