Noticias - dias 18- 19 e 20 de Abril de 2003
Negócios: Fábrica japonesa cria 300 empregos em Setúbal
2003-04-18 11:41:15
O grupo japonês Taiyo Technology vai abrir uma fábrica no Parque Industrial Sapec Bay, em Setúbal, prevendo criar 100 empregos até ao final do ano e outros 200 num curto prazo, de acordo com uma notícia avançada esta sexta-feira pela edição electrónica do Público.
O jornal adianta que a unidade fabril, cujo investimento inicial está avaliado em 14,9 milhões de euros, irá produzir componentes plásticos para automóveis e telemóveis.
A fábrica deverá começar a trabalhar ainda este ano, prevendo-se que, numa fase posterior, passe a laborar com três turnos, com um total de 300 funcionários no sector de produção.
A Taiyo Technology Portugal irá assegurar o fabrico de componentes de plástico para os telemóveis Sony e Ericsson e, também, para a fábrica da Visteon (em Palmela), onde são produzidos os painéis de comando de som e ar condicionado dos veículos da Autoeuropa.
Segundo fontes do grupo japonês citadas pelo Público, a escolha do complexo industrial Sapec Bay deveu-se à proximidade do porto de Setúbal, que permitirá grande facilidade no escoamento da produção.
Fonte: Diário Digital
2003-04-18 11:41:15
O grupo japonês Taiyo Technology vai abrir uma fábrica no Parque Industrial Sapec Bay, em Setúbal, prevendo criar 100 empregos até ao final do ano e outros 200 num curto prazo, de acordo com uma notícia avançada esta sexta-feira pela edição electrónica do Público.
O jornal adianta que a unidade fabril, cujo investimento inicial está avaliado em 14,9 milhões de euros, irá produzir componentes plásticos para automóveis e telemóveis.
A fábrica deverá começar a trabalhar ainda este ano, prevendo-se que, numa fase posterior, passe a laborar com três turnos, com um total de 300 funcionários no sector de produção.
A Taiyo Technology Portugal irá assegurar o fabrico de componentes de plástico para os telemóveis Sony e Ericsson e, também, para a fábrica da Visteon (em Palmela), onde são produzidos os painéis de comando de som e ar condicionado dos veículos da Autoeuropa.
Segundo fontes do grupo japonês citadas pelo Público, a escolha do complexo industrial Sapec Bay deveu-se à proximidade do porto de Setúbal, que permitirá grande facilidade no escoamento da produção.
Fonte: Diário Digital
- Mensagens: 23939
- Registado: 5/11/2002 11:30
- Localização: 4
Mercados: Bolsas europeias e norte-americanas reabrem na próxima terça-feira
2003-04-18 11:06:09
As praças europeias, incluindo a Euronext Lisboa, e as congéneres norte-americanas retomarão a sua actividade na próxima terça-feira.
Fonte: Diário Digital
2003-04-18 11:06:09
As praças europeias, incluindo a Euronext Lisboa, e as congéneres norte-americanas retomarão a sua actividade na próxima terça-feira.
Fonte: Diário Digital
- Mensagens: 23939
- Registado: 5/11/2002 11:30
- Localização: 4
Mercados: Resultados da Nokia ajudam Nikkei
2003-04-18 10:58:54
A Bolsa de Tóquio fechou em alta, impulsionada pelos títulos tecnológicos, que beneficiaram dos bons resultados trimestrais da Nokia. O Nikkei encerrou a semana com uma valorização de 0,66% para os 7.873,81 pontos.
Além dos resultados da Nokia, a notícia de que as encomendas de chips no mercado norte-americano cresceram em Março também ajudou a animar os investidores japoneses.
Fonte: Diário Digital
2003-04-18 10:58:54
A Bolsa de Tóquio fechou em alta, impulsionada pelos títulos tecnológicos, que beneficiaram dos bons resultados trimestrais da Nokia. O Nikkei encerrou a semana com uma valorização de 0,66% para os 7.873,81 pontos.
Além dos resultados da Nokia, a notícia de que as encomendas de chips no mercado norte-americano cresceram em Março também ajudou a animar os investidores japoneses.
Fonte: Diário Digital
- Mensagens: 23939
- Registado: 5/11/2002 11:30
- Localização: 4
U.S. Stocks Rise After Broadcom, PepsiCo Earnings; AMR Advances
By Josh P. Hamilton
New York, April 17 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks gained after quarterly results from Broadcom Corp. and PepsiCo Inc. suggested companies are starting to meet estimates because of higher sales in addition to cost cuts.
AMR Corp., the parent of American Airlines, rose on optimism that concessions by flight attendants will help the carrier avert bankruptcy as air traffic slumps amid the war in Iraq. Indexes moved higher after a government report showed manufacturing in the Philadelphia area slowed less than expected.
``Folks were afraid with the economy slowing down with the war tensions, that maybe you'd see a lot of earnings disappointments -- that's failed to materialize so far,'' Dan Bandi, who helps manage about $2 billion at National City Corp. in Cleveland, told Bloomberg Radio.
The Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 13.67, or 1.6 percent, to 893.58. Broadcom had the index's biggest gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 80.04, or 1 percent, to 8337.65. The Nasdaq Composite Index advanced for a fourth day, rising 30.78, or 2.2 percent, to 1425.50.
The S&P 500 climbed 2.9 percent this week as almost a third of its members released first-quarter results. The Dow rose 1.6 percent and the Nasdaq rallied 4.9 percent.
With 162 S&P 500 companies having reported, first-quarter profits are up 8.9 percent from a year ago and sales are 5 percent higher, according to Thomson Financial. Analysts expect profit growth of 10.2 percent after all of the benchmark's members have reported. They forecast a 3 percent gain in revenue.
Economic Reading
More than eight shares gained for every three that declined on the New York Stock Exchange, the broadest rally since Jan. 6. Almost 1.4 billion shares traded, in line with the three-month daily average. Exchanges are closed tomorrow for Good Friday.
Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are now higher for the year, up 1.6 percent and 6.7 percent, respectively, while the Dow has trimmed its year-to-date decline to 0.1 percent.
