Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Latest Offers, News, Current Affairs

Latest Offers, News, Current Affairs


Pound little changed at $1.3182 after U.K. jobs data

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:47 AM PDT

This is a Real-time headline. These are breaking news, delivered the minute it happens, delivered ticker-tape style. Visit www.marketwatch.com or the quote page for more information about this breaking news.


Source: marketwatch

Tags:
finance
marketwatch
current affairs
investment tips

U.K. wages rise 2.2% including bonuses in August vs. 2.1% FactSet estimate

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:47 AM PDT

This is a Real-time headline. These are breaking news, delivered the minute it happens, delivered ticker-tape style. Visit www.marketwatch.com or the quote page for more information about this breaking news.


Source: marketwatch

Tags:
finance
marketwatch
current affairs
investment tips

U.K. wages rise 2.1% excluding bonuses in August vs. 2% FactSet estimate

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:47 AM PDT

This is a Real-time headline. These are breaking news, delivered the minute it happens, delivered ticker-tape style. Visit www.marketwatch.com or the quote page for more information about this breaking news.


Source: marketwatch

Tags:
finance
marketwatch
current affairs
investment tips

Some Clash of Clans Guides You Should Know

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:41 AM PDT

In Clash of Clans, what speed up your progress? there are some top free game guides that can be helpful. How to win the battle in the game? Read the following contents for more details.

The Wall Breaker Elixir Bank

Did you think your Barracks was just for training troops? Wrong. If you hadn't noticed yet, you can queue a large number of troops to train, even when you aren't online. When you queue troops in this way the elixir you need to train them is “spent”, but you can cancel training at no penalty for any queued troop. This means you can queue all of your barracks till they are full, and Elixir spent this way will be “banked” safely away from would-be attackers. When you return to your village, you can cancel the queued troops and recoup your “banked” Elixir. Looking down the roster of potential troops, the Wall Breaker has the highest cost per slot. 

Various Kinds of Resources

Gems: Highly valuable (costs real money to buy) and can be used to speed up waiting times on buildings and units, buy you more builders, and boost resources. Gold: Used primarily for upgrading your important buildings such as you town hall. It also costs you gold when searching for other players to raid for resources. Elixir: Main resource for training and upgrading your troops spells. Dark Elixir: Used to train and upgrade DE troops that are unlocked later in the game.

The Spoils of War

When you defeat other players, you collect resources which allow you to upgrade stuff –– your barracks, for instance. Victories snag you trophies too, and the number of trophies you have determines what level league you're in. Clan Wars is one of the best features, you join a clan and can assist each other with reinforcements and battle with other Clans for resources. But early on you don’t really have the troop numbers or the force to participate properly, so in the initial parts of the game your main focus should be getting everything upgraded. Be warned, though, upgrading takes time.

Get More Gold and Elixir

The only way to progress in the game is by getting more and more resources and upgrading. You can get resources (gold and elixir) in a few ways –– you get them from collector buildings; you can raid another player's camp with your troops and get their trophies and resources. In addition to this, you can also get gold and elixir from the single player goblin map.

You can win the battle by following above guides. Hope you can enjoy your game time. 

Source: 2P

U.K. unemployment rate unchanged at 4.3% in 3 months to Aug., meeting expectations

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:37 AM PDT

This is a Real-time headline. These are breaking news, delivered the minute it happens, delivered ticker-tape style. Visit www.marketwatch.com or the quote page for more information about this breaking news.


Source: marketwatch

Tags:
finance
marketwatch
current affairs
investment tips

#9: Kings of Leon Nathan Caleb Followill Colorado Fox Theatre Concert Tour Poster

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:32 AM PDT

Giants War – Gamevil begins Closed Beta for mobile strategy RPG in North America and Canada

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:31 AM PDT

Mobile games publisher Gamevil and developer Singta are working on a new strategy RPG, Giants War, and gamers from North America and Canada can enter Closed Beta now. Up until October 26, both iOS and Android users will have a chance to provide feedback for a chance to win rewards. Giants War has strong exploration […]
Source: MMOCU

