Regional investors will be eyeing cues from Europe this week as officials from the world's two biggest central banks, the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank, meet in Frankfurt.
It was between July 27 and the end of September last year that global markets wiped almost 20 per cent off their value. In the United States, battles in Washington heightened over the US debt ceiling, followed by a sovereign ratings downgrade. Andin Europe, signs of a worsening debt crisis were already in motion, threatening to put the brakes on the global economy.
"The global economy is still fragile and US data doesn't look quite as healthy, the drop in housing sales last week, down 1.4 per cent, does not give comfort for analysts to give a full optimistic view for the remaining of the year," said Wadah Al Taha, the chief investment officer at Al Zarooni Group, an investment company based in Dubai.
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