Stocks got a boost after the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's factory index fell to minus 8.8 in April rather than the minus 10 that economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected. A New York Fed report on Tuesday showed manufacturing in the state contracted by the most since October 2001.
``After the Empire State indices, people were expecting a bigger decline'' in the Philadelphia report, said Steven Ricchiuto, chief economist at ABN Amro Inc.
Tempering gains, another report showed 442,000 U.S. workers sought initial unemployment benefits last week, up 30,000 from the prior week and marking the ninth week that claims were above 400,000. Economists in a Bloomberg News survey expected 410,000.
Broadcom, PepsiCo
Broadcom, the world's largest maker of semiconductors for cable-television boxes, rallied $2.55, or 18 percent, to $16.60. Sales surged 37 percent to the highest in two years and its first- quarter loss narrowed. Excluding certain costs, profit was 6 cents a share.
PepsiCo advanced $2.64 to $42.54. The No. 2 soft-drink maker reported net income of 45 cents a share last quarter, topping the average estimate of 42 cents in a Thomson Financial survey of analysts. Lower expenses and a 4.1 percent rise in sales drove the increase.
Nokia Oyj's U.S. shares rose $1 to $16.18. The company said its mobile-phone business became more profitable and it expects to increase its 38 percent market share this quarter. First-quarter net income rose to 977 million euros ($1.1 billion). Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News expected 929 million euros on average.
Applied Micro Circuits Corp. jumped 59 cents to $3.97. UBS Warburg analyst Alex Gauna upgraded the communications-chip maker to ``buy'' from ``neutral.'' He said the shares should reach $5 within 12 months.
AMR Soars
AMR soared 77 cents to $5 after the flight attendants union agreed to $340 million of wage and benefit concessions, the final piece in a plan to cut $1.8 billion in employee costs to keep the largest U.S. airline out of bankruptcy.
Delta Air Lines Inc. rose $1.26 to $11.75. The No. 3 U.S. carrier said it lost $3.49 a share in the first quarter. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial had expected $3.51 on average.
Sabre Holdings Corp. rose 76 cents to $18.10 as the biggest U.S. travel-reservations company and owner of Travelocity.com declared its first quarterly dividend. Shareholders of record as of April 30 will get a 7-cent-a-share payout on May 15. First- quarter profit matched analysts' reduced estimates.
Dover Corp., the maker of semiconductor-manufacturing equipment, climbed $3.78 to $27.83 after reporting that it earned 29 cents a share in the first quarter. The company was expected to earn 24 cents a share, according to a Thomson Financial survey.
Avery Drops
Avery Dennison Corp. lost $4.67, or 8.9 percent, to $47.83, the biggest slide in the S&P 500. The world's biggest label maker has fallen 20 percent since revealing late Monday that the U.S. Justice Department started a criminal investigation into competitive practices in the label industry. Avery said it expects to receive a subpoena in the probe soon.
United Technologies Corp. was the biggest drag on the Dow average, falling $2.27 to $60. Executives at the maker of Pratt & Whitney jet engines declined to give a second-quarter forecast because air travel has been crippled by the war and the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.
Mattel Inc. shed $1.67 to $20.93. Sales rose less than 1 percent, though cost-cutting boosted first-quarter profit to 9 cents a share at the largest toymaker.
Sun Microsystems Inc. fell 8 cents to $3.24. The maker of server computers that run corporate networks reported its eighth consecutive drop in quarterly sales as revenue slumped 10 percent. The company earned $4 million as it cut costs.
SanDisk Rallies
SanDisk Corp. rallied $4.19 to $21.99. The world's largest maker of flash-memory data-storage products returned to profit in the first quarter as sales surged 88 percent. The company earned 35 cents a share, exceeding analysts' average estimates of 18 cents a share. Flash-memory devices are used in electronics ranging from digital cameras to mobile phones.
Lam Research Corp. rose $1.71 to $13.41. The maker of tools that factories use to etch and clean computer chips said it earned 3 cents a share in the quarter ended March 30, excluding certain costs. On that basis, it was expected to break even, according to a Thomson Financial survey.
S&P 500 futures expiring in June rose 12.40 to 891.20 on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. June futures on the Nasdaq-100 Index advanced 26.50 to 1083. The index, a benchmark for Nasdaq's largest companies, gained 28.67 to 1083.56.
Nasdaq-100 tracking shares, called Cubes because of their QQQ ticker symbol, rose 60 cents to $26.82. The S&P 500 shares known as Spiders gained $1.31 to $89.56.
The Russell 2000 Index of smaller stocks advanced 5.97, or 1.6 percent, to 383.70. The Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index, the broadest measure of U.S. shares, added 126.64, or 1.5 percent, to 8466.84. Based on the Wilshire's change, the total value of U.S. stocks rose by $151.9 billion.
AMR Corp. (AMR)
Applied Micro Circuits Corp. (AMCC)
Avery Dennison Corp. (AVY)
Broadcom Corp. (BRCM)
Delta Air Lines Inc. (DAL)
Dover Corp. (DOV)
Lam Research Corp. (LRCX)
Mattel Inc. (MAT)
Nokia Oyj (NOK)
PepsiCo Inc. (PEP)
Sabre Holdings Corp. (TSG)
SanDisk Corp. (SNDK)
Sun Microsystems Inc. (SUNW)
United Technologies Corp. (UTX)
Last Updated: April 17, 2003 17:16 EDT
By Josh P. Hamilton
New York, April 17 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks gained after quarterly results from Broadcom Corp. and PepsiCo Inc. suggested companies are starting to meet estimates because of higher sales in addition to cost cuts.
AMR Corp., the parent of American Airlines, rose on optimism that concessions by flight attendants will help the carrier avert bankruptcy as air traffic slumps amid the war in Iraq. Indexes moved higher after a government report showed manufacturing in the Philadelphia area slowed less than expected.
``Folks were afraid with the economy slowing down with the war tensions, that maybe you'd see a lot of earnings disappointments -- that's failed to materialize so far,'' Dan Bandi, who helps manage about $2 billion at National City Corp. in Cleveland, told Bloomberg Radio.
The Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 13.67, or 1.6 percent, to 893.58. Broadcom had the index's biggest gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 80.04, or 1 percent, to 8337.65. The Nasdaq Composite Index advanced for a fourth day, rising 30.78, or 2.2 percent, to 1425.50.