Pakistan just narrowly averted an Osama bin Laden-type humilitation

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:19 AM PDT

A CIA drone was circling a remote valley in northwest Pakistan last month when it picked up an unusual sight: a young woman and children in a militant camp. To intelligence analysts, she appeared to be an American abducted five years earlier while backpacking in Afghanistan with her Canadian husband. The grainy images were a breakthrough. Military planners mobilized members of the Navy's SEAL Team 6, an elite group of commandos, to mount a rescue, according to senior US officials. But the operation was called off amid concerns, and days later, the CIA watched in alarm as militants drove the family out of the camp and across Pakistan's lawless tribal lands. The top US diplomat in Pakistan, Ambassador David Hale, turned to his host country, one of the officials said, delivering an urgent message to the Pakistani government: Resolve this, or the United States will. The implication was clear. If the Pakistanis did not act decisively, the United States would set aside its unease and launch a raid deep inside the country to free the family. It would be another humiliating episode for the Pakistani government, reminiscent of the operation that killed Osama bin Laden in 2011, conducted by the same elite Navy SEAL commandos well into Pakistan without its government's knowledge. And a failure to act would underscore US officials' belief that the Pakistani government gives safe haven to the Taliban-linked Haqqani network that had kidnapped the family. Pakistani officials said they acted within hours. With assistance from US intelligence, they located the vehicle and rescued the family last week in a dramatic confrontation with its captors. Inside the car were Caitlan Coleman, 31; Joshua Boyle, 34, her Canadian husband; and their three children. The rescue ended an intensive effort by US intelligence officials to locate the couple — who had been taken hostage in October 2012 — and their children. When she and Boyle were kidnapped, Coleman was seven months pregnant; she gave birth four times in captivity. The CIA declined to comment. Trump administration officials cast the rescue as a win for Pakistan without publicly acknowledging that officials there had to be pressured into conducting the operation. "This is a positive moment for our country's relationship with Pakistan," President Donald Trump said in a statement. Efforts to free the family had stalled repeatedly, and the family's time as hostages was harsh. Boyle has said that his wife was raped and that the Taliban killed one of their children shortly after birth, an allegation the militants have denied. In January 2016, the United States thought a deal had been struck with the Haqqanis, with help from Qatar, to release hostages. The FBI and Army Rangers picked up Colin Rutherford, a Canadian being held by the Haqqanis, and US officials were hopeful that Coleman and her family might be next. But the Haqqanis freed no one else. US officials said communications with the Haqqani network had gotten garbled, causing confusion, and the death of the leader of the Taliban, killed by a US drone strike last year, also set back efforts to rescue the hostages. The diapers that FBI agents in Afghanistan had bought for Coleman's children would go unused. Not only were hostages kept in captivity, the militants were also not done kidnapping. In August 2016, they seized an Australian, Timothy Weeks, and an American, Kevin King, 61, both teachers at the American University of Afghanistan in Kabul. Navy SEALs launched a rescue operation but came up empty; a tip about where the men were being held turned out to be outdated. But last month, the US intelligence community caught a break. The CIA had positioned the drone over a Haqqani encampment in the Kurram Valley, a region near Pakistan's border with Afghanistan. It spotted the woman believed to be Coleman among the armed fighters. The commandos of SEAL Team 6, tapped to rescue the family, started rehearsing. The raid was to take place not far from where the CIA had originally spotted the family, according to one military official. But the risky operation planned on Pakistani soil was called off because some in the US government were not certain that the people spotted by the drones were Coleman, Boyle and their children, according to the officials. Others voiced worries about the difficult terrain and the moon — it was too bright for a nighttime airborne raid. Why the Haqqanis decided to move the family is not clear. But on Oct. 11, as they headed toward Kohat, a city farther inside Pakistan, US intelligence officials realized they could not let the opportunity to save the family slip by — the United States had to act. US officials formed a plan to press the Pakistani government. Trump was briefed, and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson both backed the idea that should the Pakistani government decline to try to rescue the family, the Navy SEALs would go in. Officials said that as Hale, the ambassador, conveyed the Trump administration's demands, other senior officials, including Gen. Joseph L. Votel, who oversees US military operations in the Middle East and southwest Asia as head of the US Central Command, were also applying pressure. The push worked. US officials said the Pakistanis acted quickly, intercepting the vehicle with Coleman and her family. According to Pakistani security officials, they were able to shoot out the tires of the vehicle, but the captors manage to flee. Boyle has said a gunbattle ensued before he and his family were freed, but US officials remained skeptical and a Pakistani military spokesman has said only that the vehicle's tires were blown out. In an interview after he was freed, Boyle praised the Pakistanis: "Our gratitude is boundless."
Source: ET

