Search Results | Showing 561 - 570 of 1625 results for "Chinese" |
| | | ... on Friday morning was the expected release later in the day of more economic data out of China. Given the recent weak Chinese trade and inflation data in November, investors are cautious over what the latest economic figures might bring. Among the major ... |
| | | | ... In what has now become a "tradition," we learned from the AFR Gov Glenn's thoughts on: The international economy: "The Chinese economy... is looking like it's going to deliver the sort of outcomes that they had in mind - seven- ish [per cent growth a ... |
| | | | ... Street on Monday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 106.31 points, or 0.59 per cent, to 17,852.48 points following weak Chinese and Japanese economic data. Chinese trade data showed a surprising slowdown in export growth, while Japanese data showed ... |
| | | | ... Australian market looks set to follow US and international bourses downwards to open lower after disappointing Japanese and Chinese data. At 0836 AEST on Tuesday, the December share price index futures contract was down 35 points at 5,355. Chinese trade ... |
| | | | ... the PIV, and how the nomination process for the PIV will work." Reports in The Australian that police are working with Chinese authorities to trace illegal assets compounds the issue. Hall & Wilcox consults with fund managers and has assisted with the ... |
| | | | ... climbed back after hitting five-year lows, dragging down the share prices of energy companies, while miners were hit by weak Chinese manufacturing data. London's benchmark FTSE 100 index closed down 0.99 per cent to 6,656.37 points. Frankfurt's DAX 30 ... |
| | | | ... ahead of an Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) decision on quotas and after an unexpected drop in Chinese industrial profits. Coming in at its highest close in more than three years, the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index gained ... |
| | | | ... euro was trading at $US1.2474, up from $US1.2439 late in New York on Monday. HONG KONG - Asian markets were mixed after a Chinese rate cut had fuelled a rally in the previous session, while Tokyo played catch-up following a long holiday weekend. Tokyo ... |
| | | | ... to tolerate slower China growth. How quickly they forget. They've quickly forgotten that only five months before, when Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang told us what he likes, in black and white. Writing in Britain's The Times newspaper last June, Premier ... |
| | | | ... that can be quoted and traded on ASX. It will also improve the attractiveness of Australia as a listings location for Chinese companies." Tian Guoli, chairman of Bank of China, said: "The Bank of China attaches great importance to the development of ... |
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