Gold held an advance as investors weighed the partial trade deal between the U.S. and China, with investors keen for greater detail on the pact™s contents so they can better gauge the consequences for raw materials including bullion, and a clearer sense of what remains to be addressed. Bullion seesawed on Friday before ending higher after Washington and Beijing agreed to the first phase of a broader deal that will see China boost imports, including of American agricultural...
Tokyo stocks opened lower Monday, with traders taking money off the table following a 2.55-percent rally in the previous session that was fuelled by a US-China trade deal and Britain's election. The benchmark Nikkei 225 index slipped 0.25 percent or 60.31 points to 23,962.79 in early trade, while the broader Topix index was down 0.06 percent or 0.97 points at 1,739.01. Sumber : AFP
The Chinese yuan and the Australian dollar hovered below four-month highs touched last week in early Monday trade as investors pored over the U.S.-China trade deal, while sterling stayed strong after a decisive UK general election. The offshore yuan traded at 7.0026 yuan per dollar, slipping back from a four-month high of 6.9247 per dollar hit last week. The trade-sensitive Australian dollar fetched $0.6876, easing from Friday's four-month high of $0.6930. The euro stood at $1.1126, up...
Oil retreated from a three-month high as optimism the U.S. and China™s trade deal will spur demand gave way to caution due to the agreement™s limited nature and lack of detail. Futures fell as much as 0.6% in New York after closing up 1.5% Friday. The dealinvolves China buying more American farm products and making new commitments on intellectual property, while the U.S. will suspend new levies and halve existing tariffs on $120 billion of Chinese imports. The agreement is expected...
Hong Kong stocks opened lower Monday morning as investors await details of a partial trade pact agreed between China and the United States at the weekend. The Hang Seng index eased 0.57 percent, or 157.26 points, to 27,530.50. But the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index edged up 0.11 percent, or 3.29 points, to 2,970.97 and the Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks stocks on China's second exchange, gained 0.32 percent, or 5.31 points, to 1,665.86. Source: AFP
European markets closed sharply lower Thursday amid ongoing U.S.-China trade concerns.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 closed down by 1.4% to 373.79 with almost every sector in the red. All major bourses were in negative territory, with Britain's FTSE 100 down 1.4%, while Germany's DAX and France's CAC both fell around 1.8%.
Autos were among the worst-performing sectors in Europe, down by nearly 3%. This comes after renewed concerns over the trade relationship between the U.S. and China. German carmaker Daimler was the biggest loser in the sector, down almost 7%.
The U.S. has said it will impose trading restrictions on Chinese telecoms giant Huawei from August 19. Of the $70 billion Huawei spent buying components in 2018, some $11 billion went to U.S. firms including Qualcomm, Intel and Micron Technology.
Source : CNBC
Tokyo stocks closed marginally lower on Monday, with traders taking money off the table following a rally in the previous session that was fuelled by a US-China trade deal and Britain's election. The...
Hong Kong stocks finished the morning session slightly lower Monday as dealers await concrete details of the partial trade pact agreed between China and the US last week. The Hang Seng index eased 0....
Japanese stocks fell on Monday, slipping from an over one-year high hit in the previous session, as investors booked profits following an initial rally sparked by a preliminary trade deal between the ...
Hong Kong stocks opened lower Monday morning as investors await details of a partial trade pact agreed between China and the United States at the weekend. The Hang Seng index eased 0.57 percent, or 1...
Tokyo stocks opened lower Monday, with traders taking money off the table following a 2.55-percent rally in the previous session that was fuelled by a US-China trade deal and Britain's election. The ...
Gold held an advance as investors weighed the partial trade deal between the U.S. and China, with investors keen for greater detail on the pact™s contents so they can better gauge the consequences for raw materials including bullion, and a clearer sense of what remains to be addressed. Bullion seesawed on Friday before ending higher after Washington and Beijing agreed to the first phase of a broader deal that will see China boost imports, including of American agricultural...
Tokyo stocks opened lower Monday, with traders taking money off the table following a 2.55-percent rally in the previous session that was fuelled by a US-China trade deal and Britain's election. The benchmark Nikkei 225 index slipped 0.25 percent or 60.31 points to 23,962.79 in early trade, while the broader Topix index was down 0.06 percent or 0.97 points at 1,739.01. Sumber : AFP
The Chinese yuan and the Australian dollar hovered below four-month highs touched last week in early Monday trade as investors pored over the U.S.-China trade deal, while sterling stayed strong after a decisive UK general election. The offshore yuan traded at 7.0026 yuan per dollar, slipping back from a four-month high of 6.9247 per dollar hit last week. The trade-sensitive Australian dollar fetched $0.6876, easing from Friday's four-month high of $0.6930. The euro stood at $1.1126, up...
Oil retreated from a three-month high as optimism the U.S. and China™s trade deal will spur demand gave way to caution due to the agreement™s limited nature and lack of detail. Futures fell as much as 0.6% in New York after closing up 1.5% Friday. The dealinvolves China buying more American farm products and making new commitments on intellectual property, while the U.S. will suspend new levies and halve existing tariffs on $120 billion of Chinese imports. The agreement is expected...
Hong Kong stocks opened lower Monday morning as investors await details of a partial trade pact agreed between China and the United States at the weekend. The Hang Seng index eased 0.57 percent, or 157.26 points, to 27,530.50. But the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index edged up 0.11 percent, or 3.29 points, to 2,970.97 and the Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks stocks on China's second exchange, gained 0.32 percent, or 5.31 points, to 1,665.86. Source: AFP