Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In February 2020, the American companies Apple Inc. and Microsoft began lowering expectations for revenue because of supply chain disruptions in China caused by the virus. [69] In a February 27 note to clients, Goldman Sachs said it expects no earnings growth for U.S. companies in 2020 as a result of the virus, at a time when the consensus ...
"Today's market, 50% of it is asset-light growth companies, tech, healthcare, higher-margin industries," Bank of America Securities head of US equity and quantitive strategy Savita Subramanian ...
Trump's tariff threats have kept the market on its toes, with economists warning broad, long-lasting tariffs would slow the economy and reignite inflation. Trump has already slapped a 25% tariff ...
Here's what else happened today: Why Apple stock just got a rare downgrade to "sell." Bitcoin is overbought and vulnerable to a 13% sell-off, according to one technical analyst.
[167] [168] In Australia, the pandemic has provided a new opportunity for daigou shoppers to re-sell into the China market. "The virus crisis, while frightening, has a silver lining". [169] [170] Some retailers have employed contactless home delivery or curbside pickup for items purchased through e-commerce sites.
In January 2020, President Trump disregarded warnings from his administration's officials about the threat the virus posed to the United States in favor of the country's economic considerations. [92] He publicly downplayed the danger until mid-March, making numerous optimistic statements, including that the outbreak was "under control" and ...
In the foreign-currency market, the values of both the Mexican peso and Canadian dollar fell against the U.S. dollar after Trump said he expects to put 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico starting on ...
A poll conducted May 20–21 found that 56% of the American public were "very" concerned about "false or misleading information being communicated about coronavirus", while 30% were "somewhat" concerned. 56% of Democrats said the top source of false or misleading information about the coronavirus was the Trump administration, while 54% of ...