Search Results | Showing 551 - 560 of 696 results for "GDP growth" |
| | | ... that. US equities notched their second straight day of gains- Despite the second estimate to first quarter US real GDP growth of 1.8 per cent showed no revision, disappointing market expectations for an upgrade to 2.2 per cent. Despite reports that US ... |
| | | | ... 21.54 points (0.78 per cent) at 2,782.92. The market shrugged off dull data on new jobless claims and first-quarter GDP growth to score modest gains fairly evenly across the board, including the banking sector, after three weak days. Microsoft jumped ... |
| | | | ... and 4.4 per cent, respectively. And while, we're at it, let's not tell the market that the OECD has lowered its UK GDP growth projection to 1.4 per cent (from 1.5 per cent) for 2011 and to 1.8 per cent (from 2.0 per cent) for 2012. So there -- the piece ... |
| | | | ... that the 17-nation economy expanded by 0.8 per cent in the first quarter of 2011, nearly three times the 0.3 per cent GDP growth recorded in the final quarter of last year. And this, in spite of the severe fiscal austerity measures most members have ... |
| | | | ... Development Bank (ADB). ADB's annual economic publication, Asian Development Outlook 2011 (ADO 2011), has forecasted regional GDP growth of 7.8 per cent in 2011 and 7.7 per cent the following year, slightly below last years rate of 9 per cent but still ... |
| | | | Fund managers hoping for a US GDP growth rate of 3 per cent or better are likely to be disappointed if Harvard academic Martin Feldstein is correct. Dr Feldstein recently told the Australian Centre for Financial Studies that the US was unlikely to achieve ... |
| | | | ... A typical wholesaler in Australia would be at 7 or 8 times," he said. The portfolio manager also noted that Japan's GDP growth was now expected to be around 1 per cent for the year to March 2012, a 0.7 per cent drop on estimates made prior to last month's ... |
| | | | ... previous month. Didn't I say, we're in trouble now? Because negative net exports (exports minus imports) subtracts from GDP growth. Perhaps. If you don't consider that an increase in US imports also infers that Americans are again buying - not only domestically ... |
| | | | ... expectations were based on low-range price-to-equity ratios of 13 to 14 times earnings, positive forecasts for 3 per cent GDP growth and anticipated falls in unemployment. "Even dividend yield is starting to pick up," he said. "The corporates have great ... |
| | | | ... announced that it expects the economy to expand by 8.6 per cent in the year ending 31 March. Indonesia is too. Real GDP growth quickened to 6.1 per cent in 2010 from 4.5 per cent in the previous year. Indonesia received an upgrade in its sovereign credit ... |
|