| Australian Market Trades Notably Lower - Tracking the overnight decline on Wall Street, the Australian stock market is trading weak on Friday with investors indulging in some heavy selling in stocks cutting across various sectors. Concerns about the pace of economic recovery appear to be weighing on sentiment.
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| Australian Market Trades Weak On Wall Street Cues - The Australian stock market is trading lower on Thursday with investors tracking cues from Wall Street and indulging in some selling in a few front line stocks from financial, energy and consumer discretionary sectors.
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| Japanese, Australian Stock Futures Fall on Earnings Outlook; Honda Drops - Japanese and Australian stock futures fell after some companies lowered their forecasts and the yen appreciated.
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| Australian stocks tipped to open weaker - The Australian stock market is likely to open weaker on Friday after a fall on Wall Street overnight.
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| Market down on weak company reports - THE Australian stock market made further losses by noon today, following disappointing company reports.
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| Japanese, Australian Stock Futures Fall on Recovery Concerns; Nissan Falls - Japanese and Australian stock futures fell as a government report showed durable goods orders unexpectedly dropped in the U.S. and the Federal Reserve said the nations economic recovery slowed.
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| Australian stocks open lower - The Australian stock market opened lower after Wall Street ended its four-day winning streak following news that orders for big-ticket items fell in June.
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| Australian shares follows Wall St lower - The Australian stock market has opened lower after Wall St ended its four-day winning streak following news that orders for big-ticket items in the US fell in June.
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| Australian stocks set to open lower - The Australian stock market is likely to open weaker on Thursday after a fall on Wall Street overnight.
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| Australian Market Trades Modestly Higher - The Australian stock market is trading modestly higher on Wednesday with investors indulging in some selective buying in the banking, insurance and mining sectors. With Wall Street providing no prominent cues, investors are mostly seen treading cautiously ahead of release of data on inflation.
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