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By Simon Kennedy and Rich Miller |
May 12, 2013
America’s aggressive strategy for tackling its financial and economic ills is working better than Europe’s go-slow approach.
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By Ian Sayson and Maria Levitov, Bloomberg |
February 21, 2013
Emerging-market stocks fell the most in seven months, erasing 2013 gains after Federal Reserve minutes sparked concern the U.S. may curtail stimulus and declining commodity prices dragged producers lower.
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By Bloomberg News |
December 26, 2012
China’s economic rebound is uneven, with improvements in retailing, real estate and mining countered by rising inventories and lower corporate borrowing.
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By Naoko Fujimura and Mariko Yasu, Bloomberg |
September 10, 2012
Sharp Corp., Japan’s biggest liquid-crystal display maker, put up its Osaka headquarters and some plants as collateral last week to win bank loans after its credit ratings were cut to junk.
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By Joseph Stuber |
August 29, 2012
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s testimony to the Senate Banking Committee on July 17 should have scared the hell out of us, but apparently it didn’t.
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By Steve Zwick |
August 1, 2012
Although it was built on good intentions and a willingness to overlook troubling details, those factors may be coming back to bite the European Union.
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By Robyn Meredith and Shamim Adam, Bloomberg |
May 31, 2012
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, the namesake of U.S. rules designed to rein in banks’ proprietary trading, proposed another regulatory overhaul: This time, regarding supervision of global capital flows.
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By Jon Nadler |
March 21, 2012
Gold prices fell toward the $1,645 level at the opening of the midweek session in New York as the US dollar climbed slightly on the trade-weighted index .
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By Jon Nadler |
June 30, 2011
Daily metals update including analysis of gold and silver
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By Greenwich Advisors |
April 18, 2011
New research suggests credit conditions in the United States are finally starting to return toward normal.