The S&P 500 climbed 2.9 percent this week as almost a third of its members released first-quarter results. The Dow rose 1.6 percent and the Nasdaq rallied 4.9 percent.
With 162 S&P 500 companies having reported, first-quarter profits are up 8.9 percent from a year ago and sales are 5 percent higher, according to Thomson Financial. Analysts expect profit growth of 10.2 percent after all of the benchmark's members have reported. They forecast a 3 percent gain in revenue.
Economic Reading
More than eight shares gained for every three that declined on the New York Stock Exchange, the broadest rally since Jan. 6. Almost 1.4 billion shares traded, in line with the three-month daily average. Exchanges are closed tomorrow for Good Friday.
Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are now higher for the year, up 1.6 percent and 6.7 percent, respectively, while the Dow has trimmed its year-to-date decline to 0.1 percent.
Stocks got a boost after the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's factory index fell to minus 8.8 in April rather than the minus 10 that economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected. A New York Fed report on Tuesday showed manufacturing in the state contracted by the most since October 2001.
``After the Empire State indices, people were expecting a bigger decline'' in the Philadelphia report, said Steven Ricchiuto, chief economist at ABN Amro Inc.
Tempering gains, another report showed 442,000 U.S. workers sought initial unemployment benefits last week, up 30,000 from the prior week and marking the ninth week that claims were above 400,000. Economists in a Bloomberg News survey expected 410,000.
Broadcom, PepsiCo
Broadcom, the world's largest maker of semiconductors for cable-television boxes, rallied $2.55, or 18 percent, to $16.60. Sales surged 37 percent to the highest in two years and its first- quarter loss narrowed. Excluding certain costs, profit was 6 cents a share.
PepsiCo advanced $2.64 to $42.54. The No. 2 soft-drink maker reported net income of 45 cents a share last quarter, topping the average estimate of 42 cents in a Thomson Financial survey of analysts. Lower expenses and a 4.1 percent rise in sales drove the increase.
Nokia Oyj's U.S. shares rose $1 to $16.18. The company said its mobile-phone business became more profitable and it expects to increase its 38 percent market share this quarter. First-quarter net income rose to 977 million euros ($1.1 billion). Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News expected 929 million euros on average.
Applied Micro Circuits Corp. jumped 59 cents to $3.97. UBS Warburg analyst Alex Gauna upgraded the communications-chip maker to ``buy'' from ``neutral.'' He said the shares should reach $5 within 12 months.
AMR Soars
AMR soared 77 cents to $5 after the flight attendants union agreed to $340 million of wage and benefit concessions, the final piece in a plan to cut $1.8 billion in employee costs to keep the largest U.S. airline out of bankruptcy.
Delta Air Lines Inc. rose $1.26 to $11.75. The No. 3 U.S. carrier said it lost $3.49 a share in the first quarter. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial had expected $3.51 on average.
Sabre Holdings Corp. rose 76 cents to $18.10 as the biggest U.S. travel-reservations company and owner of Travelocity.com declared its first quarterly dividend. Shareholders of record as of April 30 will get a 7-cent-a-share payout on May 15. First- quarter profit matched analysts' reduced estimates.
Dover Corp., the maker of semiconductor-manufacturing equipment, climbed $3.78 to $27.83 after reporting that it earned 29 cents a share in the first quarter. The company was expected to earn 24 cents a share, according to a Thomson Financial survey.
Avery Drops
Avery Dennison Corp. lost $4.67, or 8.9 percent, to $47.83, the biggest slide in the S&P 500. The world's biggest label maker has fallen 20 percent since revealing late Monday that the U.S. Justice Department started a criminal investigation into competitive practices in the label industry. Avery said it expects to receive a subpoena in the probe soon.
United Technologies Corp. was the biggest drag on the Dow average, falling $2.27 to $60. Executives at the maker of Pratt & Whitney jet engines declined to give a second-quarter forecast because air travel has been crippled by the war and the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.
Mattel Inc. shed $1.67 to $20.93. Sales rose less than 1 percent, though cost-cutting boosted first-quarter profit to 9 cents a share at the largest toymaker.
Sun Microsystems Inc. fell 8 cents to $3.24. The maker of server computers that run corporate networks reported its eighth consecutive drop in quarterly sales as revenue slumped 10 percent. The company earned $4 million as it cut costs.
SanDisk Rallies
SanDisk Corp. rallied $4.19 to $21.99. The world's largest maker of flash-memory data-storage products returned to profit in the first quarter as sales surged 88 percent. The company earned 35 cents a share, exceeding analysts' average estimates of 18 cents a share. Flash-memory devices are used in electronics ranging from digital cameras to mobile phones.
Lam Research Corp. rose $1.71 to $13.41. The maker of tools that factories use to etch and clean computer chips said it earned 3 cents a share in the quarter ended March 30, excluding certain costs. On that basis, it was expected to break even, according to a Thomson Financial survey.
S&P 500 futures expiring in June rose 12.40 to 891.20 on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. June futures on the Nasdaq-100 Index advanced 26.50 to 1083. The index, a benchmark for Nasdaq's largest companies, gained 28.67 to 1083.56.
Nasdaq-100 tracking shares, called Cubes because of their QQQ ticker symbol, rose 60 cents to $26.82. The S&P 500 shares known as Spiders gained $1.31 to $89.56.
The Russell 2000 Index of smaller stocks advanced 5.97, or 1.6 percent, to 383.70. The Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index, the broadest measure of U.S. shares, added 126.64, or 1.5 percent, to 8466.84. Based on the Wilshire's change, the total value of U.S. stocks rose by $151.9 billion.
AMR Corp. (AMR)
Applied Micro Circuits Corp. (AMCC)
Avery Dennison Corp. (AVY)
Broadcom Corp. (BRCM)
Delta Air Lines Inc. (DAL)
Dover Corp. (DOV)
Lam Research Corp. (LRCX)
Mattel Inc. (MAT)
Nokia Oyj (NOK)
PepsiCo Inc. (PEP)
Sabre Holdings Corp. (TSG)
SanDisk Corp. (SNDK)
Sun Microsystems Inc. (SUNW)
United Technologies Corp. (UTX)
Last Updated: April 17, 2003 17:16 EDT
- Mensagens: 23939
- Registado: 5/11/2002 11:30
- Localização: 4
Asian Stocks Rise as Kyocera, Hon Hai Advance on Nokia Forecast
By Tomoko Yamazaki
Tokyo, April 18 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks rose, led by Kyocera Corp., Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. and other suppliers of cell-phone parts, after Nokia Oyj forecast global handset sales will climb about 10 percent this year.
