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Het is maandag 24 februair. Je vaste afspraak met collega Jens Leen en directeur Trends Beleggen Danny Reweghs. Woensdag wordt dé dag op Wall Street, want we krijgen de kwartaalcijfers van Nvidia – misschien wel de belangrijkste van het hele resultatenseizoen. De grote vraag: kunnen ze hun indrukwekkende groeipercentage behouden?Ook bij ons wordt het een topweek. Er komen een heleboel cijfers op ons af, en Danny neemt alvast een kijkje naar wat we mogen verwachten van AB InBev en Argenx. En we kijken ook uit naar Super Thursday. De dag waarop we onder andere de PCE-index kennen. Het favoriete inflatiecijfer van de FED. Z 7 op 7 is de nieuwe dagelijkse podcast van Kanaal Z en Trends. Elke ochtend, vanaf 5u30 uur luistert u voortaan naar een selectie van de meest opmerkelijke nieuwsverhalen, een frisse blik op de aandelenmarkten en een scherpe duiding bij de economische en politieke actualiteit door experts van Kanaal Z en Trends.Start voortaan elke dag met Z 7 op 7 en luister naar wat echt relevant is voor uw business, onderneming, carrière en geld.
The ASX suffered its fourth day in a row of losses, with company reporting shining a light on some of the biggest on the bourse.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Whyalla steelworks gets a $2.4 billion bailout from the government; Wesfarmers profits on the back of Kmart & Bunnings gains; Telstra continues to dominate the telco market; Super Thursday sees 40 companies report; job market remains strong, with unemployment at 4.1%; could this very radio station be up for sale soon?; and Scott Phillips joins for the Market Wrap to explain the difference between net profit, underlying profit & EBITDA. Host: Deb Knight Executive Producer: Tom Storey Technical Producer: Liam Achurch Publisher: Nine RadioSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is the Fear and Greed Afternoon Report - everything you need to know about what happened in the markets, economy and world of business today, in just a few minutes. Telstra goes mobile Banks tumble Bunnings boom Miners disappoint Transurban outperforms Find out more: https://fearandgreed.com.auSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
US equity markets experienced mixed performances following the release of hotter-than-expected inflation data. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for January increased by 0.5% month-over-month and 3% year-over-year, surpassing market expectations. This development has led to speculation that the Federal Reserve may maintain elevated interest rates throughout the year. The S&P 500 declined by 0.3%, closing at 6,066.89. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.5%, ending the session at 44,503.06. In contrast, the Nasdaq Composite remained relatively flat, closing just above its 50-day moving average. Treasury yields saw a significant uptick, with the benchmark 10-year yield experiencing its largest one-day rise since December 18, 2024. This surge in yields added pressure to the equity markets.In corporate news, CVS Health reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings, leading to a notable increase in its stock price. Conversely, companies in the homebuilding and housing retail sectors faced challenges due to persistently high mortgage rates. Overall, the unexpected rise in inflation has heightened concerns about the Federal Reserve's monetary policy trajectory, contributing to the day's mixed market performance.SPI up 4 - Results deluge. Barrick up 6% plus on numbers. NEM up 2.9% - TWE, IAG, S32 results.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
Will Bain hears about Super Thursday, the day on which more books are published than any other throughout the year, and what this means for books sales.
The BBC's Rushdi Abualouf, The Economist's Zanny Minton Beddoes, how to increase the number of female experts on the news, and the publishing industry's "Super Thursday".Presenters: Katie Razzall and Ros AtkinsAssistant Producers: Lucy Wai and Martha Owen
"I never read novels" is something you hear people say. What is the point of reading - be it histories or fiction? Does it help us empathize with the situation of other people or shed insights into our historical moment? With the news story that university students these days are, apparently, unaccustomed to reading entire books, cover to cover, favouring excerpts, abridgements, and introductions and ahead of the biggest date in the publishing calendar (Super Thursday on Oct 10th) Shahidha Bari is joined by novelist Elif Shafak - winner of the British Academy's President's Medal, her latest novel is called There Are Rivers in the Sky; journalist Gabriel Gatehouse - host of the podcast and Radio 4 series The Coming Storm; New Generation Thinkers Janine Bradbury - a poet, and Jonathan Egid - a philosopher; Tiffany Watt Smith - a historian of emotions and author of a book on schadenfreude and by the historian of China Professor Rana Mitter - chair of the judges for this year's Cundill History Prize. The winner will be announced on October 30th and the books in contention are: Judgement at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia by Gary J. Bass Native Nations: A Millennium in North America by Kathleen DuVal Before the Movement: The Hidden History of Black Civil Rights by Dylan C. PenningrothProducer: Luke Mulhall