Suven gets patent from Singapore for neurological molecule

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:19 AM PDT

NEW DELHI: Suven Life Sciences today said that it has been granted a patent by Singapore corresponding to the New Chemical Entities (NCEs) for the treatment of disorders associated with neurodegenerative diseases. The patents are valid till 2033, the company said in a BSE filing. “We are very pleased by the grant of these patents to Suven for our pipeline of molecules in the CNS arena, which are being developed for cognitive disorders with high unmet medical need with a huge market potential globally,” Suven Life CEO Venkat Jasti said. The granted claims of the patents are being developed as therapeutic agents and are useful in the treatment of cognitive impairment associated with neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimers disease, attention deficient hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), Huntingtons disease, Parkinsons and Schizophrenia. Suven Life Sciences shares were trading 0.70 per cent up at Rs 223 on BSE.
Source: ET

You think your company can’t be hacked? Here’s what you don’t know

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:19 AM PDT

When his phoned pinged, Gaurav Kumar thought it was just another one of the many hundreds of emails he got everyday. Kumar (name changed) was the chief executive of an outsourcing firm in Pune, with clients all over the world, and that meant his phone never stopped pinging. A quick glance at the glowing screen revealed that this might be a different kind of a mail. It was from one of the company's largest clients from the United States and was marked urgent. His heart sank as he started reading the mail. It was the kind of news that no chief executive likes to hear. This client had ordered immediate suspension of all work. There had been a breach of the private data of their customers, and hackers had put it up on dark-web marketplaces. The US-based client suspected that this data breach had occurred at the Indian outsourcer's end and had asked the company to stop all work. Kumar felt beads of sweat forming on his forehead. He wasn't sure exactly what was to be done. He knew about the dangers posed by data breaches, but didn't know what to do. No one's safe A breach, or a compromise of the digital perimeter of a company, is one of those things most firms think happen to others. The reality says otherwise. Breaches happen, and they happen aplenty. Security researchers like to point out that most companies which hackers have infiltrated into, don't even become aware that they may have been breached until things go awry. As they say, "if you think you haven't been breached, it is because you don't know you have been breached." Even after breaches become apparent, many executives are left stunned, not quite sure how to respond. Management of companies like to focus on solving the problem that they have put at the centre of their venture and growing the business. They usually don't take data security or data integrity as seriously as they should. Then later, as they evolve and grow and see the danger posed by such breaches, they retro-fit and beef up their security protocol, according to several founders who agree this is not an ideal practice. "It is a reactive topic, and as a community we don't have conversations on security until stuff hits the fan," says the founder of a Delhi based start-up. Incident response plans Atul Gupta, partner, cyber security services at KPMG, has many years of experience responding to security incidents in corporate India. He says that the top management needs to draw up incident response plans to tackle such eventualities. He believes that the C-Suite in every company needs to be trained to behave like crew in airlines, well-drilled in managing adverse situations, when faced with a crisis. "Attacks are bound to happen, come whatsoever you do. How do you manage that situation at that moment is actually going to determine the impact. If you panic, things are going to get really, really bad," he points out. To not panic, it is imperative that every company puts in place a proper incident response plan, one that will take into account not just the technological response, but also regulatory, customer and media response. Such a plan should detail and divide responsibilities so that it is clear to the team who will handle what. Technological response Knowing the real extent of the damage is the only way to first contain it and then counter it. Assemble a team to investigate the breach. The members of such a team could be drawn from your company's internal resources, or you could involve experts from companies offering such services from outside. Once the breach is contained, they could go into examining the various digital forensic artefacts in detail to build up a case and to distil learnings to prevent recurrence. KPMG, EY, Deloitte, PwC, along with a host of startups run by white hat hackers have been involved in cyber forensic investigations in India Regulators and government Legislation in many sectors like finance and banking already mandates the reporting of every incident, and it is only a matter of time before this becomes a requirement through almost all sectors. Alerting the Computer Emergency Response Team—CERT-In—is one such step. In case of financial and banking companies, the RBI has set up reporting mechanisms that must be adhered to. This could also involve bringing in the cops in the cyber crime station in its jurisdiction. Customers and media Breaches never make good headlines, but lack of openness in disclosing news about it could cause even bigger embarrassment. It wouldn't exactly flatter a company if news breaks of breaches from outside its sphere of influence. Openness is becoming among the best practices in cyber security that will sooner than later evolve into a competitive advantage. KPMGs 2017 Global CEO Outlook report found rather surprisingly that 71% of CEOs saw "their investment in cyber security as an opportunity to find new revenue streams and innovate, rather than as an overhead cost. For example, some businesses have created value by investing in technology that sends an alert to the customer if there is an unusual login, such as in a different country. This means that the customer knows if someone is pretending to be them, which gives these businesses a good opportunity to delight their customers." Kumar struggled with his response because of his total lack of preparedness. It will never be easy to manage breaches but having a plan in place and rehearsing the plan to keep responses sharp, will make it infinitely easier to limit the damage. (This article is from our Cyber crime special series ‘Dangers of Living in a Connected World’)
Source: ET

