Search Results | Showing 451 - 460 of 3708 results for "China" |
| | | ... stimulus measures would help limit the negative flow-on impact on the Australian economy - as they did during the GFC - China's deep contraction (and its trickle-down effect on the rest of the world, mainly Asia), it would not prevent this lucky country ... |
| | | | ... in London, New York and Australia. She is currently a director of Scentre Group, Myer Family Investments, the Australia-China Council and the General Sir John Monash Scholarship Foundation. Wilson has a background in finance, banking and medicine. She ... |
| | | | ... this, BlackRock iShares head of APAC investment strategy, ETF and index investing Thomas Taw said investment inflows into China had soared. "Following the initial outbreak of COVID-19 in late January, we saw investors shed exposure to China through northbound ... |
| | | | ... or 30,000 job losses for the month. Amid the current volatile environment, Dawes recommends Australian investors look to China-focused companies. "The ASX is also not immune from these global shocks; our only saving grace might be China as they are getting ... |
| | | | ... titled its WEO report with Tentative Stabilisation, Sluggish Recovery?. That was reasonable...three months ago. The US and China had just reached a trade agreement and the Fed's three rate reductions and expectations of a pause in proceedings, among ... |
| | | | ... said. "The economic damage of the outbreak will a negative tail that stretches several quarters beyond containment." Despite China regaining productivity, Lafferty questioned the case for demand. "China shows evidence of strong rebound in activity, but ... |
| | | | ... during the Global Financial Crisis more than a decade ago. At the time, Frydenberg denied that the move was directed at China. Atlas Advisors Australia executive chair Guy Hedley said government's FIRB reforms, which require every foreign investment ... |
| | | | ... Many financial advisers may need to gear up to handle the aftermath of couples growing apart as they're forced together. China was expecting a boom in births when it eased mandatory quarantine laws, instead it has seen a surge in divorce applications. ... |
| | | | ... downward pressures on Chinese equities relative to their developed market peers. "A cyclical edge is another factor because China was the first to confront the virus and is ahead coming out of the crisis," BlackRock said. "We estimate that China's domestic ... |
| | | | ... economy since World War II, Roy Morgan said. "What started as a hit to the education and travel industries when flights from China were banned on February 1, quickly emerged as a serious threat to Australia's economy in early March," Roy Morgan chief ... |
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