Money Daily Brief: Japan sees 'signs of recovery'
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鈥 Updated 9:42 EDT (13:42 UTC)
鈥Japan's cautious recovery: The Bank of Japan voted to keep its interest rate at an -- a sign that the central bank remains skeptical about the strength of the global upswing, even as the bank announced that the nation's economy is "showing signs of recovery." Comments by the bank's governor .
鈥Shares jump: Most major Asian stock markets soared, allowing the MSCI Asia Pacific Index to reach , following generally positive news in Asian and American manufacturing markets. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 2 percent as a senior government economist said in the fourth quarter.
鈥Do-it-yourself fervor: Europe's biggest home improvement retailer, Kingfisher, announced , saying "DIY is cool again."
鈥Housing intervention: Shares of Allied Irish Banks rose sharply after it said it would to Ireland's agency set up to take over soured assets. The value of real estate developments has fallen by half since 2007, a government official said. In the US, senators are considering the $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers. The National Association of Home Builders says the housing market's if lawmakers let the program expire.
鈥New construction: US housing starts reached in August, although all the gains came from condos and other multifamily units. Separately, the number of last week to reach 545,000.
鈥In my backyard: Nigeria's oil militants say they'll leave the country's pipelines and oil tankers alone in hopes of a more "meaningful dialogue" with the government, whose amnesty program is rumored to have brought in top militant leaders.
鈥 Drew Hinshaw is a Monitor contributor in Accra, Ghana. For a look at how many Americans' retirement savings have rebounded, click on 401k plans revive from bear market wreckage.