ASX 200 rose another 17 points to 8027 (+0.2%) as Super Thursday produced a head-spinning deluge. Again, some good, some bad, and some very ugly. MP1 for one down 21.0%. Once again, we saw resources outperform banks slightly. The 'Three Amigos' were firm, FMG the best, up 2.0% and lithium stocks a smidge firmer, PLS up 2.0% and LYC up another 1.3%. Gold miners were mixed, NST up 1.7% on results, EVN up 0.5% but EMR off 1.9%. Oil and gas were sidelined, WDS and STO fell on lower crude prices. Uranium not doing much either. In the coal space, WHC ran 6.3% on good numbers and the sale of assets. YAL bounced slightly after the results recently. Banks, solid, the Big Bank Basket unchanged at $233.36. Insurers fell, QBE off 0.9% and MPL dropped 2.3% on numbers. MQG doing little, with REITs better. GMG missing out slightly again. Industrials were all about the results. Retail once again in focus, SUL up 6.2% on its special dividend, LOV up 1.9% with travel stocks down again, WEB off 1.0% and CTD falling 7.4%. DMP also fell 6.0% like the proverbial. In corporate news, plenty. CKF crashed 12.9%, GEM warned of difficult times, falling 7.5%, BOQ sacked 400 and warned too, dipped 7.3%. IFL fell 15.7% as its complicated and disappointing. result. Not much on the economic front. Powell in focus. In Asian markets, mostly higher on Flash Business activity number in Japan. Nikkei up 0.3%, HK up 0.6% and China off 0.3%. 10-year yields, 3.89%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
The Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.57% to 17,918.99, also clinching its ninth positive day of 10. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ticked up by 55.52 points, or 0.14%, to finish at 40,890.49 for its sixth winning day of the last seven. The Russell 2000 outperformed, with the small cap-focused index climbing more than 1%.FOMC minutes suggested a rate cut was growing more likely for September.The revision of total payrolls following the Labor Department's updated data released Wednesday morning comes out to a decline of 0.5%. That marks the largest downward revision since 2009.ASX SPI up 28Oil settles $1 down after US job data revised significantly lower.Aluminium rally pauses on profit-taking, technical resistance.Gold prices hover near record high post US Fed minutes.Iron ore climbs to one-week high as property measures revive demand outlook.Chile's SQM posts 63% profit slump, expects weak lithium prices in near term.Copper giant Codelco invests in EVs, cacti as part of green makeover.EIA reports bigger-than-expected inventory crude draw.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
Si è chiusa agli ottavi di finale l'avventura di Luca Nardi a Indian Wells. Dopo la vittoria contro Djokovic, Nardi ha ceduto in due set al più esperto Tommy Paul. Medvedev liscio su Dimitrov, Rune e Ruud rimontano Fritz e Monfils.Fuori Azarenka contro la giocatrice americana in grande progresso Emma Navarro. Gauff avanti facile, Sakkari supera Parry e la sorprendente Yue Yuan rimonta Kasatkina.Super-giovedì con tutti i quarti di finale, Winner unico italiano rimasto in campo subito con Lehecka.Qui sotto il link per contribuire alla raccolta fondi in supporto alle dirette e alle trasferte per il 2024https://www.gofundme.com/f/dirette-e-trasferte-2024-luca-e-vanni-per-ubitenni
I discuss my thoughts on the blockbuster ESPN-CFP deal, EA Sports releasing a new version of College Football and give a first look into my CFP Stock Index for the 2024-2025 season.
The Federal Reserve has held interest rates steady at a 22 year high. It's the third meeting in a row that rates have held. We get the economist view on what a pause in interest rate movements means for business in Dubai and what it means for mortgage activity with Mathew Montgomery of Espace Real Estate. Plus, a 'historic' global climate deal has been agreed at COP28. We discuss and analyze with Karl W. Feilder, Founder and CEO, Neutral Fuels. And, we say Happy Birthday to Dubai Duty Free - 40 years of Tang and Toblerone. We're joined by the one and only Colm McLoughlin.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
