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- US May Raise Rates Before Jobs Recover: Fed's Plosser
- Stocks Likely Don't Need Santa to Keep Rally Going
- Ford, GM, Toyota US Sales Up, But Chrysler Falls
- Larry Kudlow's Open Letter to Tiger Woods
- AIG Slashes US Debt Under Deal With New York Fed
- Commercial Property Fears Are Overblown: Zell, LeFrak
- Trump: Time to Force Banks to Start Lending
- Seamstress Fined $5.7 Million for Insider Trading
- Super Fantasy Christmas Gifts of 2009
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- Commercial Property Fears Are Overblown: Zell, LeFrak
- Pending Home Sales Have Record Rise; Construction Flat
- AIG Slashes US Debt Under Deal With New York Fed
- Retailers 'Friend' Facebook as Marketing Budgets Shrink
- US Manufacturing Grew Less Than Expected in November
- Farrell: Forget About Dubai—Worry About This
- S&P Stocks Trading at New 52-Week Highs
- Somali Sea Gangs Create Pirate Stock Exchange
SAO PAULO, Nov 11 (Reuters) - Brazil's benchmark IPCA consumer price index rose 0.28 percent in October, quickening from a 0.24 percent increase in September, the government's statistics agency IBGE said on Wednesday. The index was expected to climb 0.23 percent last month, according to the median forecast of 30 economists surveyed by Reuters. Estimates ranged from a 0.19 percent to 0.3 percent rise. (Reporting by Elzio Barreto and Rodrigo Viga Gaier, editing by W Simon ) Keywords: BRAZIL ECONOMY/INFLATION (elzio.barreto@thomsonreuters.com; +55 11 5644-7725; Reuters Messaging: elzio.barreto.reuters.com@reuters.net) COPYRIGHT Copyright Thomson Reuters 2009. All rights reserved.
The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.
- Goldman Sachs has forbidden employees from gathering in private holiday parties of 12 or more.
- A conservative author aims to remind readers why capitalism works for the common good.
- Do you have what it takes to run your own business? Ask yourself these questions.
- Heavily armed pirates in Somalia have set up a sort of stock exhange to fund their hijackings.
- A recent issue of ESPN Magazine was one of its top sellers ever, and it only took scantily clad athletes to make it happen.
- A famed author has written all his work on an old typewriter that is now up for auction. The NYT reports.











