• Trendlyne logo
  • Markets
  • Alerts
  • F&O
  • MF
  • Reports
  • Screeners
  • Subscribe
  • Superstars
  • Portfolio
  • Watchlist
  • Insider Trades
  • Results
  • Data Downloader
  • Events Calendar
  • What's New
  • Explore
  • FAQs
  • Widgets
More
    Search stocks
    IND USA
    IND
    IND
    IND
    USA
    • Stocks
    • Futures & Options
    • Mutual Funds
    • News
    • Fundamentals
    • Reports
    • Corporate Actions
    • Alerts
    • Shareholding

    The Baseline

    12
    Following
    368
    Stocks Tracked
    49
    Sectors & Interests
    Follow
    Load latest
    logo
    The Baseline created a screener Stocks in Buy Zone …
    15 May 2020

    Stocks in Buy Zone with High Momentum Score Last Month

    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline
    12 May 2020
    Gainers in the News: Sobha, Spicejet, Network 18 Media, TV18 Broadcast, InterGlobe Aviation

    Gainers in the News: Sobha, Spicejet, Network 18 Media, TV18 Broadcast, InterGlobe Aviation

    by Ritmbarah Arora

    Sobha: The share price of Sobha advanced 5% to Rs 195.7 for the second consecutive trading session, as real-estate companies gain. Around 4.2 lakh shares in volume have been traded so far. The stock price is up 8% since the last week and 11.6% since the last month. The real estate shares have been trading with gains since yesterday. Sobha is listed in 32 screeners on Trendlyne.

    SpiceJet: The stock price of SpiceJet rallied 4.9% to Rs 42.8 as of now. Around 4 million shares in volume have been traded so far. The share price gained 5.6% since the last week and has fallen 8.5% since the last month. Airline stocks are gaining today on the  possibility of the lockdown being relaxed in major parts of the country post May 17. 

    SpiceJet announced on April 30 that it will disburse part salaries for April to more than 92% of its employees. The airline was not planning any lay-off of employees despite the challenges that impacted the primary source of revenue. SpiceJet is listed in 33 screeners on Trendlyne.

    Network 18 Media & Investments: The shares of Network 18 Media & Investments jumped 4.9% for a fourth straight session today. Around 1.5 million shares in volume have been traded so far. The stock price soared 13.1% since the last week and 28.1% since the last month, per Trendlyne data.

    Nifty Media index gained around 6.6% since the last month and was up 3.1% yesterday. Network 18 Media & Investments is a constituent of Nifty Media index. The PE of the stock is 0 based on TTM earnings ended March 2020. The company is listed in 35 screeners on Trendlyne.

    TV18 Broadcast: The share price of TV18 Broadcast surged 8.1% to Rs 21.01. Around 7.8 million shares in volume have been traded so far. The stock price increased 18.9% since the last week and 37.5% since the last month. The PE of the stock is 109.17 based on TTM earnings ending March 2020. TV18 Broadcast is listed in 32 screeners on Trendlyne.

    InterGlobe Aviation: The stock price of InterGlobe Aviation zoomed 4.4% to Rs 1002.4 while around 3.2 million shares in volume have been traded so far. The share price gained 5.5% since the last week and has fallen 3.8% since the last month.

    The shares of airlines started rising in an otherwise weak market, amid reports that the government could soon resume domestic flight operations in India. Also, as per the latest reports, InterGlobe Enterprises, parent company of IndiGo has evinced interest in Virgin Australia – the second largest aviation company of Australia. InterGlobe Aviation is listed in 26 screeners on Trendlyne.

    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline
    11 May 2020
    Best Reads Today: On Nostalgia, Information Overload, JP Morgan's Asia View, Four More Shots

    Best Reads Today: On Nostalgia, Information Overload, JP Morgan's Asia View, Four More Shots

    JP Morgan is seeing changes in consumer behavior across Asia post COVID19, that will benefit the region's tech companies. "The technology trends that existed prior to the coronavirus have been accelerated,” analysts say. Big beneficiaries from this would be Alibaba, Samsung, Tencent. Link

    Is nostalgia our new normal? The word 'nostalgia' means 'pain associated with home'. Over time, it has come to define a time that is impossible to return to, except in our memory. Whether it is for the taste of a grandmother's cooking, an old Walkman music player, or time spent with childhood friends, the feeling intensifies when 'one is no longer at home anywhere'. Link