``Nokia's forecast and improved profitability are positive for the industry,'' said Hideo Ueki, who oversees $6 billion in Japanese equities as a chief investment officer at UBS Global Asset Management (Japan) Ltd. Shares of some of the exporters that are sensitive to U.S. market movements may be good buys at the moment, he added.
Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 0.7 percent to 7874.51 at the 3 p.m. close in Tokyo. The Topix added 0.2 percent to 790.72, with computer-related shares contributing the most to its advance. Both benchmarks had their first weekly gain in three.
Taiwan's TWSE Index added 2 percent to 4658.30, paced by Hon Hai Precision, which supplies handset parts to Nokia in China.
South Korea's Kospi index rose 2 percent to 624.77, rounding off a 7.2 percent surge this week. Samsung Electronics Co. led today's advance after saying it expects to sell more chips and flat screens this quarter.
Benchmarks in Malaysia and Thailand gained, while China's indexes fell. Markets in Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, Indonesia, Philippines and India were shut today for public holidays.
Nikkei 225 futures for June delivery gained 0.5 percent to 7870 in Osaka and climbed 0.8 percent to 7885 in Singapore.
The Nikkei rose 0.7 percent this week, while the Topix climbed 1.3 percent. It was the first weekly gain for both since the five days ended March 28.
Kyocera, Hon Hai Rally
Kyocera, the world's largest maker of ceramic packaging used to protect finished microchips, gained 4.3 percent to 6,030 yen. Kyocera also makes cellular phone handsets. Murata Manufacturing Co., the world's biggest maker of ceramic capacitors used to regulate electricity in cell phone handsets, advanced 1.4 percent to 4,290 yen.
Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision, which supplies mobile phones to Nokia, rose 2.2 percent to NT$118.50.
Nokia, the world's largest maker of mobile phones, said first- quarter net income rose 13 percent to 977 million euros ($1.1 billion). That beat the 929 million euro average estimate given by analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.
Exporters such as Canon Inc. and Hyundai Motor Co. rose on optimism overseas demand is growing after U.S. corporate earnings indicated the world's largest economy may be improving.
Canon, which relies on overseas sales for 70 percent of its revenue, climbed 1.4 percent to 4,230 yen. Toyota Motor Corp., the No. 4 automaker in the U.S., added 1.2 percent to 2,610 yen.
South Korea
South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co., which gets a fifth of its sales from the U.S., gained 3.1 percent to 30,150 won. Trigem Computer Inc., whose computer exports account for about 70 percent of sales, jumped 3.9 percent to 5,640 won.
First-quarter profits are up 8.9 percent from a year ago among the 162 Standard & Poor's 500 Index companies that have reported results, according to Thomson Financial. Sales are 5 percent higher, it said.
A U.S. report showing manufacturing fell less than some economists expected also helped ease concerns of slowing demand in Asia's largest export market. A Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's factory index dropped to minus 8.8 in April, rather than the minus 10 that economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected.
``We are seeing some signs of a recovery in the U.S. economy and there's a perception that profits for exporters will remain firm,'' said Sadaharu Nagumo, who helps manage the equivalent of $668 million in assets at Japan Investment Trust Management Co.
He keeps his stake in computer-related shares equal to the Topix index's 14.6 percent weighting.
Forget the Past
The Kospi climbed 12.05 to 624.77. Kospi 200 futures gained 2.6 percent to 80.35, while the underlying index added 2 percent to 79.67.
Samsung Electronics, the world's biggest memory chipmaker, advanced 4.3 percent to 315,000 won. It has a ``positive picture'' for the current quarter, said Chu Woo Sik, vice president of investor relations, said on a conference call.
The company raised its forecast for capital spending this year to 6.78 trillion won ($5.6 billion) from 6 trillion won and said production of its chips and flat-panel displays will increase this quarter. First-quarter profit dropped to 1.13 trillion won from a record 1.9 trillion won a year ago.
``Investors are looking at what will happen to the company and the industry in the future rather than what already happened in the past,'' said Oh Jong Moon, chief investment officer at Midas Asset Management Ltd., who oversees the equivalent of $1.41 billion in Korean assets.
His stake in Samsung Electronics accounts for about a fifth of his holdings.
Canon Inc. (7751 JP)
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. (2317 TT)
Hyundai Motor Co. (0538 JP)
Kyocera Corp. (6971 JP)
Murata Manufacturing Co. (6981 JP)
Samsung Electronics Co. (0593 KS)
Toyota Motor Corp. (7203 JP)
Last Updated: April 18, 2003 04:13 EDT
By Tomoko Yamazaki
Tokyo, April 18 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks rose, led by Kyocera Corp., Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. and other suppliers of cell-phone parts, after Nokia Oyj forecast global handset sales will climb about 10 percent this year.
``Nokia's forecast and improved profitability are positive for the industry,'' said Hideo Ueki, who oversees $6 billion in Japanese equities as a chief investment officer at UBS Global Asset Management (Japan) Ltd. Shares of some of the exporters that are sensitive to U.S. market movements may be good buys at the moment, he added.
Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 0.7 percent to 7874.51 at the 3 p.m. close in Tokyo. The Topix added 0.2 percent to 790.72, with computer-related shares contributing the most to its advance. Both benchmarks had their first weekly gain in three.
Taiwan's TWSE Index added 2 percent to 4658.30, paced by Hon Hai Precision, which supplies handset parts to Nokia in China.
South Korea's Kospi index rose 2 percent to 624.77, rounding off a 7.2 percent surge this week. Samsung Electronics Co. led today's advance after saying it expects to sell more chips and flat screens this quarter.
Benchmarks in Malaysia and Thailand gained, while China's indexes fell. Markets in Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, Indonesia, Philippines and India were shut today for public holidays.
