Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 16 results for "Chinese New Year" |
| | ... at the time as well as our best estimates about the pace of return to work following the end of the extended Chinese New Year holiday on February 10," Apple said. "We do not expect to meet the revenue guidance we provided for the March quarter." Apple ... |
| | | ... distorted by "Black Friday and iPhone X sales..." (ABS), the February numbers could be too... by the timing of the Chinese New Year - February 16 this year, 28 January in 2017 (when monthly retail spending growth jumped by 0.5% in January following a ... |
| | | ... diverse and rapidly changing seasonal influences at this time of year (which potentially includes the shift in Chinese New Year to January this year)". Good on you Alan. For a better picture - and to smooth out the monthly volatility in the indices - ... |
| | | ... diverse and rapidly changing seasonal influences at this time of year (which potentially includes the shift in Chinese New Year to January this year)". That could be the case given the declines in new orders and exports contained in the survey. New orders ... |
| | | ... as investors took profits from the rally sparked by a massive takeover offer for Toll, and many celebrated the Chinese New Year. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 11.5 points, or 0.19 per cent, at 5,904.2 points. The broader All Ordinaries index ... |
| | | ... Chinese data, like disappointing export figures earlier this week, could have been impacted by the timing of Chinese New Year. "If it was about disruption then the potential for a bounce back in March would quickly reverse a lot of the positioning that ... |
| | | ... are heavily seasonally adjusted, but the seasonal adjustment is quite inaccurate due to the different timing of Chinese New Year holidays and short record (since year 2005),"... adding that the data set "did a poor job in predicting turning points of ... |
| | | ... Gung hei fat choy! You read it right Virginia. It's the greeting we hear (if I spelled it correctly) when the Chinese New Year comes around. For like Halloween and Xmas, it also appears to have come early. Sing Hallelujah! Sing it. Sing Hallelujah! (Dr. ... |
| | | ... markets at the moment." Mr Gibbs said he expected trade during the Asian session to be quieter than normal due to Chinese New Year from Thursday February 3. "We do have Chinese New Year at the end of the week and Asia in general, especially the Chinese-related ... |
| | | ... for the President's Day public holiday. "It's relatively quiet and will be around Asia, as well, because it's Chinese New Year," Mr Foulsham said. "The big miners are lower after a nice little run up last week, which was the best performing week for ... |
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