Search Results | Showing 471 - 480 of 948 results for "In China" |
| | | ... annually, to drop below seven per cent. "I think that has reduced some of the worst case fears for what might happen in China in the short to medium term, so that is a positive for resources stocks," he said. The banks also posted gains, with Commonwealth ... |
| | | | ... mostly unchanged with investors digesting disappointing results from Google and Microsoft and hints of financial reform in China. At close, London's FTSE 100 index of leading shares slipped 0.06 per cent to end at 6,630.67 points. Frankfurt's DAX 30 ... |
| | | | ... Thursday, Mr Shamu said. "The market has taken that in its stride," he said. Mr Shamu said he believed slower growth in China was helping the Australian dollar. "China has been a bit of a mixed bag recently. "But we're now getting accustomed to getting ... |
| | | | ... decade. He acknowledged that success in what the government has dubbed the 'Asian Century' cannot rely on unfettered growth in China to support the mining sector but Australia, following 22 years of uninterrupted GDP growth, was well placed to take advantage ... |
| | | | ... Union. These treaties outline how the region is governed and the mandate of the ECB. Focusing on concerns about a slowdown in China, Basu said he was relaxed about the long-term prospects for the region but said global economies need to be prepared for ... |
| | | | ... Dow and the S&P 500 were both posting ever higher record highs (almost daily), there were some whispers of a slowdown in China but only a few believed, paid attention or really cared, Japan only just unveiled a mammoth monetary policy stimulus and there ... |
| | | | ... quarter. IG market strategist Stan Shamu said he expected local gains to be mild until investors saw what was happening in China. Predictions are for gross domestic growth (GDP) for the quarter to be 7.5 per cent, with anything lower set to send the ... |
| | | | ... Financial markets are spooked that Chinese authorities could/are making a policy mistake. Nope Virginia, what's happening in China is not an accident but by grand Politburo design. How many times must Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Kequiang ... |
| | | | ... was serious uncertainty in the US and China - saying "there's lots of doubts about the state of the financial system in China," adding, "and of course you can always rely on Europe to stuff something up." |
| | | | ... the market on Wednesday closed higher despite slipping in afternoon trade due to concerns about an economic slowdown in China. Data from the world's second largest economy showed exports unexpectedly fell 3.1 per cent in June, and imports fell 0.7 per ... |
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