Im nejra cehic in london. Overall, the stoxx 600 in the red today. We had some Real Movement on u. S. Futures overnight, flirting around the flatline. We see a little bit of optimism come through on u. S. Futures after the s p 500 briefly rose over 20 . D yieldsthe 10 year bun and other core yields slide in europe. Some Dollar Strength. It is moving higher against all g10. The aussie underperforming. Oil bouncing back after two days of declines. Lets get the bloomberg first word news with Viviana Hurtado in new york. Viviana we begin with Prime Minister boris johnson. He remains in intensive care. Dominic raab is trying to reassure britains fight against coronavirus is under control. The u. K. Is heading to the peak of its outbreak. The government has been criticized over its handling of the crisis. Saying he isb confident the Prime Minister will pull through because he is a fighter. Theark and austria became first European Countries to loosen restrictions. Sources telling us selective
The russell looking at a 100 point drop. Volume has picked up today. Volume in the dow, s p and nasdaq positive versus yesterday. A little bit more activity in the selling on the first day of the Second Quarter. We have all three Industry Groups down. When you look at the decliners versus advancers, it is in double digits. Romaine on a day like this, anytime we have a big down day, i would like to see who the gainers are, the winners, names like balaton, teledock health. Teledoc a lot of the consumer staples, target, kellogg, moving higher 1 or 2 , kroger up more than 1 . I want to bring back into the conversation jim polson, still with us. Appreciate you being here. Lets move from equities and look more broadly at some of the other Asset Classes. When we look at the treasury market today, i relatively tamped down day come a relatively tamped down day. On the long end, seeing the 30year hold around 1. 27 . When you look at the treasury market, what signal is it telling you . James i th
Helsinki, Michael Mckee in new york, and Kevin Cirilli down in houston. There was a bloomberg report trumpday that president might have a ceasefire, and the president basically confirmed it. Pm johnson i see a lot of pres. Trump i see a lot of analysts seeing we will do a piecemeal. Easy or hard. Theres a deal or theres not a deal, but it is something we are considering. David there you heard it. It looks a little like the chinese may have responded this morning. Right. Xactly some economists are talking about a mini deal. Theres the prospect of china buying some u. S. Agricultural products and exempting pork and soybeans from additional tariffs. Expectedtowards these talks in october at a high level between both sides, there is a word of caution as well in all of this. China has always been in the market for more agricultural goods. Dating more pork in particular because of swine flu. Theres certainly evidence of some good gestures, but no signs of a major, sustainable breakthrough ju
Burgers. Is a fights, lacroix became the market darling of sparkling water but it is losing ground. Jason joel weber is with us. Joel we wanted to do this story in a summer issue. It is the zeitgeist of summer. One thing that has happened is consumers have shifted away from soda and embraced sparkling waters. Lacroix has really encapsulated that and it boomed. Thisng riding enthusiasm. All of a sudden it has gotten competitive. Taylor we learned a lot about their competitors, mainly pepsi and cocacola. Joel they are owned by National Beverage and that is a big part of their portfolio. But going against cocacola or pepsi, once they opened their war chest and looked at sparkling water, they can say we know how to put that in a can. Jason that is coming in from the top, then you have craft movement. Weve seen it in beer and food, now it is sparkling water. Joel it is what they introduced the marketplace. Lacroix basically invented the category and rejuvenated it, and they are met on both
Burgers. Taylor it is this weeks cover story. Lacroix became the market darling of sparkling water but it is losing ground. Jason joel weber is with us. Joel we wanted to do this story in a summer issue. It is the zeitgeist of summer. One thing that has happened is consumers have shifted away from soda and embraced sparkling waters. Lacroix has really encapsulated that and it boomed. Riding this enthusiasm. All of a sudden it has gotten competitive. Taylor we learned a lot about their competitors, mainly pepsi and cocacola. Joel they are owned by National Beverage and that is a big part of their portfolio. But going against cocacola or pepsi, once they opened their war chest and looked at sparkling water, they can say we know how to put that in a can. Jason that is coming in from the top, then you have craft movement. Weve seen it in beer and food, now it is sparkling water. Joel it is what they introduced the marketplace. Lacroix basically invented the category and rejuvenated it, and