এখন থেকে আমরা Elev8
আমরা শুধুমাত্র একটি ব্রোকার নই। আমরা একটি সর্বাত্মক ট্রেডিং ইকোসিস্টেম—বিশ্লেষণ, ট্রেড, এবং প্রবৃদ্ধির জন্য আপনার যা কিছু প্রয়োজন তা এক জায়গায়। আপনার ট্রেডিং উন্নত করতে প্রস্তুত?
আমরা শুধুমাত্র একটি ব্রোকার নই। আমরা একটি সর্বাত্মক ট্রেডিং ইকোসিস্টেম—বিশ্লেষণ, ট্রেড, এবং প্রবৃদ্ধির জন্য আপনার যা কিছু প্রয়োজন তা এক জায়গায়। আপনার ট্রেডিং উন্নত করতে প্রস্তুত?
First of all, for a recap of where we are as of Friday's close, see here: Forex Today: Dollar the strongest as risk aversion rules.
COVID-19 weekend news is full of headlines and updates to the debacle, COVID-19, which has mounted up 1,253,919 global cases, 68,169 deaths and 257,221 recoveries.
All eyes have been on China as the numbers of new cases added to the global tally drop off to so few coronavirus cases, that some days, authorities don't see any local transmission. Consequently, the Chinese workforce has been slowing getting back to business in a highly encouraging prospect for the global economy and humanity leading to estimates that the bell curve for other nations will be a similar time frame of a few months, (China has gone from reporting thousands of cases a day in February to reporting one or two a day now).
China on Sunday claimed 25 of the 30 news coronavirus cases it confirmed were imported, which are regarded as less of a risk considering there is less chance of contagion due to the benefit of quarantines on entry to the country. China's total number of confirmed coronavirus cases stands at 81,669, with the death toll at 3,329. Some 76,964 people have recovered, while 295 are still in critical condition. However, there's some question among international academics about China's case reporting, so it's hard to really know what China's cases are in reality, and for that matter, considering how the nations around the world have different ways to record, report and test, the data could almost be considered useless).
Either way, as China goes back to work, all eyes are on this experiment and it will be used as a template for the rest of the world and closely monitored by forward-looking investors. China, for now, is dipping the toe, to make sure that another major outbreak doesn't occur, which would otherwise be a doomsday event for markets. The market is looking to see by how much China can ease-off the highly restrictive social distancing while keeping it's testing systems up and running and getting the economy going again. So far, so good.
China’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), last week, released a set of heartening data for March that indicates Beijing’s efforts to kick start the buckled economy is showing some positive results with a rebound in the manufacturing sector and Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). A total of 96.6% of China’s large and medium-sized enterprises have resumed production, up 17.7 percentage points from February, according to NBS’ survey. However, it is early days and just one-months data, the first since the two months of shut down. Let's hope that he good news keeps flowing which could bring some stability to financial markets while Italy starts to report less eath rates and shows sign of recovery as well at the same time that the Federal Reserve begins to decrease its asset purchases.
However, as the US morphs into the new epicentre, the week ahead could be a terrible one in term of numbers as the bell curve continues in its northerly trajectory as the cases mount up. Moreover, lats Friday's jobs data in all forms were shocking. Financial markets are sure to be on the cautious side in the open.
Here are some significant developments in the debacle from the weekend: