Search Results | Showing 71 - 80 of 153 results for %22China Construction Bank%22 |
| | ... Central Bank (ECB) official said it could not restructure Greece's debt with the regional lender, while tensions between China and Japan continued to weigh on markets. Tokyo tumbled 2.03 per cent, or 184.84 points, to 8,906.70, Sydney shed 0.26 per cent ... |
| | | ... RBA to keep rates on hold at current levels when it meets early November, in the anticipation that the policy easing in China will eventually kick-in later this year, and lead to a notional pick-up in demand. "Commodity prices, notably on iron ore and ... |
| | | ... located in Hong Kong, Singapore and the US. Principal Global Investors established a joint venture with China Construction Bank in 2005 with the joint venture, China Construction Bank-Principal Asset Management (CCB-PAM), managing both equity and fixed ... |
| | | ... $US1.2497 late in New York on Monday. HONG KONG - Asian shares were mixed as fears about the eurozone and a slowdown in China were offset by hopes of US central bank measures to boost the economy. Tokyo fell 0.57 per cent, or 52.10 points, to 9,033.29 ... |
| | | ... shares were kept buoyant by lingering hopes for a restart of bond buying by the European Central Bank and new stimulus in China. Tokyo rose 1.88 per cent, or 167.72 points, to 9,092.76, Sydney climbed 1.14 per cent, or 49.0 points, to 4,330.2 and Seoul ... |
| | | ... with Bloomberg. "So, it's the perfect storm! You could have a collapse of the eurozone, a US double-dip, hard-landing of China, hard-landing of emerging markets, and a war in the Middle East. Next year could be a global perfect storm." Or yesterday's ... |
| | | ... set to open slightly lower after Wall Street fell on weak US consumer spending data and concerns about the slowing pace of China's economic growth. At 0644 AEST on Friday, the September share price index futures contract was down seven points at 4,124. ... |
| | | ... Twist is an "option on the table". Hip, hip. But like bad news, don't good ones also come in threes? You must be thinking China - the second biggest economy in the world, right? Well, sort of. The third strike comes from no other than the land downunder ... |
| | | ... since late February after poor US figures such as slower growth in consumer spending and first-quarter GDP. Stock markets in China, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand were closed on Tuesday for a public ... |
| | | ... purchases of sovereign debt. Hong Kong-listed Chinese banks were among the day's biggest blue-chip gainers. China Construction Bank added 2.2 per cent to $HK6.06 and Bank of China jumped 1.9 per cent to $HK3.18. Chinese property developers also rose ... |
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