Amazon UK now has over 100 instant-order Dash buttons

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:13 AM PDT

In order to be the biggest, sometimes you need to be the fastest. It's a philosophy that Amazon has strictly adhered to, thanks to 1-Click ordering and its one-click Dash buttons. It's been just over a year since Amazon introduced its instant order b…

Source: engadget

Tags:
business
current affairs
engadget
business news
news paper

#4: Maggi Nutri-licious Noodles Combo, 600g

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:06 AM PDT

Maggi Nutrilicious

Maggi Nutri-licious Noodles Combo, 600g
by Maggi
(19)

Buy:   180.00

(Visit the Bestsellers in Grocery & Gourmet Foods list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.in: Bestsellers in Grocery & Gourmet Foods

#5: Tiyaan – Malayalam – DVD

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:02 AM PDT

Tiyaan

Tiyaan – Malayalam – DVD
Prithviraj, Murali Gopy, Shine Tom and Ananya Nair Indrajith , Jiyen Krishnakumar    U/A (Parental Guidance)   DVD
(2)

Buy:   140.00
4 used & new from   134.00

(Visit the Bestsellers in Movies & TV Shows list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.in: Bestsellers in Movies & TV Shows

#8: Ezra

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:02 AM PDT

Ezra

Ezra
 U (Universal)   DVD
(8)

Buy:   140.00
3 used & new from   140.00

(Visit the Bestsellers in Movies & TV Shows list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.in: Bestsellers in Movies & TV Shows

#10: Laurels Imperial 2 Analog Silver Dial Men’s Watch – Lo-Imp-201

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:02 AM PDT

Laurels Imperial

Laurels Imperial 2 Analog Silver Dial Men’s Watch – Lo-Imp-201
Laurels
(1082)

Buy:   1,199.00   369.00

(Visit the Bestsellers in Watches list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.in: Bestsellers in Watches

#9: Bersache Men Combo Pack of 3 Casual Sneakers Shoes

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:02 AM PDT

Bersache Men

Bersache Men Combo Pack of 3 Casual Sneakers Shoes
Bersache
(113)

Buy:   1,494.00  1,496.00   799.00

(Visit the Bestsellers in Shoes & Handbags list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.in: Bestsellers in Shoes & Handbags

#2: Music Card: All the Hits Hindi – 320 Kbps Mp3 Audio (4 GB)

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:01 AM PDT

Music Card

Music Card: All the Hits Hindi – 320 Kbps Mp3 Audio (4 GB)
Various USB Memory Stick
(34)

