2007 Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec
27 Apr 2007 News
27 Apr 2007 News
- Positive period' in financial growth
- Plan may allow foreign stock sales on mainland
- Chinese shares surge to new high Thursday
- Chinese shares continue to hit new highs Thursday
- Shanghai News
- CNOOC reports moderate output increase in first quarter
- Shanghai News
- Mega car plant gets going
- More oil, gas finds likely at Bohai
- AmCham: Trade gap not the full picture
- Molybdenum a hit in HK
- Majority approve of Golden Week holidays
- Rulings boost agricultural, food products trade
- Gov't think tank: Excess liquidity must be diverted from real estate sector
- Policy may hurt American exports
- Foreign firms turn to M&As for expansion
- China, U.S. think green
- China's IPR policy gains good report
- Shanghai News
- Laiwu Steel to boost H-beam production
- Hong Yuan profit may surge 1,000 percent
- Mutual funds assets reach US$148b
- CITIC Bank raises US$5.4b in dual listing
- Shanghai News
- Rules drafted on foreign bourse offices
- Social security fund to reduce share holdings
- CNPC, Statoil in talks to swap oil, gas assets
- Companies protect against payment default
- UPS sees 25% China volume growth
- Investment, output rebound poses risks
- Ford's new engine plant starts production
- Yuan touches record mark again to U.S. dollar
- Baosteel's profits soar 156 pct in first quarter
- Skyworth TV sales almost flat
- Bank of Communications attracts record IPO subscriptions
- China to slash export rebates for primary products
- Chinese molybdenum producer up 66 pct at debut
- HK facilitates central China's growth: CE
- Govt to tax individual auction earnings from May 1
- Govt inspectors take the ax to fake farming materials
- Chinese vice premier urges central China to be best destination for industrial transfer
- China issues more central bank notes in Q1 to tame liquidity
- Chang'an Ford Mazda's engine plant goes into production in east China
- Chinese tourism administration pushes India visits
- Demand for highly-skilled Chinese still outstrips supply