Nikkei 225 futures for June delivery gained 0.5 percent to 7870 in Osaka and climbed 0.8 percent to 7885 in Singapore.
The Nikkei rose 0.7 percent this week, while the Topix climbed 1.3 percent. It was the first weekly gain for both since the five days ended March 28.
Kyocera, Hon Hai Rally
Kyocera, the world's largest maker of ceramic packaging used to protect finished microchips, gained 4.3 percent to 6,030 yen. Kyocera also makes cellular phone handsets. Murata Manufacturing Co., the world's biggest maker of ceramic capacitors used to regulate electricity in cell phone handsets, advanced 1.4 percent to 4,290 yen.
Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision, which supplies mobile phones to Nokia, rose 2.2 percent to NT$118.50.
Nokia, the world's largest maker of mobile phones, said first- quarter net income rose 13 percent to 977 million euros ($1.1 billion). That beat the 929 million euro average estimate given by analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.
Exporters such as Canon Inc. and Hyundai Motor Co. rose on optimism overseas demand is growing after U.S. corporate earnings indicated the world's largest economy may be improving.
Canon, which relies on overseas sales for 70 percent of its revenue, climbed 1.4 percent to 4,230 yen. Toyota Motor Corp., the No. 4 automaker in the U.S., added 1.2 percent to 2,610 yen.
South Korea
South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co., which gets a fifth of its sales from the U.S., gained 3.1 percent to 30,150 won. Trigem Computer Inc., whose computer exports account for about 70 percent of sales, jumped 3.9 percent to 5,640 won.
First-quarter profits are up 8.9 percent from a year ago among the 162 Standard & Poor's 500 Index companies that have reported results, according to Thomson Financial. Sales are 5 percent higher, it said.
A U.S. report showing manufacturing fell less than some economists expected also helped ease concerns of slowing demand in Asia's largest export market. A Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's factory index dropped to minus 8.8 in April, rather than the minus 10 that economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected.
``We are seeing some signs of a recovery in the U.S. economy and there's a perception that profits for exporters will remain firm,'' said Sadaharu Nagumo, who helps manage the equivalent of $668 million in assets at Japan Investment Trust Management Co.
He keeps his stake in computer-related shares equal to the Topix index's 14.6 percent weighting.
Forget the Past
The Kospi climbed 12.05 to 624.77. Kospi 200 futures gained 2.6 percent to 80.35, while the underlying index added 2 percent to 79.67.
Samsung Electronics, the world's biggest memory chipmaker, advanced 4.3 percent to 315,000 won. It has a ``positive picture'' for the current quarter, said Chu Woo Sik, vice president of investor relations, said on a conference call.
The company raised its forecast for capital spending this year to 6.78 trillion won ($5.6 billion) from 6 trillion won and said production of its chips and flat-panel displays will increase this quarter. First-quarter profit dropped to 1.13 trillion won from a record 1.9 trillion won a year ago.
``Investors are looking at what will happen to the company and the industry in the future rather than what already happened in the past,'' said Oh Jong Moon, chief investment officer at Midas Asset Management Ltd., who oversees the equivalent of $1.41 billion in Korean assets.
His stake in Samsung Electronics accounts for about a fifth of his holdings.
Canon Inc. (7751 JP)
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. (2317 TT)
Hyundai Motor Co. (0538 JP)
Kyocera Corp. (6971 JP)
Murata Manufacturing Co. (6981 JP)
Samsung Electronics Co. (0593 KS)
Toyota Motor Corp. (7203 JP)
Last Updated: April 18, 2003 04:13 EDT
- Mensagens: 23939
- Registado: 5/11/2002 11:30
- Localização: 4
Seiyu Shares Rise After Report It May Cut 40% of Jobs (Update1)
By Kae Inoue and Yasue Aoi
Tokyo, April 18 (Bloomberg) -- Shares of Seiyu Ltd. had their largest gain in five months after a newspaper said the supermarket operator may trim 2,500 jobs by March 2006, its first big cost- cutting since investor Wal-Mart Stores Inc. placed executives onto its board.
Seiyu, Japan's fifth-largest retailer, plans to reduce its full-time workforce by 40 percent by paying employees to quit, the Nihon Keizai reported, without citing anyone. Ryuichi Goto, senior vice president at Seiyu, denied the report, saying the company has not decided to cut jobs.
Seiyu is reducing costs to improve its finances after being unprofitable in three of the last six years as consumption growth sagged along with the economy. The company widened its group net loss forecast for the year ended Feb. 28 by almost fourfold in February to 83 billion yen ($693 million). Analysts expect Seiyu will proceed with job cuts.
``From the cost cut point of view, this is a positive move,'' said Yasuyuki Sasaki, an analyst at Credit Suisse First Boston Japan Inc., referring to the job cuts plan reported in the newspaper.
Seiyu shares rose as much as 286 yen, or 11 percent, in Tokyo Stock Exchange trading. They closed at 285 yen, trimming their drop in the past year to 53 percent.
Wal-Mart
Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, holds 38 percent of Seiyu as its main investment in Japan. Wal-Mart had 3,370 stores in the U.S. and 1,230 stores overseas as of December. There are no Wal-Mart stores in Japan.
Seiyu named five executives from Wal-Mart to its board last month. Seiyu President Masao Kiuchi said then that Wal-Mart's business models, distribution and information systems would be introduced to the Japanese company this year.
While denying that it has a plan to lop its staff numbers by 40 percent, Seiyu's Goto said the company will restart a program on May 1 to help employees who are aged 40 and older find jobs elsewhere after halting it for the last three months.
The supermarket operator will provide those who volunteer to leave the company a special allowance of 5 million yen ($41,806), on top of regular severance payments, Goto said.
Last Updated: April 18, 2003 02:12 EDT
By Kae Inoue and Yasue Aoi
Tokyo, April 18 (Bloomberg) -- Shares of Seiyu Ltd. had their largest gain in five months after a newspaper said the supermarket operator may trim 2,500 jobs by March 2006, its first big cost- cutting since investor Wal-Mart Stores Inc. placed executives onto its board.
