US stocks steady as WHO says new China virus not emergency
China locks down cities to curb virus, but WHO says no global emergency
U.S. stocks finished mixed on Thursday after WHO assured that the virus outbreak in China is not a global emergency
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Chinese authorities have largely quarantined Wuhan, a city of 11 million people, to stop spread of a virus.
Chinese stock markets endured one of the worst trading days in its history.
U.S. stocks traded lower on Thursday after China placed three cities on lockdown to prevent spread of virus
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The death cross is when a short-term moving average crosses below a longer-term moving average. The common parameters are a 50-day MA for the short term and 100-day or 200-day MA for the longer term.
Siemens CEO Joe Kaeser is betting on the support of President Donald Trump in reconstruction projects of Iraq and Syria, despite simmering transatlantic trade hostilities.
Coronavirus is rapidly spreading, and the World Health Organization is considering sounding a global alarm to warn everyone of the disease. This has gotten many government agencies alarmed, prompting PHE to issue a warning.
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"[It failed] partly because of the nature of the matter and partly because of the very obsolete PR machinery of the [Hong Kong] government, especially facing a world-class propaganda that challenged us,” she said.
Cruise ship companies are taking precautions to deal with the spread of the Wuhan coronavirus to potential passengers.
Researchers at the Peking University believe that the snakes sold at the Wuhan Market might have spread the coronavirus to human beings.