Search Results | Showing 521 - 530 of 879 results for "exports" |
| | | ... by 6,000 to 361,000 in the week to August 4. Meanwhile, the trade deficit for June fell for the third straight month as exports continued to climb while imports decreased. LONDON - European equities posted mixed performances as Chinese data lifted hopes ... |
| | | | ... Bloomberg saw it 5 days ago: "Commodities are losing their influence over currencies of nations that depend on raw materials exports as traders seek havens from the deficit and debt turmoil roiling the European Union, U.S. and Japan. As the Standard ... |
| | | | ... news that the country had posted a record trade deficit in the first six months of the year as energy costs soared and exports to key markets tumbled while the strong yen also weighed. Tokyo closed down by 1.44 per cent, or 122.19 points, at 8365.90 ... |
| | | | ... sharp decline in Chinese imports made the headlines, the other side of the trade equation was buried - for it was good. Exports grew by more than expected, 11.3% in the year to June versus expectations for a gain of 9.9%. But not only that, the rationale ... |
| | | | ... This is because of its strong domestic consumption (which accounts for more than 70% of the economy) and less reliance on exports (14% of GDP), rising foreign direct investment - particularly, the outsourcing market - and growing remittances (and investments) ... |
| | | | ... trade ban. For example, Iran is a major facilitator of Middle East shipping, global trade and of course oil and energy exports, and it's much easier than many investors realise to indirectly do business with their related entities such as banks or cloaked ... |
| | | | ... from balance of payments surpluses, public sector privatizations, fiscal surpluses or receipts from windfall resource exports which account for 58% of all SWFs. They do not, however, include government sector pension funds, explaining why Australia's ... |
| | | | ... once the commodities boom ends. "We are a highly exposed market because three things that we make, make up 40% of our exports," said Dr Stefan Hajkowicz, principal scientist, CSIRO, speaking yesterday at the ASX ETF conference. "It could be in the future ... |
| | | | ... April to 48.7 in May, representing the seventh consecutive monthly contraction. The bank linked the contraction to falling exports, arguing the data was an indication Beijing needed to engage in more policy easing. "This calls for more aggressive policy ... |
| | | | ... Halmarick, head of investment market research, Colonial First State Global Asset Management. "Less than 10% of Australia's exports go to the eurozone. But developments there impact Australia indirectly via our trading partners (such as China, which sees ... |
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