US stocks rallied, while bonds and gold also surged as the dollar and yields slumped in response to the dovish FOMCThe Fed kept rates unchanged but made dovish tweaks to the statement guidance and cut its 2024 median dot by more than expectedEuropean equity futures are indicative of a higher open with Euro Stoxx 50 future +1.1% after the cash market closed down 0.1% yesterdayDXY fell as low as 102.42, EUR/USD hovers around 1.09 pre-ECB, USD/JPY slipped below 141 at one stage. The US 10yr treasury yield below 4.0% for the first time since August, while money markets are pricing around 150bps of cuts for next year.Looking ahead, highlights include US Export & Import Prices, IJCs, Retail Sales, Australian PMI (Flash), BoE, ECB, SNB, Norges & Banxico Policy Announcements, ECB's Lagarde Press Conference, Supply from US.Read the full report covering Equities, Forex, Fixed Income, Commodites and more on Newsquawk
Adam welcomes Erik Barnes and Samantha Jane to argue unpopular opinions about Thanksgiving, astrology, the Super Bowl halftime show, and so
ASX 200 closed down 49 points at 7146 (-0.7%) as China and US worries weighed. Super Thursday results also disappointed from TLS to NXL. A worse-than-expected jobs number at 3.7% helped the ‘RBA is done' narrative and caused a rally off the lows but lacked conviction. Banks were mixed with the Big Bank Basket down to $173.41 (-0.8%). MQG fell hard down 2.0% with insurers mixed. QBE down 1.6%. Healthcare also in trouble today, CSL off 0.7% and RMD snapping back to reality after outperforming in the storm. REITs mixed with results in focus. GMG up strongly 5.7%. Industrials weaker across the board with TLS down 2.8% after aborting plans to sell its infrastructure business. Consumer stocks eased too, WOW off 1.7%, COL down 1.5%, and TCL copping some downgrades off 4.9%. Tech eased but did recover with the All-Tech Index up 0.4% WTC off 0.4% and XRO down 1.8%. Miners recovered from lows in the iron ore space with BHP and RIO modestly higher. Lithium stocks under pressure as CXO dropped a bombshell falling 24.8% on a capital raise. Gold miners also on the nose, NCM down 1.7%, and EVN fell 4.8% on results. In more corporate news, SUL rewarded shareholders with a special dividend and rose 2.9%. ING rose 14.8% on better-than-expected numbers, CXO dropped 24.8% on its deeply discounted raise, ORA rose 3.4% on results and IPH in demand rising 10.8%. SHL dropped 5.7% as CV19 effects wear off. On the economic front, jobs numbers showed a slip in the unemployment rate to 3.7%. Asian markets still under pressure, but modest losses. Japan down 0.3%, China off 0.1% and HK down 0.9%. 10-year yields higher at 4.29%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.Make life simple. Invest with Marcus Today.
Blood on the streets on the ASX 200 today, market down 110 points to 7195 (-1.5%), posting its biggest drop in six weeks. REITs put up some resistance following solid earnings reports VCX +2.4%, MGR +5.3% and SCG +1.5%. Energy stocks fell, as crude oil fell for a third day after a drop in US inventories, STX off 3.5%, BPT down 2.8% and WDS -0.9%. Tech stocks tracked the Nasdaq lower, SQ2 -4.0% and WTC down 3.7%. All-Tech Index down 2.4%. Iron ore giants BHP, RIO and FMG all lost over 2%. The big four banks were all negative; CBA went ex-dividend today down 3.6%. Big Bank Basket down 2.5% to $174.79. Bullion prices were steady, but gold stocks were caught in the broad market sell-off NCM down 1.3% and EVN off 1.7%. Industrials weaker across the board; construction stocks were slammed dragged lower by FBU -9.3% disappointing earnings report. Healthcare eased, but RMD managed to buck the trend up 0.1%, CSL off 0.4% and RHC down 1.8%. Elsewhere, WES down 0.8%, QBE off 1.0% and MIN falling 3.6%. In corporate news, lots of results today ahead of a Super Thursday tomorrow. TCL down 0.7% despite toll income rising 26%, CPU down 3.3% reported revenue jumped 27% and flagged a $750m share buyback, BAP up 5.5% despite margins getting squeezed, the company kept its final dividend, and NWL down 1.6% recorded record EDITDA and a 26.3% jump in FUA. In economics, RBNZ leaves rates on hold. China's new home prices fell 0.1%, marking the fifth decline this year amid a prolonged property crisis. Asian markets are lower on concerns over China's stuttering economy, Japan down 1.3%, HK down 1.4% nearing a two-month low, and China off 0.5%. Australia's 10Y yield down 6bps to 4.19%. Aussie Dollar sinks to nine-month lows down 0.1% to 64.51c. Dow Jones futures down 5 points, and Nasdaq futures up 6 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.Make life simple. Invest with Marcus Today.
Nish and Coco can't resist popping up for a special bonus mini-episode to discuss the Super Thursday by-election results. A revolt against Labour Mayor Sadiq Khan's Ulez low emissions policy hands the Tories a lifeline to hang on to their seat in Uxbridge and Ruislip - Coco hopes that doesn't encourage Labour HQ to sideline their green agenda.Better news for Labour in Selby and Ainsty where Kier the Younger - Labour candidate Keir Mather - successfully overturns the biggest majority ever in a by-election by the Labour Party. While in Somerton and Frome a huge win for the Liberal Democrats means Coco gets to enjoy leader Ed Davey pulling another of his cheesy victory stunts.