    The Indian Netflix show Four More Shot Please! resembles the HBO 90s hit show Sex and the City in many ways - four female friends, with frank discussions of sex, love lives, and ambitions. While reviews have been mixed, slamming the hammy acting and predictable plot, it was one of the top three Indian Amazon original series in 2019. All four stars say that people are calling them by their character’s names in public Link

    The 'Information Overload' of today's economy may be accelerating. The computer engineer Nathan Zeldes was once asked by Intel to help reduce the burden employees were facing with email. He admitted defeat. “I’d love to give you a magic potion that would restore your attention span to that of your grandparents,” he wrote, “but I can’t. After over a decade of smartphone use and social media, the harm is probably irreversible.” Link

    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline created a screener Stocks in Buy Zone …
    04 May 2020

    Stocks in Buy Zone with High Durability Score

    Stocks that are in the buy zone based on historical PE with high financial durability
    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline
    12 Apr 2020
    Warren Buffett does not like earnings projections and EBITDA

    Warren Buffett does not like earnings projections and EBITDA

    "It is both deceptive and dangerous for CEOs to predict growth rates for their companies", Warren Buffett believes.

    ---

    It is both deceptive and dangerous for CEOs to predict growth rates for their companies.They are, of course, frequently egged on to do so by both analysts and their own investor relations departments. They should resist, however, because too often these predictions lead to trouble.

    It’s fine for a CEO to have his own internal goals and, in our view, it’s even appropriate for the CEO to publicly express some hopes about the future, if these expectations are accompanied by sensible caveats. But for a major corporation to predict that its per-share earnings will grow over the long term at, say, 15% annually is to court trouble.

    That’s true because a growth rate of that magnitude can only be maintained by a very small percentage of large businesses. Here’s a test: Examine the record of, say, the 200 highest earning companies from 1970 to 1980 and tabulate how many have increased per-share earnings by 15% annually since those dates. You will find that only a handful have. I would wager you a very significant sum that fewer than 10 of the 200 most profitable companies in 2000 will attain 15% annual growth in earnings-per-share over the next 20 years.
    The problem arising from lofty predictions is not just that they spread unwarranted optimism. Even more troublesome is the fact that they corrode CEO behavior.

    Over the years, I have observed many instances in which CEOs engaged in uneconomic operating maneuvers so that they could meet earnings targets they had announced. Worse still, after exhausting all that operating acrobatics would do, they sometimes played a wide variety of accounting games to “make the numbers.” These accounting shenanigans have a way of snowballing: Once a company moves earnings from one period to another, operating shortfalls that occur thereafter require it to engage in further accounting maneuvers that must be even more “heroic.” These can turn fudging into fraud. (More money, it has been noted, has been stolen with the point of a pen than at the point of a gun.)

    I tend to be leery of companies run by CEOs who woo investors with fancy predictions. A few of these managers will prove prophetic—but others will turn out to be congenital optimists, or even charlatans. Unfortunately, it’s not easy for investors to know in advance which species they are dealing with.

    Trumpeting EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) is a particularly pernicious practice. Doing so implies that depreciation is not truly an expense, given that it is a “non-cash” charge. In truth, depreciation is a particularly unattractive expense because the cash outlay it represents is paid up front, before the asset acquired has delivered any benefits to the business. Imagine, if you will, that at the beginning of this year a company paid all of its employees for the next ten years of their service (in the way they would lay out cash for a fixed asset to be useful for ten years).

    In the following nine years, compensation would be a “non-cash” expense—a reduction of a prepaid compensation asset established this year. Would anyone care to argue that the recording of the expense in years two through ten would be simply a bookkeeping formality?

    Second, unintelligible footnotes usually indicate untrustworthy management. If you can’t understand a footnote or other managerial explanation, it’s usually because the CEO doesn’t want you to. Enron’s descriptions of certain transactions still baffle me.

    Finally, be suspicious of companies that trumpet earnings projections and growth expectations. Businesses seldom operate in a tranquil, no-surprise environment, and earnings simply don’t advance smoothly (except, of course, in the offering books of investment bankers).

    I not only don’t know today what our businesses will earn next year—we don’t even know what they will earn next quarter. We are suspicious of those CEOs who regularly claim they do know the future—and we become downright incredulous if they consistently reach their declared targets. Managers that always promise to “make the numbers” will at some point be tempted to make up the numbers.

    From Divided by Hash Lines, Warren Buffett's letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders. 

