Five major Japanese nonlife insurance firms have revised upward their respective group net profit projections for the April to September first half of fiscal 2009… ...full story at Japan Today
from Japan Today on Fri, Nov 06 2009
see also:
| 01 Mar 09 |
|
Half Japanese, live at Osaka Namba Bears, part 8 »
YouTube video Half Japanese play Osaka Namba Bears on April 18, 2003, on a bill with the Ultra Fuckers and TEEM. The first half of the set was from Jad Fair's electronic collaboration with Jason Willett, who provided analog and digital bleeps and bloops, while the... |
| 19 Nov 09 |
|
Fewer disasters boost first-half profits at major nonlife insurers » Japan Times Six major nonlife insurers said Thursday their group net profits in the April-September period rose from a year earlier as insurance payments slipped below projections on a smaller-than-expected number of natural disasters. They also reported pretax... |
| 21 May 08 |
|
Nonlife insurers lashed by steep profit hits » Japan Times Four of Japan's six major nonlife insurance companies saw their group net profits plunge in business 2007 as the U.S. subprime loan crisis and the subsequent fall in global stock prices pushed down profits from their investments, the firms said Wednesday.... |
| 10 Nov 09 |
|
Regional banks raise earnings forecasts » Japan Times Forty-five of 86 listed regional banks have revised upward their group net earnings projections for the April-September first half of fiscal 2009. The upward revisions are attributable to their lower than expected costs involved in disposing of bad loans... |
| 10 Nov 09 |
|
Technology › NTT incurs 30.5% fall in net profit in April-September » Japan Today Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp said Monday it recorded a group net profit of 282.24 billion yen in the first half of fiscal 2009, down… |
| 04 Nov 09 |
|
Business › 7 major Japanese trading firms report sales, profit declines » Japan Today Seven major Japanese trading companies have reported heavy year-on-year declines in their group sales and profits in the April to September first half of fiscal… |