Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 26 results for "Mr Daghlian" |
| | ... by six per cent this month, so, in the grand scheme of things we are seeing just a modest pullback this morning," Mr Daghlian said. "Yesterday, was a bad day for mining stocks, so there were already losses flowing through the resource space. So, perhaps ... |
| | | ... Chinese manufacturing data, due out at 11am AEST. Key US job figures out on Friday will also influence local stocks. Mr Daghlian said China's National Day celebrations, which takes Hong Kong and Shanghai markets offline for two days, would affect the ... |
| | | ... sanctions on Russia over its support of rebel fighters in Ukraine. "The caution has been holding back the major markets," Mr Daghlian said on Wednesday. "It's been a bit volatile but pretty quiet so far this week. That's because there is a number of ... |
| | | ... we're seeing in Iraq and the concerns in Ukraine and that's keeping markets a little edgy and volatile at this point," Mr Daghlian said. Lend Lease stocks took a hit on Wednesday after the developer announced the $A1.20 billion sale of its interest in ... |
| | | ... the US economy is on track for "solid growth" in the second quarter, Commsec market analyst Steven Daghlian said. Mr Daghlian said this had helped the Australian share market recover from Wednesday's losses, however local job numbers, corporate earning ... |
| | | ... Those companies include Telstra, Woodside Petroleum, Wesfarmers and Suncorp. "That's certainly holding things back," Mr Daghlian said. "We could have seen much more significant gains if not for those four businesses." Telstra was down 14 cents at $5.11 ... |
| | | ... cents, or five per cent higher, at $3.20 after the company reported a 20 per cent increase in its half year to profit Mr Daghlian said the release of HSBC's China Flash PMI - another set of manufacturing figures - would be among the major drivers for ... |
| | | ... 80,000 more jobs were created than expected, which was particularly surprising given the US government shutdown," Mr Daghlian said. He said it was likely to be a fairly busy week for the market with several major companies, including News Corp, to release ... |
| | | ... the 1.2 per cent it forecast in May, and unemployment would rise to 12.2 per cent from the previous 12.1 per cent. Mr Daghlian said the release of economic data in China and the US later in the week and Australian unemployment figures on Thursday would ... |
| | | ... talks. "At the end of the day that's probably going to be resolved but it is keeping investors a bit edgy," he said. Mr Daghlian said there had been a generally negative tone to the local market, and Wall Street, for the past week. "It's the fourth time ... |
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