Search Results | Showing 481 - 490 of 1344 results for "United states" |
| | | ... -away from emerging markets and back toward developed countries. "This shift will be a benefit to regions like the United States, Europe, and Japan, who are still shaking off the remnants of the global financial crisis. But the farther that crisis recedes ... |
| | | | ... to get that oil where it needs to be. They are flaring more natural gas than you can believe in the middle of the United States. They have to burn it off because they have nowhere to put it." He said that the US and Canada were not alone in having huge ... |
| | | | ... market on Friday finished higher, bringing a four-day losing streak to an end due to good employment news from the United States. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was UP 47.6 points, or 0.9 per cent, higher at 5,335.9. The broader All Ordinaries index ... |
| | | | ... advocates for the introduction in Australia of a financial planner passport scheme similar to the one operating in the United States, to be administered by ASIC and funded by industry," the submission said. "Each financial planner would be required to ... |
| | | | ... there was no major economic news. LONDON - Europe's stock markets advanced as dealers digest positive data from the United States and China, and take their cue from more record gains on Wall Street. London's benchmark FTSE 100 index climbed 0.30 per ... |
| | | | ... its latest 'Willingness to Pay' report that contains a warning that "Growing signs of political dysfunction in the United States have dented its Willingness to Pay score." The report noted, however, that the dysfunction distracted from an otherwise improving ... |
| | | | ... while the CAC 40 in Paris dipped 0.21 per cent to 4,276.92 points. European equities had rallied last week after the United States narrowly avoided a debt default, and following news of stronger Chinese economic growth. The euro slid to $US1.3672 from ... |
| | | | ... don't have confidence in financial planning as a general concept. The Financial Planning Standards Board (FSPB) United States chief executive Noel Maye said yesterday that "people trust their financial adviser, but they don't trust that amorphous thing ... |
| | | | ... because when you have been going down for a long time there is only one way to go," Fisher said. Turning to the United States, he explained that "the unemployment rate is falling not because people are getting jobs, but because they are leaving the work ... |
| | | | ... Chinese Premier Li Kequiang instead where he can dictate outcomes, any outcome...or heads will roll. But nah...the United States of America is a democracy and it's the gerrymandered majority that rules. While the Big O's Democratic Party has the numbers ... |
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