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| | | Wall Street securities have provided a positive lead to the Australian stock market on Friday, although key commodities all were lower in overnight trade. On the Sydney Futures Exchange at 0740 AEST, the June share price index contract was 27 points ... |
| | | | ... points. The solid performance of US shares overnight encouraged investors, while the yen's relative weakness against the US dollar also cheered players because a weaker currency boosts Japanese exports. There was a reluctance to take strong positions ... |
| | | | ... expectations of a 0.1 per cent increase. Meanwhile, easing concern about debt problems in Greece reduced demand for the US dollar. The US dollar's decline in turn increased demand for commodities, which become more attractive to foreign investors when ... |
| | | | ... worse-than-expected new home sales data from the US, we saw the Euro come off a little bit, and we saw money fly into the US dollar, which hasn't done any favours for base metals, oil and gold," Mr Taylor said. At 1206 AEDT, shares in resources giant ... |
| | | | ... headline. The news behind the headlines talk about the slumped in commodity prices (AFR) - oil in particular - as the US dollar rose as Greece's problem resurfaced. Does this make any sense at all? Perhaps. For speculators and day traders, that is. This ... |
| | | | ... UK-based Record Currency Management, to develop a currency forward rate bias beta index using five currencies including US dollar and British pound. This currency forward rate bias strategy is based around Record's research that found higher interest ... |
| | | | ... And speaking of speculation, there's one brewing our way again. China is about to revalue the renminbi and abandon its US dollar peg...or not. Yes, yes I know. This has been going on fits and starts for a long time now. But now, financial markets think ... |
| | | | ... currency fell against all 16 of its most traded currency counterparts. It fell by as much as 3 per cent against the US dollar and 2 per cent against an already weakened euro. The trigger? A YouGov Plc opinion poll indicating that while Gordon Brown's ... |
| | | | ... need for exposure to gold and precious metals. "This asset class will benefit in a reflation environment, long-term US dollar depreciation and growing demand with current limited supply due to capacity restraints," he said. "China and Russia central ... |
| | | | ... European states with outstanding foreign debt. These agreements meant Goldman Sachs had a portfolio of swaps hedging US dollar and Japanese Yen issued by Greece by the end of 2000. Between December 2000 and June 2001, the Mediterranean-based country ... |
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