澳洲新闻 (ABC新闻快递) 2011-11-27(在线收听

 The ex-boss of disgraced camera-maker Olympus has met with the company's board for the first time since he was sacked. Olympus fired Michael Woodford last month after he revealed that the company was covering up investment losses. Mr Woodford said the meeting had been constructive and honest. The board meeting came a day after the resignation of three directors in Japan accused of accounting fraud. Olympus will be delisted if it fails to report financial data by mid-December.

 
Moody's has cut its rating of Hungarian government debt to junk status. The ratings agency blamed the country's high levels of debt and weak prospects for growth and has doubts over whether the government can achieve its economic goals. The government says the move is part of a series of financial attacks against the country.
 
Let's take a look at the market numbers. As they finished and developments in Hungary added to broader concerns about the health of the global economy, particularly in Europe, which dragged down those European stocks on Friday. Local investors followed suit. The market ended lower for the sixth day in a row in Australia with the ASX 200 falling below the benchmark level of 4,000. It's a similar story across the region. The Nikkei in Japan is around the lowest level in 2.5 years. And in the US, markets have ended the week on a negative note, the Dow just closing down there lower as you can see, and the Aussie dollar is hovering at around 97 US cents.
  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/azabcxw/2011/168084.html