Buy:   699.00

(Visit the Bestsellers in Music list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.in: Bestsellers in Music

#10: Best of Bappi Lahiri

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:01 AM PDT

Best of

Best of Bappi Lahiri
(12)

Buy:   35.00

(Visit the Bestsellers in Music list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.in: Bestsellers in Music

FlyBe shares drop 14% after profit warning

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 12:57 AM PDT

This is a Real-time headline. These are breaking news, delivered the minute it happens, delivered ticker-tape style. Visit www.marketwatch.com or the quote page for more information about this breaking news.


Source: marketwatch

Tags:
finance
marketwatch
current affairs
investment tips

Stocks, bank FDs, debt or gold: Where to invest in Samvat 2074?

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 12:49 AM PDT

NEW DELHI: On the last day of Samvat 2073, it's time to take stock of your portfolio and consider a possible rejig. While your risk appetite and options available on the table would decide how your portfolio would look like in Samvat 2074, most analysts say a diversified portfolio of various assets can substantially improve the risk-reward for investors in the new Samvat. Despite having diverse views on how to invest in Samvat 2074, 12 top brokerages in a survey carried out by ETMarkets.com suggested that equities should get primacy over other asset classes in India's traditional new accounting year. On an average, they have assigned more weightage to stocks (60-70 per cent), while also listing out other asset classes such as bank fixed deposits and debt (20-30 per cent) and gold and other asset classes (10-15 per cent) to diversify risks. It would largely depend on one's age and risk appetite and, hence, it is very subjective in nature, said Pankaj Pandey, Head of Research at ICICI Securities. "Our general sense is, in the current market scenario of diminishing returns across other asset classes, a large part of one's investable surplus should be deployed in equities to generate inflation-beating returns," Pandey said. AxisDirect prescribes putting 50 per cent of the investible money in equities, 10 per cent in fixed deposits and around 20 per cent in gold to benefit from any geopolitical misadventures on the Korean peninsula. Besides the brokerage suggests 20 per cent cash should be deployed in liquid mutual funds with an intention to invest in equities on any selloff. "We would advise using the cash to be invested in a staggered manner in equities, ride the wave for gold investments and after making decent returns convert the gold investments to equities, thereby going overweight on Indian equities on a later date," it said. Deepak Jasani, Head of Retail Research at HDFC Securities, believes a portfolio of 60 per cent allocation to equity, 30 per cent to debt and 10 per cent to gold can offer decent returns with lower risk. He, however, warns that investors would have to make tough choices going forward. While the Nifty50 could correct in the early part of the coming Samvat, it could later revisit the high point and make an attempt to breach it, said Jasani. The debt market could remain lacklustre as ample liquidity and slow growth in credit demand will keep the lid on interest rates, while the forex situation (including current account deficit and FII flows) could provide a floor to interest rates. Gold prices seem to be up globally and, hence, could see some follow through in India, subject to the USD-INR rates, he said. Sanjeev Zarbade, Vice President for PCG Research at Kotak Securities, would love to invest 50 per cent of the investible sum in equities, preferably through the SIP route. Out of the balance, he would prefer 30 per cent investment in fixed income funds while keeping the remaining amount aside for lumpsum investment in equities in case the market corrects. Nitasha Shankar, Senior Vice President and Head of Research, YES Securities, says she would put 70 per cent of money in equities, 15 per cent in debt and 15 per cent in liquid gold benchmark exchange traded scheme (BeEs) or keep as cash to invest in equities on dips. Invest 50 per cent in equities, 25 per cent in debt, 10 per cent in gold and 15 per cent in dollar or dollar assets, says Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services. Jimeet Modi of Samco Securities says he would prefer to park 70 per cent in stocks, 15 per cent in gold and the rest 15 per cent in cash. Rakesh Tarway, Research Head at Reliance Securities is gung ho on equities. "Being a strong believer in equities, I would advise allocation of the entire sum to stocks with sound fundamentals." Indiabulls Housing Finance, Can Fin Home, Hero MotoCorp and L&T are some of our high conviction ideas, Tarway said. Rahul Shah, VP-Equity Advisory of MOSL, advised investors to park 100 per cent of investable money in good equity mutual funds or portfolio management services (PMS) as he expects equity funds to do well under good fund managers.
Source: ET

