Stock markets are in a meltdown over #COVID19.
— A Voice Of Liberty (@TheVoiceOfLibe3) February 24, 2020
This was inevitable.https://t.co/WFA23jk0KH#news #coronavirus #economy #finance
Stock markets tumble amid coronavirus fears https://t.co/j2qUVkMWOw
— Global Politics (@Globalpoliticss) February 24, 2020
Gold price at seven-year high on coronavirus fears - BBC#Gold #gold #news #coronavirushttps://t.co/fJ9Rv2axol
— MetalStream (@MTLSTR_tokens) February 24, 2020
Gold price at seven-year high on coronavirus fears #CoronavirusOutbreak #coronavirus #gold https://t.co/WTqQBXoYYL
— Teena Gera (@teenageee) February 24, 2020
The price of gold has surged to its highest level in seven years as worries about the coronavirus led investors to seek a safe place for their money.
— Peter Hoskins (@PeterHoskinsTV) February 24, 2020
Gold prices climbed more than 2% on Monday to levels not seen since February 2013.https://t.co/nahWlXIJRn
Stocks Slide as Virus Cases Spread@keriRN @rini6 @GrandmaShark18 @MpoppEileen @18TruckaMan @AmazonianGal127 @Da1PoliticalV
— MAKE REPUBLICANS PAY AT THE VOTING BOTH (@chavezglen1755) February 24, 2020
https://t.co/dnirFlJqWu
https://t.co/4EDef4YIn2
— James Tulp for Congress (@jamestulp) February 24, 2020
It would be much wiser for us to overreact to the coronavirus than to underreact.
This is why I called for a travel ban from China a month ago.
I pray it doesn't get much worse, but I can't stress enough how foolish it would be for gov. to underreact.
This is starting to feel like the day where the coronavirus went global. https://t.co/yHDQbictHv
— Paul Page (@PaulPage) February 24, 2020
Dow's down 800+, and now in the red on the year, as the market finally wakes up to the ramifications of the coronavirus.
— Paul Vigna (@paulvigna) February 24, 2020
2020 is so hindsight.https://t.co/SH6N64MIgZ
U.S. stocks opened sharply lower as investors grapple with the potential economic fallout from mounting coronavirus infections https://t.co/Xeca0jLx7W
— Karol Cummins (@karolcummins) February 24, 2020
Stocks Slide as Virus Cases Spread https://t.co/oBg5PzeYvz
— Herbert Reed (@Herbert_L_Reed) February 24, 2020
Coronavirus shock: The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 800 points, or 2.8%, shortly after the U.S. market opened. https://t.co/bkr37TFzYC via @WSJ
— JamesVGrimaldi (@JamesVGrimaldi) February 24, 2020
This is why it doesn’t benefit any president to put all his eggs in the economy basket. It is volatile and complex, and can too easily turn on a dime...or a virus, as it were. https://t.co/53PqG6rFfw
— Melissa Quinn Amour (@MelissaAmour72) February 24, 2020
U.S. stocks opened sharply lower as investors grapple with the potential economic fallout from mounting coronavirus infections https://t.co/DT3uEw71XX
— Shelby Holliday (@shelbyholliday) February 24, 2020
Brace yourselves - factory production and shortages of goods will be reverberating thru the world soon enough if production don’t recover soon from #COVID19 epidemic. Apple iPhone delays already anticipated. https://t.co/E2DkQzr2wt
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) February 23, 2020
World Economy Shudders as Coronavirus Threatens Global Supply Chainshttps://t.co/Hk39stga3C #News #Bibleprophecy #Truth #Knowledge #Wisdom #Economist #Endtimes #Revelation
— Clinton Kowach (@clintonkowach) February 24, 2020
The world economy shudders as coronavirus threatens global supply chains amid manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China https://t.co/cQIBV2e9u4 via @WSJ
— O. Bula-Escobar (@omarbula) February 23, 2020
It took a virus to shake us from our money-infused slumber. https://t.co/hxegDaBUOd
— Gen (Ret) Rob Spalding (@robert_spalding) February 24, 2020
'A month after the epidemic forced factories into limbo past their usual Lunar New Year break officials and economists are warning that an extended Chinese shutdown could cripple global manufacturing and cost the world up to $1 trillion in lost output.' https://t.co/ChFHplA5a6
— Jesse Felder (@jessefelder) February 24, 2020
On today's @WSJ front page: The last time a coronavirus outbreak hit China in 2003, the global economy emerged mostly unscathed. Now, the growth-damping effects of a similar pathogen threaten a world transformed by China’s boom.@JonathanEmont @YapCWhttps://t.co/KTNNCXSSxH https://t.co/DELL2OkpYf
— Jonathan Cheng (@JChengWSJ) February 24, 2020
Production is pinched even in places that seem remote. A manufacturer in southern Bangladesh has been unable to fulfill an order for 100,000 women’s jeans because he can’t get fabric from China. “I am just waiting…We have no option.”@JonathanEmont @YapCWhttps://t.co/KTNNCXSSxH
— Jonathan Cheng (@JChengWSJ) February 24, 2020
From steel to furniture, Vietnam built much of its economy on importing semifinished material from China, then exporting the finished products to developed economies. Now, over 50% of manufacturers are struggling to source supplies.@YapCW @JonathanEmonthttps://t.co/KTNNCXSSxH