Seiyu, Japan's fifth-largest retailer, plans to reduce its full-time workforce by 40 percent by paying employees to quit, the Nihon Keizai reported, without citing anyone. Ryuichi Goto, senior vice president at Seiyu, denied the report, saying the company has not decided to cut jobs.
Seiyu is reducing costs to improve its finances after being unprofitable in three of the last six years as consumption growth sagged along with the economy. The company widened its group net loss forecast for the year ended Feb. 28 by almost fourfold in February to 83 billion yen ($693 million). Analysts expect Seiyu will proceed with job cuts.
``From the cost cut point of view, this is a positive move,'' said Yasuyuki Sasaki, an analyst at Credit Suisse First Boston Japan Inc., referring to the job cuts plan reported in the newspaper.
Seiyu shares rose as much as 286 yen, or 11 percent, in Tokyo Stock Exchange trading. They closed at 285 yen, trimming their drop in the past year to 53 percent.
Wal-Mart
Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, holds 38 percent of Seiyu as its main investment in Japan. Wal-Mart had 3,370 stores in the U.S. and 1,230 stores overseas as of December. There are no Wal-Mart stores in Japan.
Seiyu named five executives from Wal-Mart to its board last month. Seiyu President Masao Kiuchi said then that Wal-Mart's business models, distribution and information systems would be introduced to the Japanese company this year.
While denying that it has a plan to lop its staff numbers by 40 percent, Seiyu's Goto said the company will restart a program on May 1 to help employees who are aged 40 and older find jobs elsewhere after halting it for the last three months.
The supermarket operator will provide those who volunteer to leave the company a special allowance of 5 million yen ($41,806), on top of regular severance payments, Goto said.
Last Updated: April 18, 2003 02:12 EDT
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Samsung Electronics Profit Drops More Than Expected (Update7)
By Ian King
Seoul, April 18 (Bloomberg) -- Samsung Electronics Co.'s first-quarter profit fell a bigger-than-expected 41 percent as prices slid. Shares of the world's biggest memory-chip maker rose 4.3 percent after Samsung said it expects to sell more computer chips and flat-panel displays this quarter.
Net income at Samsung, second only to Intel Corp. in overall semiconductor sales, fell to 1.13 trillion won ($936 million) from a record 1.9 trillion won a year ago after the price of computer- memory chips fell by almost half. A Bloomberg News survey of nine analysts had a median forecast of 1.48 trillion won.
Samsung has a ``positive picture'' for the current quarter, Chu Woo Sik, vice president of investor relations, said on a conference call. In a bid to edge out competitors, the company will increase its production of memory chips and flat screens this quarter at plants outfitted with the latest equipment.
``Investors are looking at what will happen to the company and the industry rather than what has already happened,'' said Oh Jong Moon, chief investment officer at Midas Asset Management Ltd., who oversees 1.7 trillion won ($1.41 billion) in Korean assets.
Oh's stake in Samsung Electronics, whose shares have fallen 22 percent the past year, accounts for about a fifth of his holdings. ``The stock had already reflected concern about first- quarter earnings,'' he said.
The company raised its forecast for capital spending this year to 6.78 trillion won from 6 trillion won, putting it as much as 44 percent ahead of Intel and extending its lead as the largest spender on equipment and new plants in the industry.
Samsung's shares were up 4.3 percent at 315,000 won at the 3 p.m. end of trade in Seoul, their highest close since March 21.
Second-Quarter Rebound?
Samsung's remarks on the outlook for the second quarter reinforced comments from three of the world's largest chipmakers, which suggested technology spending is starting to recover.
Intel on Tuesday said first-quarter sales fell less than 1 percent and forecast second-quarter revenue will rise as much as 11 percent. The same day, Texas Instruments Inc., the world's largest maker of chips that power mobile phones, said first- quarter sales jumped 20 percent and will rise again this quarter. Motorola Inc. reported its third consecutive quarter of net income.
Samsung, which claimed the No. 2 spot in chip sales behind Intel last year, is relying on selling products which command higher prices, a strategy it expects to pay off this quarter when its more efficient chip and LCD plants boost production.
``As long as selling prices don't fall too much, we can expect a reasonably bright prospect for the second quarter,'' Chu said on the conference call.
Price Stability
Representatives from Samsung's liquid-crystal display, memory- chip and cell-phone divisions said they expect prices to stabilize or increase in the current period.
An oversupply in the memory-chip industry will shrink to 1.1 percent in the second quarter from 2.3 percent in the first, said Kim Il Ung, head of Samsung's semiconductor marketing. Dynamic random-access memory chips, the main memory in PCs, may be in short supply this quarter and again in the second half, he added.
Operating income, or sales minus the cost of goods sold, tumbled to 1.35 trillion won from 2.41 trillion won, the company said. Sales of cell phones totaled 13.2 million in the quarter. Overall sales fell to 9.6 trillion won from 9.93 trillion won.
First-quarter operating profit at Samsung's semiconductor unit dropped 37 percent to 560 billion won from the three-month earlier period, when flash-memory chip prices dropped 25 percent.
The global cell-phone market is expected to reach 435 million units this year. Two out of five handsets will have color displays and 10 percent will be equipped with camera phones. Samsung said some 68 percent of its phones this year will have color screens; 21 percent will have cameras, allowing it to command higher average selling prices.
Operating profit at Samsung's telecom division slipped 3 percent to 680 billion won from the fourth quarter of 2002.
Samsung's digital media unit returned to operating profit with 100 billion won. The company expects liquid-crystal display prices to remain stable this year.
Affiliates, Cash Reserves
Losses at Samsung's affiliates knocked 34.8 billion won off its profit, compared with a 235 billion won contribution to profit in the fourth quarter, the company said. Samsung Card Co., 57 percent owned by Samsung Electronics, had a loss of 187 billion won in the first quarter. Of total loans, payments overdue by more 30 days decreased to 9.1 percent.
Samsung Electronics's cash level fell by 2.13 trillion won in the first quarter to 5.29 trillion won partly because the company dipped into reserves to buy back shares.
The company is considering a further repurchase of shares if cash flow and the ``overall business environment'' improve, Chu said, repeating the company's stance.
The company's capital spending of 6.78 trillion won compares with Intel, which this week said it expects to spend between $3.5 billion and $3.9 billion on new plants and equipment this year.
