Bharat Joshi News
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Malaysian stocks fell to a two-month low and a gauge of price swings climbed to an 11-month high on speculation the government will dissolve parliament after the Lunar New Year for an election.
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Malaysian stocks sank to a six-week low as election concerns made equities more volatile than the benchmark emerging-market index for the first time in almost five years. The ringgit weakened.
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Asian stocks fell, with a regional benchmark index retreating after a record 10-week advance, as oil near a nine-month high and continued concern that Greece will not be able to avoid a default spurred investors to lock in gains.
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Emerging-market stocks rose as concern Europe’s debt crisis will hurt global growth eased after Italian borrowing costs declined at an auction and a U.S. report showed business activity expanded more than forecast.
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Malaysian construction stocks are trailing regional peers by the most since 2007, a buy signal to CLSA Ltd. and Manulife Asset Management as the government’s $16 billion building plan sends profit estimates to a record.
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Bumi Armada Bhd., a company controlled by Malaysian billionaire T. Ananda Krishnan, raised 2.66 billion ringgit ($888 million) after pricing shares at the upper half of its indicative range in the country’s biggest initial public offering this year, two people familiar with the matter said.
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Chinese stocks are poised to extend their slump as the slowing economy hurts earnings, according to Bank Julius Baer & Co., which has about $286 billion in client assets worldwide.
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