    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline created a screener Positive Net Cash Flow, …
    06 Apr 2020

    Positive Net Cash Flow, Low Debt

    Companies with good net cash flow, rising operating cash and low debt
    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline created a screener Rising momentum score compared …
    01 Apr 2020

    Rising momentum score compared to previous week and month

    Stocks with momentum score >60, and rising momentum compared to the momentum score of previous week and month
    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline
    01 Apr 2020
    LIVE: World Bank approves $1 billion in emergency funding to India

    LIVE: World Bank approves $1 billion in emergency funding to India

    • The World Bank has approved $1 billion of emergency funding to India to help the country beat the coronavirus. The Bank in all approved a plan to roll out USD 160 billion across various countries as the pandemic spreads. 

    • US unemployment claims jumped to 6.6 million last week, a record in the country's history. In all, US has seen a loss of ten million jobs since the coronavirus epidemic spread. 38 US states have announced plans for stay-at-home orders that will last for weeks.

    • A big tracing effort of attendees is underway across states - particularly Telangana and Kerala - after a big religious gathering was held at the Markaz building in Nizamuddin between 13-15 March. The religious gathering came into the spotlight after over 24 people who attended the event tested positive for coronavirus.

    • Cases worldwide have risen to 860,000 with the US reporting the highest number, accounting for 1 in 5 covid cases worldwide.

    • The US Centers for Disease Control is apparently reconsidering its earlier guidance that people not wear masks, with new data showsingthat individuals who show no symptoms are carrying the virus.

    • "Since we are dealing with a communicable disease, even one case is a hotspot", the Indian Health Ministry says. 

    • ICMR says that 42,788 samples have been tested for coronavirus. 4,346 samples have been tested yesterday. 123 labs are currently functional for testing while 49 private labs have been given permission to carry out tests.

    • Johnson and Johnson (J&J) has announced that the company will start human trials for its experimental coronavirus vaccine by September, to potentially have it approved by the beginning of 2021. The company plans to invest $1 billion alongside US agencies to fund vaccine research. 

    • The first test results for various coronavirus treatments, which have been tested on 3000 human volunteers, will be made public later this week, the French Minister of Research Frédérique Vidal has said.

    • The US Food and Drug Administration on Sunday issued an emergency use authorization for hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine in the treatment of covid. Some doctors such as Dr. Jeff Colyer, have come out saying they are seeing favorable results of these drugs on patients. 

    • The US is recommending that Americans limit their travel upto April 30. Over 2,500 people have died nationwide, even as states implement social distancing - but not full lockdowns. 

    • Some hopeful signs for Italy, the worst hit country in Europe with nearly 11,000 deaths. The country saw deaths drop for a third day in a row, from 969 to 889 to 756. 

    • Russia has put Moscow on lockdown with four hours of notice, not letting city residents leave their homes. 

    • The Japanese government is approving Avigen - favpiravir - as a treatment for coronavirus, saying that it has seen success in trials against the disease. Favipiravir is now an off-patent drug, and Avigen in Japan is manufactured by the drug maker Fuji. In India Lasa Supergenics, a Mumbai company, is the first to be working on this molecule. If it gets regulatory approval for clinical trials, it can test and start manufacturing the drug, the company had said.

    • It also remains to be seen if Lasa has the operational wherewithal to be the primary supplier of this drug, if the trials are successful. 

    • US President Donald Trump has after initial reluctance, decided to invoke the Defense Production Act, a wartime law to force auto giant General Motors to manufacture ventilators amid a rising shortage as American hospitals are deluged with coronavirus cases. 

    • Tata Trusts commits Rs. 500 crore to fight the virus. Wipro's Azim Premji is also in the news for a donation of Rs. 50,000 crore, although this was done in March 2019. The then chairman of Wipro donated 34 percent of his shares, worth Rs 52,750 crore to an endowment under the Azim Premji Foundation.

    • Self isolation of a different kind: The King of Thailand has rented every room in a hotel in Germany to self-isolate with a harem of 20 women. 

    • Moody’s has downgraded South Africa’s sovereign credit rating to "junk' level, as the country struggles against the coronavirus pandemic.

    • From this Saturday the Delhi government will be reportedly serving lunch and dinner to nearly four lakh people at over 224 night shelters, 325 schools and other locations.

    • The UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has the coronavirus, and is self-isolating at home. He is the second significant British political figure after Prince Charles to test positive. 

