Search Results | Showing 41 - 50 of 50 results for "Mr McCarthy" |
| | | ... downwards. The market had become softer before the Australian Bureau of Statistics released the latest inflation figures, Mr McCarthy said. "It looks to me as if there are concerns about weaker metals prices that we've seen overnight," he said. While ... |
| | | | ... three trading sessions had been confirmed with the weakest stocks on Wednesday being those exposed to global growth, Mr McCarthy said. "There is clearly a drop in risk appetite out there and we see more risks on the downside." "We're also seeing a market ... |
| | | | ... much on hold as it waited for offshore economic news. "A very compressed trading range suggests a number of things," Mr McCarthy said. "The recent strong rally we've seen could be running out of steam, and there are some macro issues in the wind, with ... |
| | | | ... sat on the sidelines after Wednesday's global market sell-off reminded investors of how quickly markets can change, Mr McCarthy said. "Yesterday was quite a shocking reminder of how... greed can turn to fear in one night's trading and that concerned ... |
| | | | ... as if we might see a higher close, but with the pulling back, we might have another day of (investor) indecision," Mr McCarthy said. "The fundamentals are supporting the market overall at the moment - the weaker US dollar is obviously helping - but a ... |
| | | | ... economy. "The FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) announcements on Monday night were quite disturbing for the market," Mr McCarthy said. "Although it is being painted as an ongoing stimulus, taking money from maturing mortgage securities and putting ... |
| | | | ... suggests to me that the large players, the ones that really make a difference to the market, are largely absent," Mr McCarthy said. "The market over the last two days has been dominated by short term trading interests." Local stocks closed at their highest ... |
| | | | ... National Australia Bank (NAB) had fallen 42 cents, or 1.71 per cent, to $24.21 and ANZ was 17 cents lower at $22.14. Mr McCarthy said a mixed bag of domestic economic data was released on Tuesday morning, with retail sales stronger than expected, but ... |
| | | | ... at this level was in October 2008. "It's quite an impressive performance... A good push through with real depth," Mr McCarthy said. "What's impressive is (that) it's not the big cap stocks that are shining. BHP, Rio and the four major banks are all quite ... |
| | | | ... have waited till December to announce a rate rise. "This is just a case of taking the foot off the accelerator," said Mr McCarthy. "The economy suggests that the time is past for stimulatory policies. Domestically, the worst of the drought is over, farm ... |
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