Search Results | Showing 451 - 460 of 1647 results for "Commodity" |
| | | ... In Australia, the market on Thursday closed lower, dragged down by resources companies following further weakness in commodity prices. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 28 points, or 0.53 per cent, at 5,231. The broader All Ordinaries index was ... |
| | | | ... news is expected. In Australia, the market on Wednesday closed lower, thanks to a slump in consumer sentiment and fears commodity prices will continue to tumble. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 23.7 points, or 0.45 per cent, at 5,259 points. ... |
| | | | Investors in the Australian share market can expect sluggish growth at best in 2015, as the fall in commodity prices flows on to the wider Australian economy. Plummeting oil prices and the resulting sudden fall in the domestic share market in early ... |
| | | | Despite falling commodity prices and a stalling domestic economy, investors should not underestimate the potential of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to fill the hole left by iron ore, coal, and other commodities, according to BNP Paribas head of fixed ... |
| | | | The Australian market looks set to open higher after Wall Street made moderate gains as energy and commodity shares rallied while data boosted confidence in the economy. At 0844 AEST on Thursday, the December share price index futures contract was up ... |
| | | | ... contract was down 44 points at 5,294. In local economic news on Monday, the Reserve Bank of Australia releases the index of commodity prices for November while the Australian Bureau of Statistics releases business indicators for the September quarter. ... |
| | | | ... billion-dollar new iron ore mine in West Australia's Pilbara region but stuck with plans to ramp up production of the commodity. Oil and gas producer Woodside Petroleum dropped $2.13, or 5.54 per cent, to $36.34, and Santos plunged $1.18, or 10.16 per ... |
| | | | ... senior economist Guy Bruten believes the consensus view underestimates the likely impact on Australia of the collapse in commodity prices, which is likely to be "deeper and broader" than expected. This is a "mirror image" of the failure to anticipate ... |
| | | | ... weakening if you compare it with the 2.1% annualised rate recorded in the June quarter. The stronger US dollar and falling commodity prices, particularly crude oil, should keep prices on the down low in the months to come. This should allow Janet's Fed ... |
| | | | ... were: "if the US lifts its rates by mid-2015 and if the United States' dollar continues to strengthen" and "falling commodity prices, declining mining investment and reduced government spending," (as reported by the Sydney Morning Herald back then). ... |
|