Higher spending on equipment to make and test semiconductors may boost earnings at companies such as Japan's Advantest Corp. and Tokyo Electron Ltd. The two companies supply equipment to most of the world's largest chipmakers, including Samsung.
Tokyo-based Advantest's shares rose 130 yen, or 3.3 percent, to 4,100 yen as of the 3 p.m. local time close on Japanese stock exchanges. Tokyo Electron's shares rose 2.7 percent.
Last Updated: April 18, 2003 02:39 EDT
By Ian King
Seoul, April 18 (Bloomberg) -- Samsung Electronics Co.'s first-quarter profit fell a bigger-than-expected 41 percent as prices slid. Shares of the world's biggest memory-chip maker rose 4.3 percent after Samsung said it expects to sell more computer chips and flat-panel displays this quarter.
Net income at Samsung, second only to Intel Corp. in overall semiconductor sales, fell to 1.13 trillion won ($936 million) from a record 1.9 trillion won a year ago after the price of computer- memory chips fell by almost half. A Bloomberg News survey of nine analysts had a median forecast of 1.48 trillion won.
Samsung has a ``positive picture'' for the current quarter, Chu Woo Sik, vice president of investor relations, said on a conference call. In a bid to edge out competitors, the company will increase its production of memory chips and flat screens this quarter at plants outfitted with the latest equipment.
``Investors are looking at what will happen to the company and the industry rather than what has already happened,'' said Oh Jong Moon, chief investment officer at Midas Asset Management Ltd., who oversees 1.7 trillion won ($1.41 billion) in Korean assets.
Oh's stake in Samsung Electronics, whose shares have fallen 22 percent the past year, accounts for about a fifth of his holdings. ``The stock had already reflected concern about first- quarter earnings,'' he said.
The company raised its forecast for capital spending this year to 6.78 trillion won from 6 trillion won, putting it as much as 44 percent ahead of Intel and extending its lead as the largest spender on equipment and new plants in the industry.
Samsung's shares were up 4.3 percent at 315,000 won at the 3 p.m. end of trade in Seoul, their highest close since March 21.
Second-Quarter Rebound?
Samsung's remarks on the outlook for the second quarter reinforced comments from three of the world's largest chipmakers, which suggested technology spending is starting to recover.
Intel on Tuesday said first-quarter sales fell less than 1 percent and forecast second-quarter revenue will rise as much as 11 percent. The same day, Texas Instruments Inc., the world's largest maker of chips that power mobile phones, said first- quarter sales jumped 20 percent and will rise again this quarter. Motorola Inc. reported its third consecutive quarter of net income.
Samsung, which claimed the No. 2 spot in chip sales behind Intel last year, is relying on selling products which command higher prices, a strategy it expects to pay off this quarter when its more efficient chip and LCD plants boost production.
``As long as selling prices don't fall too much, we can expect a reasonably bright prospect for the second quarter,'' Chu said on the conference call.
Price Stability
Representatives from Samsung's liquid-crystal display, memory- chip and cell-phone divisions said they expect prices to stabilize or increase in the current period.
An oversupply in the memory-chip industry will shrink to 1.1 percent in the second quarter from 2.3 percent in the first, said Kim Il Ung, head of Samsung's semiconductor marketing. Dynamic random-access memory chips, the main memory in PCs, may be in short supply this quarter and again in the second half, he added.
Operating income, or sales minus the cost of goods sold, tumbled to 1.35 trillion won from 2.41 trillion won, the company said. Sales of cell phones totaled 13.2 million in the quarter. Overall sales fell to 9.6 trillion won from 9.93 trillion won.
First-quarter operating profit at Samsung's semiconductor unit dropped 37 percent to 560 billion won from the three-month earlier period, when flash-memory chip prices dropped 25 percent.
The global cell-phone market is expected to reach 435 million units this year. Two out of five handsets will have color displays and 10 percent will be equipped with camera phones. Samsung said some 68 percent of its phones this year will have color screens; 21 percent will have cameras, allowing it to command higher average selling prices.
Operating profit at Samsung's telecom division slipped 3 percent to 680 billion won from the fourth quarter of 2002.
Samsung's digital media unit returned to operating profit with 100 billion won. The company expects liquid-crystal display prices to remain stable this year.
Affiliates, Cash Reserves
Losses at Samsung's affiliates knocked 34.8 billion won off its profit, compared with a 235 billion won contribution to profit in the fourth quarter, the company said. Samsung Card Co., 57 percent owned by Samsung Electronics, had a loss of 187 billion won in the first quarter. Of total loans, payments overdue by more 30 days decreased to 9.1 percent.
Samsung Electronics's cash level fell by 2.13 trillion won in the first quarter to 5.29 trillion won partly because the company dipped into reserves to buy back shares.
The company is considering a further repurchase of shares if cash flow and the ``overall business environment'' improve, Chu said, repeating the company's stance.
The company's capital spending of 6.78 trillion won compares with Intel, which this week said it expects to spend between $3.5 billion and $3.9 billion on new plants and equipment this year.
Higher spending on equipment to make and test semiconductors may boost earnings at companies such as Japan's Advantest Corp. and Tokyo Electron Ltd. The two companies supply equipment to most of the world's largest chipmakers, including Samsung.
Tokyo-based Advantest's shares rose 130 yen, or 3.3 percent, to 4,100 yen as of the 3 p.m. local time close on Japanese stock exchanges. Tokyo Electron's shares rose 2.7 percent.
Last Updated: April 18, 2003 02:39 EDT
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Finanças: Duisenberg aceita ficar à frente do Banco Central Europeu
2003-04-17 20:34:55
O actual presidente do Banco Central Europeu (BCE), Win Duisenberg, aceitou permanecer à frente dos destinos desta instituição europeia até ficar definido o seu sucessor.
O anúncio foi feito pelo próprio Duisenberg nesta quinta-feira e a decisão está directamente relacionada com o facto de o seu mais possível sucessor - o francês Jean-Claude Trichet - ser ilibado pelos tribunais quanto à sua participação no polémico caso do Crédit Lyonnais.
Esta posição merece a concordância da França e da Alemanha, os Estados-membros que mais se envolveram política e estrategicamente na definição do sucessor deste gestor holandês.
