Powered by MOMENTUM MEDIA
investor daily logo

Markets

markets

07 October 2016 • By Tim Stewart • 1 min read

Property market subject to China's whims

The future strength of Australia's housing sector will be primarily determined by Chinese policymakers, says Altair Asset Management. In a note to ...

READ MORE
icon

Australian GDP growth set to improve: HSBC

Australia’s economy is set to improve as growth rebalances away from the mining sector and in to housing and services, according to HSBC

READ MORE
icon

ETF providers cut fees

BlackRock and Vanguard have both announced fee reductions within their ETF product suites. Speaking to InvestorDaily, BlackRock Australia head of ...

READ MORE
icon

Markets lacking 'conviction', says Man FRM

Recent market stability in the face of several significant central bank announcements may actually be an indicator of a lack of conviction rather than ...

READ MORE
icon

November rate cut 'likely': AMP Capital

The Reserve Bank of Australia this week kept in line with market expectations and chose to hold the cash rate steady, but a cut could be on the cards ...

READ MORE
icon

'Fragile' recovery underway for trade cycle

While recent production data suggests the global economy has moved past the bottom of a global trade and production cycle, challenges may yet remain, ...

READ MORE
icon

Antipodes IPO raises over $300m

Listed investment company Antipodes Global Investors has announced the closure of its initial public offering after raising over $300 million

READ MORE
icon

Australian funds stronger on ESG measures

Australian fund managers incorporate environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors to a greater degree than their global peers, Lonsec Research ...

READ MORE
icon

Public investment set to increase: Saxo Bank

Fiscal spending is set to ‘top the agenda’ for investors globally following a push for public spending from a number of global organisations, ...

READ MORE
icon

RBA keeps cash rate on hold - Oct 2016

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has elected to keep the official cash rate on hold at 1.5 per cent at its first meeting with Philip Lowe as ...

READ MORE