Small Business

Asian markets end in red, Nikkei bucks trend

Asian markets ended in the red today. The Hang Seng dropped 228 points (1%) to 20,948. The Nikkei, however, added 41 points to 10,183. - India"s growing economy to fuel oil demand: Opec - Asian markets have a weak day - Rupee down 5 paise at 46.93/$ - National Australia Bank to buy Axa Asia, trumping AMP - No impact on Axa"s Indian ops - Out in the bush The Straits Times and the Seoul Composite dipped marginally to 2,793 and 1,644, respectively. Taiwan Weighted advanced 34 points ti 7,787. The Shanghai Composite was up nine points at 2,123. ____________________________________________ (Updated at 1131 hrs) The signals from the Asian bourses in mid-day trades are mixed. The Hang Seng is quoting at 21,040, weaker by 135 points, while the Nikkei is higher by 47 points at 10,189. Taiwan Weighted is at 7,787, up 33 points. On the other hand, Straits Times is at 2,796, lower by 9 points, Seoul Composite is at 1642, down 4 points, and Shanghai Composite is weaker by 9 points at 3,104. _________________________________________________________________________________ (Updated at 0811am) The Asian markets have opened mixed. The Hang Seng is quoting at 21,091, weaker by 84 points or 0.4%, and the Nikkei is placed at 10,205, higher by 63 points or 0.6%. Taiwan Weighted is at 7,792, up 39 points or 0.5%. Shanghai Composite is flat at 3,113, Straits Times is unchanged at 2,802 and Seoul Composite is flat at 1,645.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
India offers partnership in African hydrocarbon sector
Seeking to strengthen bilateral cooperation in the petroleum space, India has called for partnership with companies in the African hydrocarbon sector.
Popular Articles
payday loan lenders

United Spirits Q2 net down 25% at Rs 69 cr
United Spirits, India"s largest spirits firm, has posted a 25 per cent decline in net profit to Rs 69.6 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2009 where as the same was at Rs 94 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2008.

V V: Correcting the fault lines of capitalism
In the long run,” John Maynard Keynes had famously said, “we are all dead.” Keynes may not have been quite dead, but he had lived a ghostly half-life in the corridors of central banks and within the academia for decades. Now with the failures of unbridled capitalism on a global scale, he is back in fashion, along with Marx. John Cassidy, the finance correspondent for the New Yorker has come with How Markets Fail: The Logic of Economic Calamities (Allen Lane/Penguin £25), which draws heavily on Keynes to recount the story of America’s housing boom and the failures of regulators and self-deception of bankers that led to the present financial crisis. The book is a sequel to Cassidy’s earlier book DotCon that dealt with the stupidities of the stock market bubble in the late 1990s, but both deal with one central idea: the belief that society is best served when individuals are left free to pursue their self-interest was “Utopian economics” and led to disaster because of “the crooked timber of humanity”, and the uncertainty that is inherent in any human enterprise.