Segundo um pacto secreto - entretanto tornado público - entre Kohl e Chirac, Alemanha e França concordaram quanto À permanência de Duisenberg na liderança do BCE até ao dia em que completa 68 anos, ou seja, a 9 de Julho.
O sucessor de Duisenberg deverá ser um francês, sendo Trichet o mais forte e consensual candidato. O próximo homem forte do BCE terá a difícil tarefa de lidar com o alargamento da UE aos novos membros, gerindo os destinos monetários de uma União Europeia a 25 vozes.
Fonte: Diário Digital
2003-04-17 20:34:55
O actual presidente do Banco Central Europeu (BCE), Win Duisenberg, aceitou permanecer à frente dos destinos desta instituição europeia até ficar definido o seu sucessor.
O anúncio foi feito pelo próprio Duisenberg nesta quinta-feira e a decisão está directamente relacionada com o facto de o seu mais possível sucessor - o francês Jean-Claude Trichet - ser ilibado pelos tribunais quanto à sua participação no polémico caso do Crédit Lyonnais.
Esta posição merece a concordância da França e da Alemanha, os Estados-membros que mais se envolveram política e estrategicamente na definição do sucessor deste gestor holandês.
Segundo um pacto secreto - entretanto tornado público - entre Kohl e Chirac, Alemanha e França concordaram quanto À permanência de Duisenberg na liderança do BCE até ao dia em que completa 68 anos, ou seja, a 9 de Julho.
O sucessor de Duisenberg deverá ser um francês, sendo Trichet o mais forte e consensual candidato. O próximo homem forte do BCE terá a difícil tarefa de lidar com o alargamento da UE aos novos membros, gerindo os destinos monetários de uma União Europeia a 25 vozes.
Fonte: Diário Digital
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Merck abandona Vilazodone
17-4-2003 19:56
A Merck decidiu abandonar os testes intermédios do Vilazodone, um novo fármaco antidepressivo, devido ao insucesso apontado pelos anteriores relatórios. O Vilazodone tem vindo a ser desenvolvido em colaboração com a GlaxoSmithKline, que comprou os seus direitos em Fevereiro de 2001.
BolsaPt.com
17-4-2003 19:56
A Merck decidiu abandonar os testes intermédios do Vilazodone, um novo fármaco antidepressivo, devido ao insucesso apontado pelos anteriores relatórios. O Vilazodone tem vindo a ser desenvolvido em colaboração com a GlaxoSmithKline, que comprou os seus direitos em Fevereiro de 2001.
BolsaPt.com
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Noticias - dias 18- 19 e 20 de Abril de 2003
Acções EUA terminam semana a subir após resultados positivos; Nasdaq ganha 2,21%
Quinta, 17 Abr 2003 21:15
As acções americanas terminaram a semana a subir, com os investidores optimistas depois de várias empresas, como a PepsiCo e a Nokia, terem anunciado resultados acima das estimativas. O Nasdaq cresceu 2,21% e o Dow Jones subiu 0,97%.
O Nasdaq terminou nos 1.425,50 e o Dow Jones fechou a valer 8.337,65 pontos.
Numa semana repleta de resultados, o saldo foi positivo, depois de empresas como a Microsoft, Intel, JP Morgan e outras terem anunciado resultados que indiciam uma retoma na actividade das empresas. Na semana o Nasdaq subiu mais de 4% e o S&P 500 avançou 2,5%.
Hoje foi o dia da finlandesa Nokia, maior produtora de telemóveis do mundo, e a PepsiCo, terem animado os investidores. A PepsiCo, que anunciou uma subida de 13% nos lucros, valorizou 6,62%.
Também em reacção aos resultados apresentados, a Apple desceu 0,91% e a Sun Microsystems desvalorizou 2,41%.
Entre os títulos mais movimentados a Intel valorizou 2,75%, a Microsoft trepou 2,37% e a Cisco Systems subiu 2,88%.
O american depositary receipt (ADR) da Portugal Telecom (PT) ganhou 2,03% para os 7,05 dólares (6,48 euros), enquanto em Lisboa a empresa fechou nos 6,42 euros.
O ADR da Electricidade de Portugal (EDP) subiu 1,11% até aos 19,08 dólares (17,54 euros euros), enquanto em Lisboa a empresa fechou nos 1,72 euros. Cada ADR equivale a 10 acções da eléctrica nacional.
por Nuno Carregueiro
Quinta, 17 Abr 2003 21:15
As acções americanas terminaram a semana a subir, com os investidores optimistas depois de várias empresas, como a PepsiCo e a Nokia, terem anunciado resultados acima das estimativas. O Nasdaq cresceu 2,21% e o Dow Jones subiu 0,97%.
O Nasdaq terminou nos 1.425,50 e o Dow Jones fechou a valer 8.337,65 pontos.
Numa semana repleta de resultados, o saldo foi positivo, depois de empresas como a Microsoft, Intel, JP Morgan e outras terem anunciado resultados que indiciam uma retoma na actividade das empresas. Na semana o Nasdaq subiu mais de 4% e o S&P 500 avançou 2,5%.
Hoje foi o dia da finlandesa Nokia, maior produtora de telemóveis do mundo, e a PepsiCo, terem animado os investidores. A PepsiCo, que anunciou uma subida de 13% nos lucros, valorizou 6,62%.
Também em reacção aos resultados apresentados, a Apple desceu 0,91% e a Sun Microsystems desvalorizou 2,41%.
Entre os títulos mais movimentados a Intel valorizou 2,75%, a Microsoft trepou 2,37% e a Cisco Systems subiu 2,88%.
O american depositary receipt (ADR) da Portugal Telecom (PT) ganhou 2,03% para os 7,05 dólares (6,48 euros), enquanto em Lisboa a empresa fechou nos 6,42 euros.
O ADR da Electricidade de Portugal (EDP) subiu 1,11% até aos 19,08 dólares (17,54 euros euros), enquanto em Lisboa a empresa fechou nos 1,72 euros. Cada ADR equivale a 10 acções da eléctrica nacional.
por Nuno Carregueiro
Editado pela última vez por TRSM em 21/4/2003 12:00, num total de 1 vez.
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