θα μοριοδοτηθούν σε ενισχυμένη βάση όσοι διαθέτουν προϋπηρεσία σε αντίστοιχη θέση
$trillion5.442US7.7
47.851506 billion U.S. dollars
$US7.7 trillion5.44200 trillion Japanese yen =
47.851506 billion U.S. dollars
απολυτήριο Ειδικής Επαγγελματικής Εκπαίδευσης και Κατάρτισης
5.442 νέες θέσεις σε υπουργεία, δήμους και νοσοκομεία
23/10/2017
Προς έκδοση οδεύει η νέα μεγάλη προκήρυξη του υπουργείου Εσωτερικών, που αφορά 5.000 θέσεις εργασίας στον τομέα της καθαριότητας των δήμων.
Ο σχετικός διαγωνισμός υπόκειται τους τελευταίους ελέγχους από το ΑΣΕΠ.
Οι ειδικότητες που θα ζητηθούν μέσω της προκήρυξης είναι: εργάτες καθαριότητας, τεχνίτες, υδραυλικοί, οδηγοί απορριμματοφόρου, καθαριστές, ηλεκτρολόγοι, εργάτες συνοδών απορριμματοφόρου, χειριστές μηχανημάτων.
Οι ενδιαφερόμενοι θα πρέπει να διαθέτουν απολυτήριο υποχρεωτικής εκπαίδευσης (όσοι έχουν αποφοιτήσει μέχρι και το 1980 απολυτήριο τριτάξιου Γυμνασίου, απολυτήριο Δημοτικού Σχολείου) ή ισοδύναμο απολυτήριο Ειδικής Επαγγελματικής Εκπαίδευσης και Κατάρτισης.
Σημειώνεται ότι θα μοριοδοτηθούν σε ενισχυμένη βάση όσοι διαθέτουν προϋπηρεσία σε αντίστοιχη θέση.
εργάτες καθαριότητας, τεχνίτες, υδραυλικοί, οδηγοί απορριμματοφόρου, καθαριστές, ηλεκτρολόγοι, εργάτες συνοδών απορριμματοφόρου, χειριστές μηχανημάτων
23/10/2017
Προς έκδοση οδεύει η νέα μεγάλη προκήρυξη του υπουργείου Εσωτερικών, που αφορά 5.000 θέσεις εργασίας στον τομέα της καθαριότητας των δήμων.
Ο σχετικός διαγωνισμός υπόκειται τους τελευταίους ελέγχους από το ΑΣΕΠ.
Οι ειδικότητες που θα ζητηθούν μέσω της προκήρυξης είναι: εργάτες καθαριότητας, τεχνίτες, υδραυλικοί, οδηγοί απορριμματοφόρου, καθαριστές, ηλεκτρολόγοι, εργάτες συνοδών απορριμματοφόρου, χειριστές μηχανημάτων.
Οι ενδιαφερόμενοι θα πρέπει να διαθέτουν απολυτήριο υποχρεωτικής εκπαίδευσης (όσοι έχουν αποφοιτήσει μέχρι και το 1980 απολυτήριο τριτάξιου Γυμνασίου, απολυτήριο Δημοτικού Σχολείου) ή ισοδύναμο απολυτήριο Ειδικής Επαγγελματικής Εκπαίδευσης και Κατάρτισης.
Σημειώνεται ότι θα μοριοδοτηθούν σε ενισχυμένη βάση όσοι διαθέτουν προϋπηρεσία σε αντίστοιχη θέση.
5.442 trillion Japanese yen - Wolfram|Alpha Results
m.wolframalpha.com/input/?...5.442%20trillion%20Jap...
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Input interpretation: ¥5.442 trillion (Japanese yen). Local currency conversion: $48.37 billion (US dollars) (at current quoted rate). Contact Pro Premium Expert ...
