English
+230 5869 0074
English
+357 25023910
Score
Benchmark
A
Influence
B
Score
License Index8.70
Business Index9.00
Risk Management Index8.90
Software Index8.37
Regulatory Index8.67
Benchmark
A
Influence
B
Single Core
1G
40G
English
+230 5869 0074
English
+357 25023910
More
Company Name
GO MARKETS PTY LTD
Company Abbreviation
GO MARKETS
Platform registered country and region
Seychelles
Company website
YouTube
Company summary
Pyramid scheme complaint
Expose
Capital
$(USD)
Stop Out
0.76%
Stop Out Symbol Distribution
6 months
This week, Target (NYSE:TGT) reported second quarter earnings of $0.39 per share, which is down 89% from last year’s earnings of $3.65 per share. The decrease in earnings is a result of charges related to reducing unwanted inventory. The report was made on its second quarter earnings results before the opening bell on Wall Street on Wednesday.
US got off to a flying start in Tuesdays session after retail giant Walmart (WMT.NYSE) reported much better results and forward guidance than the recently lowered expectations of analysts, sending the stock soaring over 5%, and dragging the whole consumer discretionary sector with it.
The Aussie Dollar has seen a drop in its price due to wage and unemployment data released over the past day and a half. The economic data shows that unemployment has fallen to its lowest level in nearly 50 years with the jobless rate at 3.4% compared to analysts expecting the figure to remain at 3.5%. Wages also rose modestly in the last quarter to 2.7%, however this is still a far cry from the 6.1% inflation figure. The AUD’s weakness came on the removal of 40,900 roles from the economy vs the previous month as opposed to expectations of a gain of 25,000. The report indicates that the labour market might just be starting to feel the pinch and that growth is beginning to slow. These figures give the RBA more flexibility in its next cash rate decision with the option for a 25 bps rise instead of 50 bps now being a realistic possibility after 3 consecutive 50 bps raises.
US indexes finished mixed with early gains on a post CPI honeymoon and a soft PPI were erased during the session as investors realised they may have become too optimistic about a Fed pivot, with the drift lower in risk coinciding with a sharp rebound in bond yields.
The regulated Australian broker GO Markets has included Hong Kong market assets into its offering, in addition to the previously available ASX and US shares. GO Markets started offering stocks of leading companies, such as Alibaba, Bank of China and Tencent Holdings.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six rivals, was steady at 94.327 after rallying 0.51% overnight. That lifted it into the positive for the week, adding 0.20%.
The broker initially signed a deal with the club last October.