— Jonathan Cheng (@JChengWSJ) February 24, 2020
The world economy shudders as coronavirus threatens global supply chains amid manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China https://t.co/PwVhWylEI2 via @WSJ
— Timothy Aeppel (@TimAeppel) February 24, 2020
The world economy shudders as coronavirus threatens global supply chains amid manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China https://t.co/TCzmU3VYdC
— Chad Moutray (@chadmoutray) February 23, 2020
Why will costs of #COVID19 exceed SARS? For starters, China now accounts for nearly a third of world GDP growth, up from around 3% in 2000. Between 2000 and 2017, the world’s economic exposure to China tripled #SARSCoV2 https://t.co/k8QaQpwUhA
— Tom Bollyky (@TomBollyky) February 24, 2020
A look at the global economic effects of the coronavirus https://t.co/XW6A4gPbuT
— Miriam Elder (@MiriamElder) February 24, 2020
WSJ - World Economy Shudders as Coronavirus Threatens Global Supply Chains - The world economy shudders as coronavirus threatens global supply chains amid manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China https://t.co/y2FrJKpwdb via @WSJ
— Small Wars Journal (@smallwars) February 24, 2020
China now accounts for nearly a third of world GDP growth, up from around 3% in 2000. Between 2000 and 2017, the world’s economic exposure to China tripled: McKinsey Global Institute https://t.co/xEFtDQ7Lml
— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) February 24, 2020
The world economy shudders as coronavirus threatens global supply chains amid manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China @YAPCW @JONATHANEMONT https://t.co/tpES56OaLC via @WSJ
— Stella Yifan Xie (@yifanxie) February 24, 2020
"Top 5 Things to Know in the Market on Monday, February 24th" $Spy $Tvix $Usd $Jnug $DWT $Uwt https://t.co/2GFCevsb58
— Follow The Money (@Follow2TheMoney) February 24, 2020
#Coronavirus all this BS due to some little folks who can't stop eating #illegally traded #wildlife. So now the Word suffers for their gluttony. https://t.co/SxWa9YnYA1
— SEAWILDEARTH (@seawildearth) February 25, 2020
Do people know that Gold doesn’t cure an infection??
— shackas (@shackas) February 25, 2020
Global stock markets plunge on coronavirus fears - BBC News https://t.co/0zCJcQFyTF
Am always fascinated to see gold described as 'safe'. In a pandemic—or climate emergency or any other disaster—what exactly can we do with gold? https://t.co/1hUXcUNY5E
— Alice Grundy (@alicektg) February 25, 2020
Did you say 'No Excuses' Donnie?
— D A V I D ‘P I E F K E’ P I C K W O R T H (@david_pickworth) February 25, 2020
Looking forward to witnessing a huge orange fireball being blasted at the sun.https://t.co/EZJZCulaV3 pic.twitter.com/a9UyRYEDdY
Global stocks sink as investors grapple with the potential economic fallout from mounting coronavirus infections in South Korea, Italy and elsewhere https://t.co/HbaFEopxmq
— Bojan Tunguz (@tunguz) February 24, 2020
24日の状況ですが … 株から撤退 金・国債へ(WSJ)https://t.co/yPSWbf4rHW pic.twitter.com/SsBcKTP0O5
— 大沼安史 (@BOOgandhi) February 25, 2020
U.S. stocks drop as investors grapple with the potential economic fallout from mounting coronavirus infections https://t.co/PYzolqJGMy
— Luis Carlos Vélez ? (@lcvelez) February 24, 2020
#WSJWhatsNow: The Dow tumbled around 1,000 points Monday after fresh coronavirus cases were reported outside of China, erasing the Dow's gains for the year https://t.co/M7Cev4cLoA pic.twitter.com/oAGEJKUvDj
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) February 24, 2020
Transport stocks falling faster than the overall Dow, off 3.6% today on coronavirus fears. FedEx, XPO, ArcBest, Schneider, Maersk, DSV all down more than 5%. Shares in bulk and other shipping companies all pummeled. https://t.co/yHDQbictHv via @WSJ
— Paul Page (@PaulPage) February 24, 2020
All hail @mccabe_caitlin, who wrote her first @WSJmarkets story on the day that ended up being the worst session of selling for stocks in two years. https://t.co/qfXytxMoxq
— Akane Otani (@akaneotani) February 24, 2020
What does the coronavirus mean for China's economy? | CNBC Explains https://t.co/M8LELTJ7PY via @YouTube
— Manqeezus (@_Bonga) February 24, 2020
The world economy shudders as coronavirus threatens global supply chains amid manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China https://t.co/FVAPkJN1Br via @WSJ
— Stephen Olson (@StephenOlsonHF) February 25, 2020
"Manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China sees shortages ripple around the globe."@WSJ reports. https://t.co/avd09mDZM5
— China US Focus (@ChinaUSFocus) February 24, 2020
Supply Chain Reaction Game https://t.co/RVCIKHkh2n
— [PrisonRepublic] (@ndyArthrunZarra) February 24, 2020
The world economy shudders as coronavirus threatens global supply chains amid manufacturers’ increased reliance on more interconnected China https://t.co/ZI92EyVXHb via @WSJ
— Costas Paris (@CostasParis) February 24, 2020