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Daily Advance - Business (Free subscription) | 11/07/2009
"Equities managed to shrug off" the jobs data, said Deutsche Bank's Adam Boyton. Investors generally look at jobs as a "lagging indicator," or one of the last areas to recover in a recession. So they weren't particularly worried about the unemployment rate, he said, especially given that last week the government said the country grew 3.5 percent in the third quarter.
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Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 11/06/2009
... Japanese yen from 90.78 yen."Equities managed to shrug off" the jobs data, said Deutsche Bank's Adam Boyton. Investors generally look at jobs as a "lagging indicator," or one of the last areas to recover in a recession. So they weren't particularly worried about the unemployment rate, he said, especially given that last week the government said the country grew 3.5 percent in the...
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ABC News (Free subscription) | 11/06/2009
... Japanese yen from 90.78 yen."Equities managed to shrug off" the jobs data, said Deutsche Bank's Adam Boyton. Investors generally look at jobs as a "lagging indicator," or one of the last areas to recover in a recession. So they weren't particularly worried about the unemployment rate, he said, especially given that last week the government said the country grew 3.5 percent in the...
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Seattle Times (Free subscription) | 11/06/2009
"Equities managed to shrug off" the jobs data, said Deutsche Bank's Adam Boyton. Investors generally look at jobs as a "lagging indicator," or one of the last areas to recover in a recession. So they weren't particularly worried about the unemployment rate, he said, especially given that last week the government said the country grew 3.5 percent in the third quarter.