Showing 1-10 of 29 results
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Pump prices cut by 50 satang
Online Reporters, Published on 16/07/2018
» Most retail oil prices will be cut by 50 satang a litre, effective on Tuesday.
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Opec output-cut deal provides lift for equities
Business, Published on 03/10/2016
» Recap: Global stock markets see-sawed last week with news developments. The relief rally that followed the previous week's Fed meeting ebbed, but Hillary Clinton's strong performance against Donald Trump in the first US presidential debate cheered investors. Also buoying sentiment was Opec's surprise agreement to cut oil output, but worries about the health of Deutsche Bank, which faces huge US fines for dodgy business practices, capped gains. The Opec decision helped the energy-heavy Thai stock market recoup some earlier losses.
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Pump prices to be cut by 50 satang
Online Reporters, Published on 03/03/2017
» Retail oil prices will be cut by 50 satang a litre, effective on Saturday.
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Pump prices to be cut by B0.40
Online Reporters, Published on 13/11/2015
» Petrol prices will be cut by 0.40 baht a litre, effective on Saturday.
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Pump prices cut by B0.40 a litre
Online Reporters, Published on 01/04/2016
» Petrol and gasohol prices will be cut by 40 satang a litre, effective on Saturday.
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Pump prices cut by 30 satang
Online Reporters, Published on 08/01/2016
» The prices of all fuels except E85 will be cut by 30-50 satang a litre, effective on Saturday.
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Oil prices cut by up to 70 satang
Online Reporters, Published on 11/02/2016
» The prices of petrol and gasohol will be cut by 50 and 70 satang a litre, effective on Friday.
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Gasohol prices cut by B0.40
Online Reporters, Published on 30/06/2015
» Gasohol prices will be cut by 0.40 baht a litre, effective 5am on Wednesday.
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E85 price cut by 70 satang
Online Reporters, Published on 07/01/2016
» The E85 price will be cut by 0.70 baht to 18.09 baht a litre, effective on Friday.
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China rate cut spurs stocks but set struggles
Business, Nuntawun Polkuamdee, Published on 18/05/2015
» Recap: China's interest-rate cut by 25 basis points, the third in six months, propelled Asian stock markets early last week. However, sentiment turned sour amid renewed worries over the world's second largest economy following weak economic data, and Greece's precarious finances.
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