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| | | ... Wednesday, the Australian share market closed lower as tensions in the Middle East continued to rattle markets and spike up oil prices. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index fell 23.2 points, or 0.48 per cent, to 4,803.2 points, while the broader All Ordinaries ... |
| | | | ... of the regimes currently being protested against by their subjects think and believes like Qaddafi does, the risk of oil prices staying higher for longer increases. This would be bad news indeed. Perhaps it's not that. Perhaps Charlie Sheen was onto ... |
| | | | Australian stocks were lower by noon as tensions in the Middle East and rising oil prices weigh down the market. At 1200 AEDT, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 34.6 points, or 0.72 per cent, at 4,791.8 points, while the broader All Ordinaries ... |
| | | | ... licenses - the Jasmine Revolution currently doing its tour in the MENA (Middle East and North Africa) region would send oil prices soaring and derail the fledgling global recovery or ignite inflation or both - stagflation. With reports like these, who ... |
| | | | ... session. Commsec market analyst Julianna Roadley said uncertainty about the turmoil in Libya and its potential impacts on oil prices and major global economies remained a concern for investors. "We actually saw a lot of strength coming back into the ... |
| | | | ... contraction would be short-lived and would be paid back by stronger growth when rebuilding commences. But Libya? And oil prices? Don't get me wrong but it's not the violence in Libya per se that's sending oil prices higher. Like Tunisia and Egypt, international ... |
| | | | ... 100.60 cents on Thursday. Since 1700 AEDT, the Australian dollar traded between 100.01 US cents and 101.24 US cents. Oil prices are trading up around $US100 a barrel as anti-government clashes in Libya intensify with rebels controlling much of the eastern ... |
| | | | The Australian stock market opened lower after world equity markets slumped as investors worried about higher oil prices due to violent unrest in Libya. At 1015 AEDT, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 23.5 points, or 0.49 per cent, at 4822.4 ... |
| | | | ... whatever his correct name is - a butcher by any other name is still a... -- murderous defense of his throne has sent oil prices spiralling upwards. He will not go peacefully like his counterparts in Tunisia and Egypt. And oil as we know it ladies and ... |
| | | | ... said the Australian dollar weakened overnight because of the continuing Libyan unrest. "Libya on its own is pushing up oil prices for now and higher oil prices are a risk for global growth," Mr Speizer said from Wellington. "The contagion effect is a ... |
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