Search Results | Showing 771 - 780 of 1625 results for "Chinese" |
| | | ... given a bit of reassurance." He said investors were unlikely to make any major trades ahead of the release of important Chinese manufacturing data later on Thursday. The big four banks were mixed, with NAB down 18 cents at $31.05, ANZ down seven cents ... |
| | | | ... 1.72 per cent, or 34.54 points, to close at 1,976.31. Hong Kong and Shanghai shares were weighed by concerns about the Chinese economy days ahead of the release of manufacturing activity data. Recent figures have pointed to continuing weakness in the ... |
| | | | ... the lacklustre start for the local shares, while China's market would also be a key driver. He said a national audit of Chinese debt levels, currently underway, was causing some anxiety for traders. Mr Weston said the Australian market could edge lower ... |
| | | | ... and Huawei have leveraged their brands effectively over the last three years and now dramatically outsell Apple in the Chinese smartphone market. Lenovo has also made huge inroads into the personal computer and laptop market. Greater awareness of brand ... |
| | | | ... our presence in Beijing, our goal is to continue to provide solutions to meet the unique and evolving challenges facing Chinese investors with industry-leading research and an experienced team of professionals," SSgA president and chief executive Scott ... |
| | | | ... continues in Brisbane. In Australia, the market on Wednesday finished firmer with resource companies shaking off a slowdown in Chinese manufacturing activity. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was up 18.0 points, or 0.36 per cent, at 5035.1 points, while ... |
| | | | ... said the market was waiting for the release of Australian consumer price index (CPI) figures for the June quarter and Chinese manufacturing data. "I think the market is just awaiting those developments," he said. The content of those releases was likely ... |
| | | | ... statistics. Only slowing growth numbers are correct, factual and to be trusted! Oh, pa-lease! Anyways, back to the point. Chinese Premier Li Kequiang has just drawn a line on the floor. No he's not about to play hopscotch with the rest of them Politburo ... |
| | | | ... removed the 6.0% floor on one-year loans, allowing banks to set their own lending rates. Markets previously expected the Chinese central bank to gradually lower the floor on lending rates. But nah! It just went ahead and scrapped it altogether. Ahhh...the ... |
| | | | ... investors started to adjust portfolios after US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke confirmed the tapering of stimulus and Chinese growth showed signs of weakness. Demand for stocks with $US earnings benefitted as the $A fell. Special dividends, higher ... |
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