#9: Munchkin Warm Glow Wipe Warmer

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 12:40 AM PDT

Munchkin Warm

Munchkin Warm Glow Wipe Warmer
by Munchkin
3.9 out of 5 stars(2612)

Buy new: $31.99 $13.99
18 used & new from $11.47

(Visit the Best Sellers in Baby list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

Via Amazon.com: Best Sellers in Baby

China’s Xi Jinping takes his first step to challenge Modi’s rising clout in South Asia

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 12:24 AM PDT

Wednesday is an important day for Prime Minister Narendra Modi. What makes it important is because of what’s happening in neighbouring China. While Modi is seen as a brave leader who can ignore checks and balances for bold reforms, he is also seen as a strong-arm leader outside India, especially after India's surgical strikes in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. India's challenge to China during the Doklam standoff only amplified this persona. On the backfoot after the border skirmish, Xi Jinping is trying to turn the page at the critical once-in-five years party congress of the top leaders of the Communist Party of China. Considered China’s most powerful leader since Deng Xiaoping or even Mao Zedong, Xi will try to use the congress to lay the foundation to stay atop the 89-million-strong party even longer than the normal 10 years. That would break the unwritten two-term limit accepted by his immediate predecessors Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao — who were by Xi’s side at the congress — and end the era of “collective leadership” aimed at preventing the emergence of another Mao. The congress is expected to cement Xi’s authority that will further strengthen his power to pursue an aggressive policy abroad. The 19th edition of the congress assumes significance for Xi as he will have a far greater ability to choose his colleagues than he had in the last congress held in 2012. It is because of this the developments in Beijing will be closely watched in Delhi's policy circles. Another term for Xi does not augur well for Modi. First, China has lately started asserting in the world economic sphere, especially with its One-Belt-One-Road (OBOR) project. OBOR needles India as it passes through Indian territory occupied by Pakistan. A stronger and more confidant Xi will not only find a new zeal to increase China's global economic clout but can also flex its economic muscle in the region by investing in more infrastructure projects in the region, which will also give it strategic as well as diplomatic heft at India's expense. Second, a stronger and more confidant Xi can also escalate the border tussle with India. Xi wants to make China the number one global power by replacing USA but finds rising India a stumbling block. India's growing alliances in Indo-Pacific region (Japan, Australia and Southeast nations such as Vietnam, Singapore and Indonesia) and with USA to rebalance China's aggression is viewed as an obstacle by the Chinese regime. Xi would like to test India newly acquired confidence, especially with regard to Bhutan. India and Bhutan have a special security arrangement under which India will extend support whenever the Himalayan state faces a security threat. Doklam may be over but China is not going to digest the humiliation that India posed to it. China may have pulled out of the border tussle due to the upcoming Congress. After the Congress, it can escalate tension with India. India's Modi-led efforts to gain supremacy in the region will come under serious challenge with a stronger Xi. Modi's 'Act East' policy can face strong resistance from China. One positive for Modi is that with Xi growing stronger, there will be greater liking for stronger leaders in India. That will ensure he remains popular with the masses.
Source: ET

Stretchable ‘skin’ gives robots the sense of touch

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 12:23 AM PDT

Robots show a lot of promise as first responders, but they can't effectively dismantle bombs or perform delicate first aid procedures if they can't feel what they're touching. To remedy that problem, a team of engineers from the University of Washing…

Source: engadget

Tags:
business
current affairs
engadget
business news
news paper

Zalando falls 3.5% after warning of possible pretax loss

Posted: 18 Oct 2017 12:07 AM PDT

This is a Real-time headline. These are breaking news, delivered the minute it happens, delivered ticker-tape style. Visit www.marketwatch.com or the quote page for more information about this breaking news.


Source: marketwatch

Tags:
finance
marketwatch
current affairs
investment tips

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...