European bourses trade on the backfoot with selling pressure having picked up since the cash open; Chinese markets were closed overnight.US equity futures are also softer on the session, albeit to a lesser extent than European peers with the ES just about holding around the 4400 mark.SNB's rate hike disappointed markets but matched analyst expectations while Norges opted for a larger-than-forecast rate hike and guided another hike in August.DXY sits in a tight range on either side of 102.00, EUR/USD eventually reclaimed 1.10+ status, with hefty in-the-money OpEx for the NY cut.Looking ahead, highlights include US IJC, Existing Home Sales, EU Consumer Confidence (Flash), BoE, CBRT & Banxico announcements, Speeches from Fed's Powell, Bowman, Barkin, ECB's de GuindosRead the full report covering Equities, Forex, Fixed Income, Commodites and more on Newsquawk
On this week's Cricket…Only Bettor Ed Hawkins, Sam Collins, Paul Krishnamurty, and Richard Mann return for your IPL Betting Hub. They have the outright latest and analysis for Punjab v Bangalore and Delhi v KKR. Plus, there's a bonus game with New Zealand taking on Pakistan in a T20 in Rawalpindi. Don't miss the Best Bets, 5 point challenge and the treble klaxon. Read the latest insights and tips on cricket at https://betting.betfair.com/cricket/ 18+ Please Gamble Responsibly. Visit www.begambleaware.org
ASX 200 dropped 29 points to 7286 (0.4%), which once again was not too bad considering BHP hit a seven-week low down 3.4% and RIO fell 1.7%. Resources generally were mixed, FMG only modestly lower, lithium stocks rallied slightly, PLS up 5.2% ahead of results tomorrow, and gold miners continued to lose their lustre. Oil and gas stocks slid as crude fell, WDS off 0.6% and STO down 1.3%. Coal miners were mixed WHC down 2.0%. In the industrials green across most sectors, Healthcare doing well, CSL bouncing back, RMD up 1.3% and FPH rallying 1.2%. REITs mixed, SCG up 1.0% and SGP off 1.6%, Tech better, WTC up 4.2% as brokers fell back in love, XRO slipped 1.1%, and the All-Tech Index up 0.6%. Banks fell, CBA rallied 0.7% after ex-dividend yesterday. The Big Bank Basket unchanged at $177.08. MQG off 0.8%, and fund managers down, PPT off 2.8% and MFG falling another 1.3%. Insurers mixed. Utilities pushing up with ORG and APA better. In corporate news, QAN fell 6.8% as record profits and angry customers collided. Plenty of angst but people still flying as have no Joyce. SGR launched a rescue deeply discounted rights issue and placement to raise $800m. Buys some time. TLG returned after placement falling 14.4%, with SLX tapping shareholders for a cool $100m. In results, Super Thursday saw MPL reveal that customers are sticky and lazy to switch, rising 6.5%, PTM tried hard to sneak in their results last night after hours but fell 16.9% on lack of fees. OBL dropped 6.4% on results and management changes, BGA was creamed falling 7.8% on results, and BKL revealed that customers are spending less on vitamins, dropping 6.8%. APE kicked the lights out again up 9.0% with TLC beating expectations and offered a special dividend. KLS caught the express bus up 5.4%. On the economic front, private capital expenditure rose by 2.2%. Asian markets quiet, Japan closed for the Emperor's birthday. HK up 0.5%, and China unchanged. Dow futures up 99 points and Nasdaq futures up 107 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
ASX 200 rallied back 58 points to 7409 (0.8%) after the drubbing yesterday. Bank steadied on NAB Q1 results, with NAB up 0.7% and ANZ up 0.6%. CBA copped some downgrades falling another 1.5% with the Big Bank Basket falling to $179.69 (0.750. MQG ran 1.7% with MFG also doing well on results up 6.4%, Insurers better too, QBE up 1.0% and SUN rallying 1.6%. Industrials were firm, WES kicked hard up 4.0%, Staples better, WOW up 1.4% and COL up 1.0%. TLS firmed up 1.9% on mobile dominance and dividend rise. Platform stocks in demand, REA up 4.9% and CAR better by 2.2%. Tech doing well with WTC up 3.2% and XRO up 4.1%. The All-Tech Index up 2.8%. REITs better led by GMG up 2.1%. Builders are back as JHX rose 4.8% and BLD up 2.9%. In the resource space somewhat more muted with BHP up 0.4% and RIO better, FMG outperforming up 1.5%. Gold miners hit another air pocket dropping hard. NCM knocked back Newmont falling 1.7% and results not helping, NST off 3.0% and EVN falling 2.0% on its results. Second tier lithium bounced a little and oil and gas slipped despite crude gains in Asia. Coal stocks mixed, WHC reported with a disappointing dividend, falling 2.8%. In corporate news, Super Thursday came and went. AMP back to SOP with its first dividend in five years but core business remains challenged falling 13.4%. MFG roused the animal spirits and rose 6.4% on its numbers. TLS raised the dividend under the new CEO, Vicki Brady. BAP bounced 5.2% on DIY car repair surge, PRN fell 9.5% on a Dugald mine incident update. SHL went supersonic rising 14.3% on its results, ORA jumped 14.8% on numbers. On the economic front, unemployment rose to 3.7% as signs emerge that Phil Lowe's cunning strategy is working. In Asia, markets pushed higher with Japan up 0.6%, HK up 2.3% and China rallying 0.8% as ‘balloongate' tensions ease. 10-year yields steady at 3.76%. Dow futures up 19 points and Nasdaq futures up 48 points.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
It's a SUPER THURSDAY on Radio Ronin!!!!HAPPY BIRTHDAY BISHOP SHANNON!!!! Thanks for putting up with Chunga, Chandler, Gregg and Chris!!! Your 4 boys love you very much!!Matt Smith of The Matt Cave Podcast is on the show! He's here to answer a bunch of random questions Chris the Brit has about football! He also has his predictions about who's going to win the Super Bowl on Thursday!CHUNGA POLL:. What is your favorite Super Bowl food!?!! Post your answers below!Did you watch the Grammys!?! No? That's ok, Ben Affleck didn't either! And WHAT THE HELL HAPPENED TO MADONNA?!?!There was high Drama this week at Disneyland on Pirates of the CaribbeanAnd Gregg has a new music themed movie SHOUT OUT!!!
