Search Results | Showing 61 - 68 of 68 results for "US Election" |
| | | Heard at the G-20 gabfest at Gyeongju: blah, blah, blah... and more blah, blah, blah. As it always is when top authorities of the top nations meet, there's going to be too much chatter and too little done. Financial markets were right to expect that ... |
| | | | It's a wrap! It's official! September 2010 is the man! Wall Street may have been down for the day but it produced the best September gain even before many of us were born. The S&P 500 index soared by 8.8 per cent in the month, the Dow jumped by 7.7 ... |
| | | | Web content manager Vignette predicts that social networking tailor-made for corporates will be the next platform on which financial services providers can engage their Gen Y staff and retain their customers. The power of social networking came to the ... |
| | | | ... peak. "High volatility breeds uncertainty and uncertainty breeds opportunity [for the fund]," said Wilkinson. With the US election out of the way, and after much government intervention, the index is back to around the mid-50s range and Wilkinson expects ... |
| | | | ... happy to take some money off the table," he said. "Coming from our offshore office out of Chicago, they see with the US election... just (achieving) an outcome is going to buoy the stock market to start off with, but if the Democrats were to win, then ... |
| | | | Living in interesting times means now may be the time to focus on volatility itself instead of just traditional performance measures, said Alvin Wilkinson, principal portfolio manager of the new Pengana Global Volatility Fund that is due to launch in ... |
| | | | ... jump in technology stocks and news that US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld will step down offset jitters about US election results. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 26.82 points at 12,183.59. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 3.99 points ... |
| | | | The Australian dollar shot up over one US cent to hit six and half month highs in early morning trade, after US president George W Bush was reelected for a second four-year term. At 0700 AEDT the local currency was at $US0.7555/58, compared to yesterday's ... |
|