We are down 0. 3 on the s p. Back down to 1. 90 on the 10 year. We got up past 1. 95 a little earlier. Disney one of the Better Stories today after earnings, up 4 . Gap up on the ceo leaving gap down on the ceo leaving more than 7 . Guy the president has just been indicating that he hasnt agreed to tariff rollbacks with china. This was always the risk with this rally. Absolutely it was built on a single man risk. If the president didnt agree, you were going to get this kind of reaction. The market is down by 0. 4 . In some ways, this reaction is relatively muted considering this is a key demand from china, that we do see some degree of tariff rollback. The fact that we are only down 0. 3 on what is a relatively big piece of news i think is worth paying attention to. The market may be signaling it Still Believes that a deal can get done, but we have rolled over this news. The president saying he hasnt agreed to tariff rollbacks with china. In terms of the way we are seeing that rippling
Our will. Now i doubt there is anyone in scotland who is not partially sick of the brexit nightmare, but the Boris Johnson deal does not get brexit done. It just opens the door to the next episode of the brexit horror show. Sturgeon added a vote for the s p is able to escape brexit. The parties is involved hold a new independence referendum next year. Protesters hit the streets of hong kong today after the death of a student who took part in demonstrations earlier this week. The student died after a fall in a parking garage near a protest site. Prodemocracy supporters claim police were chasing him, while Authorities Say the accusations are false. Some demonstrators have committed suicide during the unrest in hong kong but nobody has been confirmed dead as a result of the clash between police and demonstrators. Global news 24 hours a day, onair, and tictoc on twitter, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in over 120 countries. Im Mark Crumpton. This is bloomberg. Live from
Occasion. We begin tonight [inaudible conversations] avec program appropriately with a presentation of colors followed by the singing of the National Anthem please rise. The osage nuc via the dawn dawns ey light what so proudly we hailed at the twilights last gleaming whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight or the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming and the rockets red glare the bombs bursting in air gave proof through the night that our flag was still there of status that starspangled banner yet wave music mac or the land of the free and the home of the brave please thank the honor guard and ken kaplan for that special tribute to the nation. Please be seated. Ladies and gentlemen, i am the event director for the Richard Nixon foundation and its a pleasure to have you over here tonight. Thursday of last week marked the 75th anniversary of the operation overlord, the largest invasion in history and a turning point of world war ii. A day that is rememb
What’s work life like at the center of conflict coverage? It’s highly collaborative, by necessity. It calls for attention to more than the reportable news points that map a war’s course. It means keeping humanity at the center of the story. Ken Kaplan, the Monitor’s Mideast and diplomacy editor – and a close observer of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for nearly four decades – talks with host Clay Collins about life with little sleep, about logistics, and about helping to enforce “the Monitor difference” on stories that have every news outlet’s attention.