It's a SUPER THURSDAY on Radio Ronin!!!!HAPPY BIRTHDAY BISHOP SHANNON!!!! Thanks for putting up with Chunga, Chandler, Gregg and Chris!!! Your 4 boys love you very much!!Matt Smith of The Matt Cave Podcast is on the show! He's here to answer a bunch of random questions Chris the Brit has about football! He also has his predictions about who's going to win the Super Bowl on Thursday!CHUNGA POLL:. What is your favorite Super Bowl food!?!! Post your answers below!Did you watch the Grammys!?! No? That's ok, Ben Affleck didn't either! And WHAT THE HELL HAPPENED TO MADONNA?!?!There was high Drama this week at Disneyland on Pirates of the CaribbeanAnd Gregg has a new music themed movie SHOUT OUT!!!
We have a slew of European corporate earnings this Super Thursday including Deutsche Bank, Roche and Santander, ahead of key central bank decisions. Stateside, the Federal Reserve slows the pace of rate hikes to deliver its smallest increase in a year. Chairman Jerome Powell hints that the central bank will again hike in March despite signs of cooling inflation. We await interest rate decisions from the BoE and the ECB later today as euro zone inflation eases for a third consecutive month.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
APAC stocks were negative in the aftermath of the rush of global central bank rate hikes; Nikkei 225 was closed due to a public holidayDXY marginally gained but with price action contained after the headwinds yesterday, EUR/USD remained firmly below the 0.9900 handle, USD/JPY retested 142.00 to the downsideChinese Senior Diplomat Wang Yi said US-China ties are at a low ebb; G7 Foreign Ministers' statement noted there is no change in G7 policy positions on TaiwanReferendums on Russian annexation begin in occupied Ukrainian territory, according to AFP News AgencyLooking ahead, highlights include EZ, UK & US Flash PMIs, UK Mini-Budget & Speech from Fed Chair PowellClick here for the Week Ahead preview.Read the full report covering Equities, Forex, Fixed Income, Commodites and more on Newsquawk
ASX 200 up another 50 points to 7048 (0.7%) as banks and resources rally pre-Jackson Hole. Resources continue to find friends on Chinese stimulus moves. Iron ore stocks wilted from highs with BHP up 0.7%, FMG up 0.1% and RIO lagging slightly although still up 0.2%. Base metals also doing well despite nickel falling overnight, S32 good results up 1.0% and IGO up 1.8%. Lithium stocks took a slight breather, PLS down 1.7% as uranium took centre stage on Japanese moves to embrace more nuclear power. PDN rose 11.6%, BOE up 5.2% and BMN up 15.4%. Oil and gas stocks continue to find buyers as STO rose 1.3% and WDS up 2.0%. WHC results today saw early losses as buyers stepped back in and erased the fall closing only down 1.4%. Even gold miners put in a better day, NCM up 3.0% and DEG up 5.3%. Banks were better as bond yields rose, CBA up 0.6% and WBC the stars, the Big Bank Basket rose 0.7% to $172.57. IFL pushed 11.4% ahead as MLC integration looks to be working out. MQG saw a rebound too up % with insurers a little left out. Healthcare better as CSL bouncing back 0.4%. SHL up 2.2% saw upgrades from brokers, RHC up 0.8% as BlackRock becomes a substantial shareholder at 5.1%. Industrials were firm with the exception of the staples which again came under pressure as WOW fell 3.2% on results. Plenty of ex dividends today as well. Tech was firm but unremarkable with the All- Tech Index up 0.5%. In corporate news, Super Thursday today, QAN announced a $400m buyback and Joyce gave $50 vouchers to say sorry, up 7%. NEC streaming 9.0% higher on better numbers, IEL doing well on its pivot up 7.5% and KAR better on a full year of Bauna, up 8.4%. Nothing much on the economic front. In Asia, markets pushing higher although HK suffering from storm disruptions Japan up 0.7% China up 0.4% and HK up 1.7%. 10-year yields higher again at 3.67%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
