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| | | European Union laws that come into effect next year will allow Australian fund managers to invest funds for overseas investors with less admin headaches. It's the new world breaking into the old world. Australian fund managers, many of whom could trace ... |
| | | | ... the CPI that matters more for the Fed....and the rumours: Spanish daily newspaper El Economista reported that the European Union, the IMF and the US Treasury are in talks with Spanish officials involving the provision of a credit line for Spanish banks ... |
| | | | ... over global economic prospects. Spanish press reports said the International Monetary Fund was working with the European Union and Washington on a rescue plan for Spain, plagued by big public deficits and credit difficulties confronting its banks, worth ... |
| | | | The Australian share market has received a mixed lead from offshore markets after Wall Street closed weaker but crude oil and copper ended firmer. At 0730 AEST on the Sydney Future Exchange, the June share price index contract was down 11 points at ... |
| | | | ... turns. Five days of uncertainty... and markets hate uncertainty. Fingers were pointed. At the Greeks. Despite the European Union/IMF a,-750 billion bailout pact, financial markets didn't trust Greece to be able to withstand the debilitating effects on ... |
| | | | ... separating from the ADF in 2005, Cosgrove has served as a director of Qantas Airways, Qantas Superannuation, Australian Rugby Union and as a fellow of the Australian Institute of Company Directors. McCullagh has 28 years experience in the governance ... |
| | | | ... over the eurozone's debt troubles. Shares followed a fall on the Dow, where scepticism set in about whether the European Union's nearly $US1 trillion ($A1.18 trillion) bailout plan can contain the damage caused by Greece's debt woes. Hong Kong's benchmark ... |
| | | | ... limit some kinds of short selling fed Wall Street's drop. The euro gave stocks a boost early in the day when 10 European Union countries sent bailout money to Greece. The move raised confidence about Europe's ability to prevent its debt crisis from spreading ... |
| | | | ... are again subscribing to Murphy's Law. After a collective shout of hallelujah, financial markets now consider the European Union/IMF 750 billion rescue package either as insufficient, or a step towards the wrong direction -- moral hazard -- or impotent ... |
| | | | ... movements -- yes, those downs... then ups... then downs -- we've seen this week immediately before and after the European Union's announcement of a 750 billion bail out package indicate that the smell of fear still lingers in the air. The rescue package ... |
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