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Shares set for gains with a Clinton win
Investors have got so worked up about a Trump victory that they have forgotten it is Clinton leading the polls.
Philip Baker writes on markets specialising in bonds, equity markets and currencies. Based in our Sydney newsroom, Phil is a markets columnist.
Investors have got so worked up about a Trump victory that they have forgotten it is Clinton leading the polls.
It's not unusual for stocks to fall in November and some experts are predicting a rally will start in a few weeks.
It doesn't matter who wins the US election, stocks are in for a tough time.
The latest house price figures suggest property is the main game right now, but that could be misleading.
It's still too early to say the Reserve Bank won't cut rates again.
Financial markets don't take Donald Trump seriously. But writing him off too soon could prove just as problematic as Brexit.
November is shaping up to be a ''shocker'' for the share market, says Bell Potter's Richard Coppleston.
The travails of Crown, Blackmores and Bega have shown the investing in China has risks as well as opportunities.
The inflation report still gives the RBA an excuse to cut the cash rate to 1.25 per cent as soon as Melbourne Cup Day if it really wants to.
For those that want house prices to fall so everyone else can buy in, be careful what you wish for.
The Woolworths AGM is still a month away, but already chairman Gordon Cairns has been asked a few tricky questions by money manager Peter Mo...
Low wage growth might give the RBA a reason to cut the official cash rate one more time.
Hedge funds keep shutting down but it's still possible to make money
It's been 29 years since the 1987 crash. Here's where the next one is coming from.
There are five ''big calls'' out there right now but what if they are wrong.
It's over. The two-year earnings recession is finished and the S&P;/ASX 200 will hit 6000 by the end of next year.
Anxiety among investors on Wall Street reached a record high this week
Tracker mortgages might have been good when the RBA was cutting but they were also a reason the crisis hit banks so hard.
It really doesn't matter if Donald Trump wins his way to the White House, populism is still a horrifying shadow haunting investors.
Investors are waiting to see how the third quarter US earnings season, that's about to get underway, pans out.
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