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Σαράντης: Αγορά 5.442 ιδίων μετοχών - Capital
www.capital.gr/epixeiriseis/2225294/sarantis-agora-5-442-idion-metoxon
10 Φεβ 2015 - Σε αγορά 5.442 ιδίων μετοχών, με τιμή κτήσης 7,00 ευρώ ανά μετοχή και συνολική αξία 38.094 ευρώ, προέβη κατά τη διάρκεια της συνεδρίασης
This week in finance: Trump tax cuts and inflation set to dominate markets
- By business reporter Stephen Letts
- Updated 23 Apr 2017, 1:48am
US President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference.
PHOTO: US President Donald Trump confirmed he will unveil his much anticipated tax policy this week. (Reuters: Lucas Jackson)
MAP: Australia
The first tangible evidence that there is something behind the so-called "Trump trade" may be presented this week when the US President's much-vaunted tax policy is unveiled.
Donald Trump's confirmation that his tax plan would be finally be released on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), didn't totally light up the market with Wall Street slipping on Friday, although it made a solid 0.5 per cent gain for the week.
Uncertainty about events in Europe — particularly France — didn't help, although another batch of solid corporate results were a positive.
Futures trading on the ASX over the weekend split the difference, and pointed to a flat opening to a shortened week's trading.
Markets on Friday's close:
ASX SPI200 futures flat at 5838
AUD:75.42 US cents, 70.30 euro cents, 58.86 British pence, 82.21 Japanese yen, $NZ1.07
US: Dow Jones -0.2pc at 20,548, S&P500 -0.3pc at 2349, NASDAQ flat at 5442
Europe: FTSE flat at 7115, DAX +0.2pc at 12,049, Eurostoxx50 flat at 3440
Commodities: Brent oil -2pc at $US51.96, Gold +0.2pc at $US1,284/ounce Iron ore +1.2pc at $63.36/tonne
Inflation set to rise
Locally, first quarter inflation (Thursday) will be the focus of attention this week.
The punditry has forecast a headline inflation increase of 0.6 per cent over the quarter, to give annual rate of 2.2 per cent.
If correct, it would move the headline figure back within the Reserve Bank's 2-to-3 per cent target band for the first time in two-and-a-half years.
The last quarter of 2016 saw headline inflation growing at an insipid 1.5 per cent.
Much of the jump will be supported by the negative — some said deflationary — March quarter figure from last year dropping out of calculations.
However, there is still a fair bit of inflationary fuel being supplied by soaring east coast gas prices, as well as education fees and food prices rising over the quarter.
RBC's Michael Turner noted outside these sectors inflationary trends remain subdued, reflecting stagnant wages and falling margins among retailers.
"We expect this will leave the average of the RBA's core measures at a more modest 1.8 per cent, a rate of underlying inflation we expect will persist for most of 2017," Mr Turner said.
US tax plans a big test for Trump administration
Mr Trump certainly set the bar pretty high when back in February he described his impending tax plan as "phenomenal".
It is perhaps the key piece of the economic revolution he plans, buttressed by big infrastructure spending, financial deregulation and cost-cutting measures in areas such as health care.
So far nothing much has happened, bar an ill-fated effort to wind back Obamacare, so the tax announcement is a big deal and real test of the administration's economic and fiscal credibility.
The package so far has been leak-proof, but the 2016 election campaign speeches highlighted deep personal and corporate tax cuts as central.
The number of tax brackets will be revised down from 7 to 3, while there will be a cap on deductibility of business interest payments and a crackdown on multinationals squirreling their profit away overseas.
A failure to deliver on expectations could have very ugly repercussions for the already faltering Trump trade.
Corporate America gaining strength, economy may be slowing
While the traders wait anxiously for the tax news, they will be able to amuse themselves with the busiest week of the current US reporting season.
On Reuters' numbers, around 40 per cent of the benchmark S&P500 index — representing $US7.7 trillion of value — will trot out results this week.
