Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 41 results for "Prayin" |
| | | It wasn't so long ago - before the COVID-19 pandemic struck to be precise - that every other central bank around the planet were hopin' and wishin' and prayin' for consumer price inflation to, at the very least, move higher to within ... |
| | | | Tell us something we, Australians all, don't already know. Those who have (at least one) are salivating, wringing their hands and thanking their lucky stars. Those who don't are still pounding the pavement - winter, spring, summer and autumn ... |
| | | | ... begin jabbing their citizens with the coronavirus vaccines (roll 'em, roll 'em, roll 'em). It's "the rainbow" you've "been prayin' for". However, given the bond markets' reaction - bond yields almost everywhere have been surging - the world economy appears ... |
| | | | Wall Street wants to have its cake and eat it too. It wants both a return to pre-pandemic normal - with all the growth and activity and employment and profitability that came with it - while at the same time wishing, hopin' and prayin' for Biden's ... |
| | | | Australian private new capital expenditure (capex) usually commands attention before and during its release for it provides an indication of domestic firms' optimism towards future growth as well as, itself, being a driving component of that growth. ... |
| | | | The race that stops the nation - the Melbourne Cup - is upon us. There'll be a lotta betting and hopin' and wishin' and prayin' for a chosen steed to make it past the finish line in first place. Cross Counter is the odds-on favourite ... |
| | | | "There's an old saying in Tennessee - I know it's in Texas, probably in Tennessee - that says, fool me once, shame on -- shame on you. Fool me -- you can't get fooled again." - former US President George W. Bush, Nashville, Tenn., 17 September ... |
| | | | Financial markets action over the past few days leading up to the June G20 meeting in Osaka - where the main game is between the trade talks between the two biggest economies in the world, the United States and the People's Republic of China - suggests ... |
| | | | If the Reserve Bank of Australia's (RBA) very own Financial Aggregates report - released on March 29 - doesn't convince the board to switch from its current "neutral stance" to an interest rate cut very, very soon, by the time it does - and ... |
| | | | ... Australian banking and financial services customers (hey, that's all of us). Too, Malcolm must be wishin' and hopin' and prayin' that he gets a win on his free trade negotiations (FTA) with Europe. According to the Australian Financial Review, "the Europeans ... |
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