ASX 200 rallied 36 points to 6998 (0.5%) after two days of losses, Banks rebounded with the Big Bank Basket back to $171.40 (0.4%). ANZ the standout, up 1.6%. MQG rallied slightly but still lots a little underwhelming. Insurers better with ASX slipping 1.4%. Healthcare flat as CSL fell 0.4%, RMD down 1.2% and SHL doing well on results up 6.2%. Industrials a little lacklustre, TLS ex dividend, GMG slid 2.0%, WOW and staples eased with EDV finding some support after the rout yesterday. TCL down 0.4% and BXB drifting 1.1% lower. In resources, iron ore strength as BHP continue to hold up well, up 1.1%, FMG up 0.4% but RIO down 0.5%, S32 up 2.7% and lithium stocks bubbling away. MIN up 3.0% and PLS forgoing ahead 6.1% despite broker downgrades. Oil and gas stocks doing well with WDS up 3.4% and STO up another 2.1%. Coal stocks continue to play well, WHC up 1.9%. In the tech sector, WTC shot the lights out with results up 12.8% dragging the index up 1.5%. In corporate news, results in abundance, ILU up 9.8% on good numbers, EML fell 10.6% on fraud issues., NWL rose 7.0% on its numbers, DMP saw a 7.6% gain as Don charmed the market on cheese falls. HSN fell hard on disappointing numbers, off 13.3%, COL dropped 4.6% as staples coming under inflation pressures. WGN down 19.3% hard as profits not set in concrete. Super Thursday beckons for results tomorrow. Nothing on the economic front. Asian market soft on Chinese woes. Japan down 0.5% China down 1.2% and HK down 1.3%. 10-year yields flat around 3.60% Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
US markets found some positive footing overnight, the Dow finished up 60 points (+0.2%). However, the markets are still showing caution ahead of Jackson Hole tonight. SPI Futures are up 31 points (+0.45%), slowly making up for the losses from earlier in the weak. Get in the know with Henry's Breakfast Briefing.ASX 200 SPI Futures up 31 (0.5%)Dow rose 60 points (0.2%)S&P 500 up 12 points (0.3%)Nasdaq up 50 points (0.4%)Oil up again 1% Gold unchanged.Base metals mixed nickel down 1.8%Iron ore up 0.2% Results to dominate on Super Thursday.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
ASX 200 fell 15 points to 7113 (0.2%) in a day dominated by Super Thursday results. Resources are stumbling lower as gold miners slid, NCM off 2.9% and NST down 4.1%. Base metals and lithium shares under a little pressure, MIN off 1.0%, PLS down 1.9% and LYC falling 3.1%. Oil stocks firmed on higher crude prices, coal stocks again in demand, WHC up 2.2% and NHC better by 3.7%. Industrials slipped slightly, TCL disappointed with results falling 3.4%, WES eased 0.8%, REITs down led by SCG down 1.0%. Healthcare mixed as CSL rallied 2.3% with the rest of the sector suffering from the sniffles. Tech down and out for now, WTC down 1.9%, XRO off 7.1% and SQ2 falling 6.0%. The All–Tech Index fell 2.2%. Banks were mixed as CBA rallied 1.4% and NAB up 0.3% with ANZ and WBC easing lower. The Big Bank Basket pretty unchanged at 178.33 Insurers eased and MQG slid 0.9% with ASX off 4.0%. MFG continues lower by 0.9% with PNI down 2.6%. In corporate news, plenty happening, TWE rose 4.0% following its numbers, BXB 3.6% better on broker upgrades, IRE moving higher in results, CDA and BKL both tanked on disappointing numbers, XRO fell 7.1% and TLX down 8.7%. KLL returned to trade with a large capital raise and debt restructure, down 38.0%. In economic news, the jobs headline was 3.4% unemployment. Everyone that wants a go gets a go. Scottie has many goes. Asian market weaker, Japan down 0.9%, China down 1% and HK down 0.7%. 10-year yields rise to 3.32% Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights andresearch and become a better investor.
