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| Equity Market News | 06th February 2012 | |
Equity Org Headlines:Essar Energy adds 3 percent in mostly lower London energy sectorAntofagasta leads miners higher in London Hunting plc leads energy sector lower Sports Direct International leads London retailers higher Pace plc drops 40 percent on profits warning Royal Bank of Scotland leads London banks lower Royal Bank of Scotland leads banks, FTSE 100 higher in London Lloyds Banking Group drops 8 percent on first-quarter loss Lloyds shares down on PPI claims Aquarius Platinum adds 7 percent amid mostly lower mining sector |
09/06/05Shanghai and Seoul up as Tokyo, Taipei, and Mailla fallEquities markets in Shanghai and Seoul were up on Thursday, while Taipei, Manila, and Tokyo fell on the day. The composite index in Shanghai rose 1.4 percent to 1,131.052, after advance of 8.4 percent on Wednesday; that was the largest 1-day advance in Taipei in 3 years. The market in Seoul, meanwhile, was up, by 1.2 percent to 987.58 as the shipping sector advanced on lower oil prices. On the losing side, the market was down in Taipei as the weighted index fell 0.3 percent to 6,145.92 on profit taking in the technology sector. In Manila, worries about government corruption led the composite index down 2.8 percent to 1,898.24, after the market there had its largest weekly advance in two years just last week. Additionally, the peso fell to a 2-month low against the US dollar. The latest scandal involves allegations that individuals in the Philippine president’s family have been accepting gambling payoffs. In Tokyo, the markets fell to a 2-week low as the technology and automobile manufacturing sectors were down and export-oriented stocks generally were down on data showing that export volumes have dropped on a year-to-year basis in three of the past four months. The Nikkei 225 fell 1.1 percent to 11,160 while the Topix index was down 0.9 percent to 1,138.7. Japanese investors were also influenced by higher estimates of inflation and lowered economic growth forecasts in the US as well as by anticipation over Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan’s upcoming remarks in front of a Congressional committee. |
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