This includes giants such as the company formerly-known-as Google, aka Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft and Exxon.
So far, results have well and truly beaten expectations, with earnings-per-share growth for the quarter up 11.2 per cent, the strongest effort in more than five years.
While corporate America is motoring away, the rest of the economy may be hitting the brakes again.
The consensus for GDP out on Friday is for growth to have slowed to an annualised 1.3 per cent, from a not-exactly-flat-chat 2.1 per cent in the previous quarter.
Some analysts are describing the weakness as a pretty big "headfake" — a basketball term, for appearing to drive in one direction, and suddenly taking off in another.
Weak consumer spending will certainly be a brake on GDP this time around, but savings are solid — and who knows, a big surprise from the impending announcement on tax cuts may just unleash a wave of wallet emptying.
Oil deal extended and iron ore edges back
Oil endured another tough week, with global markets sliding 2 per cent on Friday.
Both the global benchmark Brent crude and US-based West Texas crude slid 7 per cent for the week, with US prices dipping below $US50 a barrel for the first time since March.
With prices looking very much like one-way traffic, news emerged on the weekend — after the markets closed — that the deal brokered by the Saudis and Russia to cut production by 1.8 million barrels a day will be extended by another six months.
The usual sources "familiar with the matter", spoke to the usual wire services to pass on the whisper that the deal will be extended to the end of the year in a effort to clear the massive oil glut that has built up.
That might support prices again briefly, but generally it just encourages greater production in US onshore fields, which again drives the price back down.
US production is at its highest level since August 2015, with the rig count still going up, as it has every week for more than three months.
Iron ore climbed off the mat on Friday, with spot prices up a bit over 1 per cent, but still down more than 30 per cent from their February peak.
Future prices had a bit more spring their step, up 6 per cent rallying along with their mates in the steel futures game.
Both iron ore and steel futures jumped around 10 per cent late in the week, after hitting their lowest point since early January.
The move didn't totally surprise ANZ commodities analyst Daniel Hynes.
"We are still constructive on iron ore, with enough bullish price indicators to suggest the sell-off in recent weeks is overdone," Mr Hynes said.
"However in the short term, negative sentiment will make it difficult to arrest the selling and for prices to stabilise."
The ANZ house view is iron ore will settle in the $US70-$80/tonne range for the remainder of the year.
Others have a far gloomier opinion.
Australia
Day What to watch What to expect
Wednesday
26/4/17
Inflation
BHP production
Q1: Headline rate forecast to rise to 2.2pc YoY
Quarterly production report
Thursday
27/4/17
Import/export prices
RBA speech
Mirvac update
S32 production
Stockland update
Q1: Export prices rose a booming 12.4pc last quarter
Governor Phillip Lowe speech
Investor briefing from the property developer
Quarterly production report
Investor briefing and quarterly results
Friday
28/4/17
Private sector credit
Producer price index
Origin Energy report
March: Growing at around 5pc YoY
Q1: Very modest 1pc YoY growth last quarter
Quarterly production numbers
Overseas
Day What to watch What to expect
Tuesday
25/4/17
US: New home sales Mar: Has been fairly solid
Wednesday26/4/17
US: Tax announcement Donald Trump expected to release details of his tax package
Thursday
27/4/17
CH: Industrial profits
US Wholesale inventories
EU: ECB meeting
JP: BoJ meeting
Mar: Up 2.3pc YoY in February
Mar:
Refinancing rate to be held at zero
No change expected
Friday
28/4/17
US: GDP
UK: GDP
EU: CPI estimate
Q1: Growth forecast to slow to 1.2pc YoY
Q1: Growth forecast to be 1.9pc YOY
Apr: Inflation forecast to be growing at 1.5pc
Topics: company-news, stockmarket, currency, oil-and-gas, australia, european-union, united-states
First posted 23 Apr 2017, 1:32am
this-week-in-finance-trump-tax-cuts-inflation-to-dominate
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