The ASX 200 rose 11 points to 7296 (0.2%) as results dominated on Super Thursday. US futures soft at close on Ukraine rumours see afternoon selling. Bank once again feeling the love with the Big Bank Basket rising to $181.37 (0.4%) with CBA up 0.2% and WBC doing well up 0.9%. Other financials flat with CGF a winner post results rising 6.7%. Healthcare saw a bump as brokers warmed to CSL with another 5.1% rise. Industrials were mixed, WES down on results, TCL better on traffic outlook. TAH doing well with a 4.1% rise on its numbers and TLS easing 4.2% on numbers. Miners were slightly better with iron ore stocks leading the way, BHP rose 1.4%, RIO up 1.2% and S32 beating expectations and up 1.1%. Energy mixed, WPL up 4.1% on its numbers but STO falling 1.7%. BPT rallied 1.7% after a down day yesterday. Lithium stocks a little depressed as Tesla effect wears off, PLS down 5.5% and LTR falling 5.2%. Gold miners better in spots, NCM up 1.5% and NST up 4.4% on numbers. Tech on the nose again, SQ2 down 6.4%, XRO off 3.0% and WTC falling 3.70%. The All-Tech Index dropped 2.3%. In corporate news, plenty around with CUP falling 15.3% on a sudden loss of CEO/MD. On the economic front, better jobs numbers but still with a 4 in front with the headline rate at 4.2%. Asian market slightly firmer. 10-year yields ease to 2.19%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and independent research and become a better investor.
Sasha Stone and Clarence Moye, Mark Johnson and Ryan Adams talk about the Producers Guild, Directors Guild, Writers Guild and Editors Guild nomination announcements the same day as Oscar voting starts. What movies do we think are doing well, how do we see the race shaping up?
Isabella Leembruggen, Nick Quinn and Darren Parkin all joined Scott Cooney for a whopping edition of the Tennis Podcast today ahead of Super Thursday at Melbourne Park on RSN 927!
WOW! It's Super Thursday! Christian and Josh fire up the mics to talk the finale of Batman Fear State, a tubular infiltration in X-Force, and much more!! As always you can find Christian on Twitter/Instagram @thechrisespinal Josh @jdcole_37 and Brian @bdotesp! follow the show on Twitter/Instagram @newjumpcity. Check out Brian's Twitch Stream here! Our theme song is by @drum_fu. Watch the video version of this episode on our Youtube channel here! Feel free to email us at newjumpcitypod@gmail.com with any suggestions, recommendations, feedback, or fan theories you'd want us to read on the show!
Airbus boosts its FY guidance as profits dip less than forecast on the back of pandemic belt-tightening. Shell faces activist investor ire as hedge fund Third Point reportedly builds a $750m stake and demands a break-up of the company's assets. In Canada, the central bank ditches its Covid-era bond-buying programme while European markets await today's ECB rate decision. We also have a slew of Q3 earnings on Super Thursday with C-suite interviews from Skanska, WPP, Volkswagen and more. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
It's Super Thursday for many European corporates, including Volkswagen, Shell and Diageo. Credit Suisse releases a scathing report following an internal investigation into the bank's failure to manage risk in the wake of the Archegos scandal. The Swiss lender's investment bank revenues plunge by 40 per cent. Meanwhile, Airbus is buoyant, raising its guidance for deliveries and operating income. In the U.S., Facebook shares fall in after-hours trading despite beating Q2 earnings expectations. The social media giant is braced for a significant growth slowdown. And in China, tech shares lift after a CNBC source reveals that Chinese market authorities have met with top investment banks to calm concerns following Beijing's recent regulatory crackdown. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Super Thursday is back for Season 2!
A new group of 2nd Year AGD students are now running the show! Listen in as Stephanie, Joshua, Baylee, and Julia introduce themselves and discuss what's coming to Super Thursday!
On this week's Cricket…Only Bettor, hosts Ed Hawkins and Sam Collins are joined by Betting.Betfair.co's Paul Krishnamurty and Sportinglife.com's Richard Mann for Super Thursday with two Test matches and the continuing Pakistan Super League to preview. Can England sneak a win against New Zealand? What are the best betting angles for West Indies versus South Africa? We bring you all the stats, trends and Best Bets from Paul and Richard. Read the latest insights and tips on cricket at https://betting.betfair.com/cricket/ 18+ Please Gamble Responsibly. Visit www.begambleaware.org
In this week's ‘Deep Dive,' host Chris Wright and guests discuss the elections, after the ‘Super Thursday' polls that took place across England, Scotland and Wales. In this episode, Chris is joined by Philip Collins, former Number 10 speechwriter, and writer-in-chief of ‘The Draft;'David Maddox, political editor of the Sunday Express and leader writer for the Daily Express; and Ryan Capperauld, journalist, political commentator and panelist for BBC Scotland.The discussion begins with guests' reactions to the Conservative Party claiming the Hartlepool seat from Labour for the first time in over 60 years; whether Keir Starmer will survive this defeat, despite allegations of ‘sleaze' circling Boris Johnson; and question whether the concept of Socialism is dead.The conversation then moves to whether we are seeing a major realignment in U.K politics and debate how Brexit and the pandemic have influenced voting, especially amongst the younger generation.Guests also delve into the growing pressure on Boris Johnson for a Scottish referendum, and whether Nicola Sturgeon can lead Scotland into Coronavirus recovery.Created & produced by Podcast Partners: www.podcastpartners.com
In this episode, your hosts discuss what Super Thursday is — both on and off the air — and how each of them came to CVCC's AGD program.
