The Australian sharemarket has opened higher today after leads from Wall Street led by positive factory data.ย ย ย
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Last night the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 2.01% after new figures showed factory activity fell at a slower rate than the previous month – hardly brilliant news, but in this climate, even not-so-bad news is greeted happily.ย ย
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The Wall Street gains helped push Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX200 index up 97.2 points or 2.7% to 3676.9 at 12.15 AESDT.
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NAB shares have gained 3% to $20.92, while ANZ jumped 2.8% to $16.32. Commonwealth Bank shares have gained 2% to $32.75 while Westpac jumped 1.9% to $19.79.
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The eyes of many investors are trained on the G20 meeting of global leaders in London, which were rocked by protests last night.
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Prime Minister Kevin Ruddย is stressing the importance of coming up with a plan of action from the meeting, saying the global economy will suffer more damage than necessary if world leaders at the G20 summit walk away with no plans. ย
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He says there is an emerging consensus among the group of world leaders but that there could be demand for another G20 summit later this year.
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“We have an obligation, as leaders, to produce the most substantive outcome possible from this G20 summit because working people across the world depend on this being a good outcome,” he said.
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“All those working people are looking to us as leaders to do everything physically possible to support their interests both in the months ahead but also through until 2010.”
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Elsewhere in London US President Barack Obama has played down any tensions caused by French President Sarkozy’s threats to walk out of the meeting.
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Obama has said there has been an “enormous consensus” among the group.
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“The core notion that government has to take some steps to deal with a contracting global marketplace and that we should be promoting growth – that’s not in dispute,” Obama said.
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His comments come after Sarkozy threatened to leave the summit if his calls for global financial regulatory reform were not implemented and that he would not endure “false compromises”.
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Back home, more job cuts have been announced in Queensland, where 300 workers at the Fisher & Paykel refrigerator factory will be made redundant as the company moves operations to Thailand.
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The company will also close factories in the United States and New Zealand, as it moves its manufacturing arm to Thailand and Mexico.
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Overseas, the Obama Administration in the US may push troubled automaker General Motors into a “controlled” bankruptcy, according to The New York Times. ย
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The publication has claimed that sources say the Government will persuade the automaker to implement a plan that will cut the company into two operations.
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The rumours come as the company’s chief executive says it is receiving pressure from the Government about moving into bankruptcy.
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“By no later than June 1, if we’re not able to accomplish this outside bankruptcy, we’ll be in bankruptcy. It’s pretty clear. The Government was unequivocal,” Fritz Henderson said.
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