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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jap.Acc.Pf | LSE:JAP | London | Ordinary Share | GB0033788018 | PTG SHS 0.01P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 102.50 | - | 0.00 | 01:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
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02/11/2009 12:54 | Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's wages slid for a 16th month in September, a sign that consumer spending may be too weak to support the economy's recovery from its deepest postwar recession. Monthly wages including overtime and bonuses slipped 1.6 percent from a year earlier to 266,364 yen ($2,928), the Labor Ministry said today in Tokyo. Japan's largest companies plan to slash winter bonuses at the fastest pace on record, the Japan Business Federation said in Tokyo last week. Firms typically pay the bonus, which is often equivalent to several months of pay, in December. | briarberry | |
01/11/2009 23:49 | Japan - Housing Starts - September: -37.0% YoY | briarberry | |
01/11/2009 23:16 | The IMF expects Japan's gross public debt to reach 218pc of gross domestic product (GDP) this year, 227pc next year, and 246pc by 2014. This has been manageable so far only because Japanese savers have been willing or coerced into lending for almost nothing. The yield on 10-year government bonds has been around 1.30pc this year, though they jumped to 1.42pc last week. | briarberry | |
24/9/2009 16:27 | Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's exports fell for an 11th month in August as the economic recovery struggled to gain traction. Shipments abroad dropped 36 percent from a year earlier compared with a 36.5 percent decline in July, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo. From a month earlier, exports fell 0.7 percent, the second straight decrease. | briarberry | |
17/9/2009 15:42 | Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese land prices dropped the most in five years as the recession discouraged buyers and tighter credit markets choked off funding to developers. Average prices declined 4.4 percent in the 12 months ended June, the 18th consecutive annual decline, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism said in a report today. Values fell in all but three of the 22,435 locations surveyed. | briarberry | |
08/9/2009 02:33 | thanks briarberry, but that report is almost unintelligible. John is half fred's age, who was double mary's when she was half again as old as peter, who is younger than expected. What? Why didn't they just quote the actual numbers so we could see for ourselves? | jackpipe | |
04/9/2009 19:13 | Sept. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese businesses cut spending for a ninth quarter as the global recession squeezed profits, underscoring the challenge for the incoming government to sustain a recovery from the country's worst postwar slump. Capital spending excluding software fell 22.2 percent in the three months ended June 30 from a year earlier, after dropping a record 25.4 percent in the previous quarter, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo. Profits slid 53 percent. Sales fell 17 percent, the second-biggest drop on record, indicating global demand hasn't recovered enough to encourage companies to buy more plant and equipment. | briarberry | |
28/8/2009 16:37 | Aug. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's unemployment rate rose to a record 5.7 percent in July and deflation worsened, dealing a blow to Prime Minister Taro Aso on the eve of an election that polls indicate his ruling Liberal Democratic Party will lose. The jobless rate rose more than economists estimated, surpassing the previous record 5.5 percent last seen in April 2003, the statistics bureau said today in Tokyo. Consumer prices dropped an unprecedented 2.2 percent from a year earlier. | briarberry | |
26/8/2009 12:57 | Aug. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's exports fell for a tenth straight month in July as demand from all of the nation's major markets deteriorated. Shipments abroad tumbled 36.5 percent from a year earlier, steeper than June's 35.7 percent drop, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo. The median estimate of 23 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 38.4 percent decrease. Declines in shipments accelerated in all major regions: Exports to China fell 26.5 percent, shipments to the U.S. slid 39.5 percent and those to Europe slumped 45.8 percent, according to today's report. | briarberry | |
26/8/2009 03:39 | Japan's July imports down 40,8% on year Japan's July exports down 36.5% on year Toyota reportedly to slash production by 10% Japan's July trade surplus quadruples on year | briarberry | |
17/8/2009 18:12 | A hollow recovery Aug 17th 2009 | TOKYO From Economist.com Those who doubt the sustainability of the upswing note that, above all, it was technical in nature. After a period of destocking, inventories fell so low that an upswing in production was inevitable-indeed, it was widely forecast to happen as far back as January. Furthermore, some of the growth is due to one-off government stimulus measures. Big public works projects pumped money into the economy, and the government has been credited for the aggressive way that it poured cash at the crisis. But economic stimulus packages can not boost an economy forever in a country with a ratio of government debt to GDP that is close to 200%, the largest of any rich country. On the consumer side it also offered financial incentives for consumers to buy new, energy-efficient cars and appliances, as well as handing out ¥12,000 ($127) per person. Household consumption grew by 0.8% quarter on quarter. | briarberry | |
17/8/2009 14:27 | Aug. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's economy emerged from its deepest postwar recession as exports and consumer spending rebounded. Stocks fell on concern the recovery won't last. Gross domestic product expanded at an annual 3.7 percent pace in the three months to June 30, the first growth in five quarters, following an 11.7 percent decline in the first three months of the year, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo. The median estimate of 22 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News was for 3.9 percent growth. | briarberry | |
17/8/2009 12:27 | Japan has left recession.. Is Japan a buy, eg an investment trust. | hectorp | |
09/8/2009 15:26 | Japan Airlines - the largest carrier in Asia - made a loss of 99bn yen ($1bn; £618m) during the quarter, down from a 3.4bn yen loss a year earlier. The carrier saw sales drop 32% to 334.9bn yen from a year before. | briarberry | |
04/8/2009 16:38 | Toyota reports $819 million quarterly loss | briarberry | |
03/8/2009 14:05 | losses... Panasonic lost 52.98bn yen ($558m; £332m) from April to June. Sony Corp reported a 37.1bn yen loss between April and June. | briarberry | |
03/8/2009 13:35 | Aug. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's wages fell at the fastest pace on record in June as companies cut bonuses to protect dwindling profits, adding to evidence that consumers are unlikely to contribute to an economic recovery. Monthly wages including overtime and bonuses dropped 7.1 percent from a year earlier to 430,620 yen ($4,500), the sharpest decline since the survey began in 1990, the Labor Ministry said today in Tokyo. Bonuses shrank 14.5 percent. | briarberry | |
02/8/2009 13:35 | Japan, Housing Starts, June: -32.4% | briarberry | |
30/7/2009 02:10 | Japanese exports fell in June but at their slowest annual rate this year partly due to improving shipments to China, which saw second-quarter economic growth boosted by Beijing's stimulus package. Exports rose 1.1 percent in June from the previous month Japan's exports fell 36% in June YoY | briarberry | |
30/7/2009 02:06 | Toyota's domestic car production in June came to 251,171 vehicles, down 31.2 percent from the corresponding month of last year -- an improvement of more than 10 points from the 41.9 percent year-on-year decrease in May. | briarberry | |
30/7/2009 02:04 | July 29 (Bloomberg) -- Nissan Motor Co., Japan's third- largest carmaker, posted a third straight quarterly loss as the global recession cut demand for new vehicles and a stronger yen hurt earnings from exports. The company had a first-quarter loss of 16.5 billion yen ($175 million), compared with a net profit of 52.8 billion yen a year earlier, Tokyo-based Nissan said in a statement today. The loss was less than the 58.5 billion yen median of four analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales fell 35 percent to 1.51 trillion yen in the three months ended in June. | briarberry |
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