Super Thursdays are coming soon!
Doug, Lefty & Red discuss Biden's comeback,Warren's calls Democrats sexist ans MSNBC math. A topless woman causes a crash. Night Knight and bubo find themselves in the middle of a gang war. A pervert injects a woman's ass with a syringe full of semen. Scientists may have made a Star Trek like replicator. Finally a man gets arrested for Moo Poo battery! [EP295]
Congratulations! It's finally happened: The Democratic Primaries have finally caused The Devil Advocates to break down. Out the window is nuanced and cool headed self-reflection. Listen in on the entertaining fray as we discuss the Super Tuesday election results and discuss how we feel the party should move forward.
In this week's podcast, Washington Times editorial page editor Ethan Epstein and Washington Times columnist Tim Young discuss Super Tuesday. Is "the fix in" against Bernie?
Hosted by acclaimed author Cathy Rentzenbrink, the tenth edition of The Bookseller Podcast features interviews with two authors whose books are being published this month: debut novelist Okechukwu Nzelu talks about his coming of age story The Private Joys of Mnenna Maloney, while Andrew Michael Hurley discusses his latest Gothic tale Starve Acre. The Bookseller's Caroline Sanderson and Tom Tivnan chat about Super Thursday, one of the busiest days of the publishing calendar, and the new and notable titles coming out in the run up to Christmas. In our new section we meet Helen Stanton from Forum Books, located in the picturesque village of Corbridge in Northumberland. Helen talks to Nigel about the shop, the area, and the books that she recommends. Cathy and Nigel share the events they're most looking forward to this month on Bookgig, including Cheltenham Literature Festival, a talk from Harry Potter illustrator Jim Kay and more. And playing us out – an extract from The Giver of Stars by Jojo Moyes. The Bookseller Podcast is a Heavy Entertainment Production.
Welcome to the Brit Lit podcast, where we talk about all things books from a British perspective. Claire's first guest is Jennifer Ryan, author of The Chilbury Ladies' Choir, an epistolary novel set in an English village in World War II. She also explains what Super Thursday is and gives a shout out to some interesting new books. Books mentioned: Me. You. A Diary, by Dawn French Thinking Out Loud: Love, Grief and Being Mum and Dad, by Rio Ferdinand Finding My Virginity, by Richard Branson Mary's Household Tips and Tricks: Your Guide to Happiness in the Home, by Mary Berry Nadiya's Bake Me a Festive Story: Thirty festive recipes and stories for children, by Nadiya Hussain Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen Mrs Dalloway, by Virginia Woolf The Stranger, by Albert Camus Brideshead Revisited, by Evelyn Waugh Hamlet, by Shakespeare The Diaries of Nella Last, by Nella Last Year of Wonder, by Clemency Burton-Hill When They Go Low, We Go High, by Philip Collins The Little Library Cookbook, by Kate Young The Sparsholt Affair, by Alan Hollinghurst The Party, by Elizabeth Day ***** Support Claire on Patreon to get bonus content. For daily news and views from British books and publishing, follow the Brit Lit Blog. Questions? Comments? Need a book recommendation? Email Claire at britlitpodcast@gmail.com ***** SOCIAL MEDIA The Brit Lit Podcast Twitter / Facebook / Website Claire Twitter / Facebook / Blog / Jennifer Ryan Twitter
Kate and rob look ahead to the big books that are being released on this year's 'Super Thursday'.
Wunderlich Securities' Art Hogan counts down to the Fed decision. Bloomberg's Cynthia Koons discusses why investors are punishing Valeant. Bloomberg Gadfly's Lisa Abramowicz explains why negative rates are taking over the world. And former Bank of England policymaker Danny Blanchflower gets ahead of Super Thursday. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Option Block 286: Super Thursday Trading Block: Another mild day on the street. Earnings-Palooza today! Ford before the bell. A newly revived Microsoft. Amazon surges after hours. Zynga breaks the four handle. Crazy developments in Apple post iPad. Odd Block: Calls trade in Covanta Holding Corp (CVA), straddle trades in Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), calls trade in Silvercorp Metal Inc. (SVM), calls trade in Jive Software Inc. (JIVE). Xpress Block: More interesting OX trading patterns. Apple is back! Around the Block: More earnings around the bend: 10/28 - Apple; 10/29 - EA Games, LinkedIn, Take Two, Nokia; 10/30 - General Motors, Marriott