driver
- 02 Mar 2006 15:23
moneyplus
- 13 May 2006 15:54
- 176 of 934
Article on E-Pay in the IC this week can anyone tell me roughly what it says please? very tempted to keep on buying.
hlyeo98
- 16 May 2006 09:43
- 179 of 934
my God! Looks like FTSE is still having a cold. Dow has moved up yesterday. Why are we still in the doldrums?
hewittalan6
- 18 May 2006 17:32
- 182 of 934
But it reopens tommorow as either a renewed thread cos of all the bargains or a pawn brokers for Drivers shirt.
driver
- 18 May 2006 18:11
- 183 of 934
Youd have the shirt of me bed.
moneyplus
- 18 May 2006 18:33
- 184 of 934
new tip-head for the bunkers!!
driver
- 20 May 2006 18:28
- 188 of 934
NUT
Keep an eye on this there is talk of agreeing a large acquisition that would boost the companys range.
Web Site
http://www.biocare.co.uk/
cynic
- 20 May 2006 18:39
- 189 of 934
Soul* ..... I am still chary of buying MOG nowithstanding that it is intrinsically a good or at least sound company .... The lack of liquidity leading to unreasonable volatility etc is a big worry.
As for VOG, my own view is that this is one of the shares that should be bought NOW as it has been hammered (imo) solely due to enforced liquidations elsewhere.
As for Monday, I would certainly expect FTSE to move ahead for DOW finished marginally up on a day of option expiries.
cynic
- 20 May 2006 20:35
- 191 of 934
True, though DNX are still relatively heavyweight - i.e. down about 20% ..... VOG are down from an intraday high of 260 to 200, so prob much the same in % terms.
driver
- 22 May 2006 16:27
- 194 of 934
Global markets have continued to feel pressure amid concerns about higher interest rates and slower world growth.
Stock markets fell across Europe and Asia, and trading in India was briefly suspended after its key index lost 10%.
In the US the Dow, Nasdaq and S&P 500 indexes all opened the day down, taking up from where they left off last week.
Commodities also felt the squeeze, with the cost of crude oil down in London and New York, and metals prices dropping on fears of a price bubble.
Analysts said it was difficult to tell when the declines, triggered by a slump in the US dollar last week, will end.
Linus Yip, a strategist at First Shanghai Securities, said that any bad news would reinforce the downward cycle.
"We have to be cautious," he explained.
Christopher Bellew of Bache Financial in London said that Monday's slide was "a continuation of the bubble-bursting in commodities and energy markets last week."
Broad sell-off
All the major European markets were behind on Monday morning, with Germany's Dax index down 1.2% and France's Cac down 1.3%.
Weaker metals prices pushed London's FTSE 100 index 0.9% lower as mining firm Antofagasta shed 6.2%.
In Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 index closed 1.8% lower at 15,857.87, ending the session below 16,000 for the first time in two months.
The index's biggest fallers included oil group Inpex Holdings, down 5.3%, and Japan Energy owner Nippon Mining, falling 8%.
In India, the Bombay Stock Exchange's benchmark 30-share Sensex index was trading 436.27 points, or 4%, lower at 10,398.05 after trading was suspended for an hour.
Earlier it had lost more 1,000 points, its biggest intra-day drop, amid heavy selling by domestic and foreign funds.
The US's Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.4% to 11,102.91, and the Nasdaq lost 0.7% to 2,178.45.
Crude oil prices slipped by about $1 on Monday, amid worries that slower economic growth would limit demand.
In London, Brent crude lost 88 cents to $67.80 a barrel, while New York light sweet crude fell 84 cents to $67.69.
Commodities fared little better, with Shanghai aluminium futures down 4%, the most they can fall in a single day.
Other commodities sectors also suffered with gold, copper and zinc prices all falling.
driver
- 22 May 2006 16:42
- 195 of 934
Where they gone.