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| | | The US Federal Reserve's recent decision to employ a second round Quantitative Easing could be the catalyst for another downturn in markets, according to a leading strategist. Matthew Sherwood, Perpetual's head of investment markets research, told Financial ... |
| | | | Bob Jones, founding head of Goldman Sachs Asset Management global quantitative equity group in Australia, will be retiring from the firm at the end of the year, after 24 years with the company. S&P fund services subsequently confirmed that the ratings ... |
| | | | ... appears to be fading, given the rise in metals prices and the decline in the price of oil overnight, he said. "QE II (quantitative easing round two) is now fully priced in and a tighter interest rate and regulatory environment in China is now priced ... |
| | | | ... reason that international equities are so cheap is due to the issues facing it including the wide equity risk premium, quantitative easing having long-term ramifications and the fact that Australia has some of the most expensive markets in the world ... |
| | | | ... $1.04, or 1.19 per cent, at $88.24. Fortescue Metals was up seven cents at $6.89. Mr Taylor said the second round of quantitative easing announced by the US Federal Reserve last week had been positive for equities and negative for the US dollar. "That ... |
| | | | ... Unlike the increasing number of countries voicing their protests against the Fed's US$75 billion a month worth of quantitative easing. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority said that the Fed's action will "definitely add pressure to the asset markets in emerging-market ... |
| | | | ... re-assess the program and its ultimate size. Goldilocks QE2. The US Federal Reserve wants to get the quantum of its quantitative easing 2 just right. Too small and financial markets throw a tantrum, walk away and dump risk assets from their investment ... |
| | | | ... speculation over the third quarter reporting season and lingering "will they, won't they?" question over a second quantitative easing by the Fed, the share market may have as well joined in on the holidays. At least, there was some action there unlike ... |
| | | | ... the US, Europe, Japan, et al for their respective predicaments. Speculation that the US would unleash another bomb (quantitative easing 2) in the currency markets gathered pace after the ADP/Macroeconomic Advisors reported that private payrolls fell ... |
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