Li Huiyong News
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China’s benchmark index rallied to the highest level in five months, erasing this year’s losses on speculation an improving economic outlook will boost earnings.
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China’s benchmark stock index rose, trimming a weekly loss, after foreign direct investment climbed and the European Central Bank and international policy makers coordinated to lend dollars to banks to tame the credit crisis.
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Foreign direct investment in China climbed 11.1 percent in August from a year earlier as the nation’s growth encourages companies from Volkswagen AG to Caterpillar Inc. to expand.
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China’s stocks fell the most in a week on speculation the government will increase interest rates this weekend, boosting concern tightening measures will slow corporate profit growth.
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German stocks slid, after climbing to a 30-month high yesterday, as losses in carmakers outweighed gains in Allianz SE.
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China’s inflation may have accelerated to 5.1 percent in November, the fastest pace since July 2008, according to two Chinese newspaper reports today ahead of the release of the data tomorrow.
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Chinese industrial companies’ profit rose 4.5 percent in March, rebounding from the first January-February decline since 2009 as demand strengthened.
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China’s stocks fell the most in almost four months after a central bank adviser said he sees the nation keeping tight monetary policies next year and Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co. forecast plunging export growth.
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China’s stocks fell for a fifth day, capping the longest stretch of losses this year, on speculation the government will increase interest rates by as early as next week to tame inflation.
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China’s inflation rate may ease to 5.6 percent this month as gains in food prices slow, according to Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co.
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