If Radio NZ or the BBC are reporting this you know it is important. If they tell you to prepare you know it is too late.
Coronavirus:
Global stock
markets suffer sixth day of
losses
Global
investors were hit with a sixth day of stock market losses on
Thursday, as traders responded to the threat of the coronavirus.
27
February, 2020
The
string of declines pushed indexes in Europe and the US down more than
10 percent from their recent highs - sending them into so-called
"correction" territory.
In
the US, the three main indexes slumped more than 2.5 percent in
opening trade, while London's FTSE 100 closed 3.5 percent lower.
Japan's
Nikkei 225 led losses in Asia.
Shares
there fell more than 2 percent while South Korea's Kospi closed 1
percent lower and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index gained about 0.3
percent and Shanghai was roughly flat.
In
the US, the indexes were poised for their steepest week of declines
since the 2008 financial crisis. Globally, the share price declines
of the last six days have wiped out more than $US3.6tn.
The
moves come as the outbreak, which started in China but is rapidly
spreading, weighs on the economy, restricting travel, causing
manufacturing slowdown in China and upending global supply chains.
In
recent weeks, companies across industries - from mining firm Rio
Tinto to software giant Microsoft - have said that they will not hit
sales targets.
Economists,
many of whom had originally expected the virus to be a temporary
blow, are also sounding warnings.
At
an event on Wednesday, former US Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen
suggested it could tip the US into recession, while Goldman Sachs
told clients it did not expect companies to see any profit growth
this year.
"Our
reduced profit forecasts reflect the severe decline in Chinese
economic activity... lower end-demand for US exporters, disruption to
the supply chain for many US firms, a slowdown in US economic
activity, and elevated business uncertainty," the firm wrote.
The
coronavirus has infected nearly 79,000 people in China and killed
more than 2,700. More than 3,200 cases and 51 deaths have been
reported in another 44 countries.
Investors
around the world are now looking to see if central banks respond with
efforts to prop up the economy.
Chinas's
central bank has already taken stimulative measures.
Germany's
Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said that while the impact of the
virus so far had been limited, the country was considering how to
respond should it worsen.
https://www.nbcnews.com/business/markets/stocks-enter-correction-dow-plunges-500-points-coronavirus-fears-multiply-n1144116
Delusion never dies until it turns to BLIND PANIC
https://www.nbcnews.com/business/markets/stocks-enter-correction-dow-plunges-500-points-coronavirus-fears-multiply-n1144116
Delusion never dies until it turns to BLIND PANIC
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