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Economy interviews
JULY 2010 |
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Professor Neville Norman, Melbourne University & Michael Jones, Cummings Flavel McCormack |
| The economy's doing well, but can we expect more of the Henry Tax Review proposals to be adopted any time soon? PREVIEW » |
JULY 2010 |
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Nicholas Don, Odyssey Financial |
| Fears of a property bubble may be over-stated: demand is strong for a number of reasons and shows no sign of a major downturn. PREVIEW » |
JULY 2010 |
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Tim Lincoln, Lincoln Stock Doctor |
| The market's still volatile, but now's the time to actively manage your portfolio. That means tough decisions to free up cash for stocks that are trading well below valuation. PREVIEW » |
JUNE 2010 |
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Professor Neville Norman, Melbourne University |
| The Federal Budget - more realistic than last year's, but is it now too optimistic about the global economy and the resources boom? PREVIEW » |
JUNE 2010 |
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Tim Lincoln, Lincoln Stock Doctor |
| Volatility is still the name of the game, but experienced sharemarket investors will still find their way to the right stocks. PREVIEW » |
MAY 2010 |
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Professor Neville Norman, Melbourne University |
| On the Eve of the 2010 Federal Budget, watch out for a sharp revision in economic forecasts and signs of of tax reform, warns economist and forecaster professor Neville Norman PREVIEW » |
MAY 2010 |
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Elio D'Amato, Lincoln Stock Doctor |
| Investors breathed a collective sigh of relief as the market reached a recent 18 month high. But will the resurgence last? Elio D'Amato of Lincoln checks the outlook with some thoughts on the latest hot stocks on the market. PREVIEW » |
APRIL 2010 |
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Professor Neville Norman, Melbourne University |
| Confidence in the Australian economy still on the rise - but the rest of the world looks patchy PREVIEW » |
MARCH 2010 |
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Professor Neville Norman, Melbourne University |
| The economic outlook is mixed, but you can count on more interest rate rises in 2010. PREVIEW » |
FEBRUARY 2010 |
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Professor Neville Norman, Melbourne University |
| More growing pains than slowing pains for business, as the economy picks up in 2010. PREVIEW » |
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