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Transcripts For RT News 20180206

When electronic markets come in and the algos kick in there is no way the average person on the trade or ameritrade thats putting their orders and can hit that button and make a decision fast enough to curtail their losses and training is very simple its all about critelli your losses and riding your winners and that makes it very difficult you know when markets go down they go down fast when they go up they can go up fast too so its a double edged sword David Greenberg founder dreamer a catheter executive Committee Member of the New York Mercantile Exchange in the path thank you for joining us david. Thank you good to see you. And more energy when we return but as we go to break markets continue their curious correction the dow when just Dow Jones Industrial average dropped by one thousand one hundred Seventy Eight points today thats following fridays six hundred sixty point one we saw the largest intraday dow drop in history in history keep in mind that the dow was up in january year

Mid Suffolk communities receive nearly £1 million in grants | East Anglian Daily Times

Meanwhile, Tom Barker, assistant director for Sustainable Communities at Mid Suffolk and Babergh, commented: “I am immensely grateful to the groups and organisations who have pulled together to look after Mid Suffolk’s most vulnerable residents or helped those hit hardest financially by Covid-19. Our council’s grant scheme has hopefully provided comfort to many while the virus and its aftermath remains.” Funding was also approved for walking routes, leisure equipment and local sports clubs over the last 12 months. This includes more than £50,000 in funding which has been collected from developers building new homes in the district, being put towards new play areas in Badwell Ash and Elmswell, while £36,500 was awarded to Mid Suffolk tennis clubs and a £2,000 discretionary grant was given to establish a new ParkRun at Chilton Fields in Stowmarket. 

Why Lakeland small businesses need people to shop local to survive

LAKELAND Quarantined from her job and facing some extra time on her hands, Avni Tilvawala did the only practical thing she could six months into a financially devastating pandemic. She launched a business.  I thought it was the perfect time during the pandemic, Tilvawala said. I felt like everyone is at home and doing a lot of online shopping. And so that was the perfect time to just launch and start online. Tilvawala, who runs the small batch spice business One Good Knife, has received the bulk of her customers the old-fashioned way: in person. Tilvawala sets up shop every Saturday at the Lakeland farmer s market, where she makes most of her sales; she extended over the weekend into the Buena Market at Lkld Live. Even her digital sales are partially owed to her regulars from the market. 

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