    • The government will pay the EPF contribution of both the employer and employee - 24% (12%+12%) for the next three months for those companieswhich have upto 100 employees and 90 percent of them  are earning less than Rs 15,000 per month.

    • A relief package of Rs. 1,70,000 crore for poor via cash transfer and food subsidies has been announced. Farmers will be given Rs. 2000 in April out of the Rs. 6000 they receive annually,

    • FM Nirmala Sitharaman has announced a Rs. 50 lakh cover for all medical workers on the coronavirus frontlines. 

    • Mahindra and Mahindra is working with an existing manufacturer of high-spec ventilators to help them simplify design and scale up capacity, the company said. Ventilator demands are likely to rise in the coming weeks, as one of the effects of the coronavirus is difficulty breathing for affected patients. 

    • South Korea now mandatorily requires every incoming visitor to download a self-quarantine app, which tracks the user and alerts the authorities if the person leaves their quarantine area. 

    • The coronavirus cases in California is doubling every three to four days, creating worries that San Francisco is going to be the next epicenter for the infection after New York. A health official noted,.

      “We originally thought that it would be doubling every six to seven days and we see cases doubling every three to four days
    • The world is running out of gloves at the worst possible time: The world's biggest maker of medical gloves by volume, Top Glove Corp Bhd in Malaysia, has the capacity to make 200 million gloves a day, but a supplier shutdown has left it with just two weeks of boxes to ship them in

    • Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, has said that a significant portion of London's tube services may have to be cut  with staff sickness rates approaching 30%.

    • China has permanently banned the trade and consumption of wild animals in the wake of the pandemic. 

    • German industrial conglomerate Thyssenkrupp has announced ithat it is cutting 3,000 jobs in its steel unit as part of a coronavirus "crisis package

    • Prime Minister Modi extends the lockdown - scheduled to end on March 31st - by 21 days starting midnight on March 24.

    • Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa has warned people not to come out onto the streets without good reason, threatening strict action against those who do so. Total cases in the state rose to 41, of which 6 were Kerala residents transiting through Karnataka airports. 

    • US President Trump is questioning how much quarantining and lockdowns are worthwhile. “Life is fragile and economies are fragile,” he said on Monday, and suggested he may be looking at more targeted shutdowns. Trump said he is reviewing existing restrictions, and that Americans may see revisions after March 31. 

    "We are going to get it all going again very soon," Trump said. Deaths however, continue to climb in major American cities, particularly New York where officials say the "attack rate" of the virus is one in a thousand people. National deaths in the US crossed 100 in one day. 

    • After pressure from countries, the Tokyo Olympics have been postponed to 2021. Japan had been resisting postponing the Olympics despite the pandemic, worried, Japanese officials said, about the cost impact of doing this. 

    • One in five people worldwide are now under lockdown, as governments battle the coronavirus. UK goes into lockdown starting today. India, much of Europe and US citizens are under lockdowns. 
    • A total of 482 people in India have tested positive for the coronavirus as of Tuesday morning. While the numbers are rising, infection rates inside samples tested are holding steady, and will need to be closely watched in the coming days. 

    • Wuhan, China, the original epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak, will lift its outbound travel restrictions on April 8. 

    • India's ICMR is recommending the use of hydroxychloroquine for coronavirus. "Hydroxy-chloroquine is found to be effective against coronavirus in laboratory studies and in-vivo studies," ICMR says, and has recommended it for use for high risk populations to prevent the disease: asymptomatic health workers, and for asymptomatic household contacts of confirmed cases. 

    ICMR recommends a dosage of the anti-malarial drug at 400 mg twice a day on Day 1, followed by 400 mg once weekly for next 7 weeks; to be taken with meals, only on a prescription. Read the full notification.

    • A European clinical trial has been launched with 3,200 people, which will be testing four experimental coronavirus treatments.

    • The Director General of CIvil Aviation (DGCA) is requiring precautions to be taken by airlines, including the seat between two passengers to be kept empty. 

    • The Emirates airline has announced a suspension of all flights for two weeks in response to the United Arab Emirates’ decision to temporarily pause all inbound and outbound passenger flights in the country. 

    • IPCA Labs has had its import ban in the US partially lifted by the FDA for its chloroquine formulations. This ban has been lifted as clinical trials for chloroquine against the coronavirus begin in New York on Tuesday.

    New York, the first to be doing these trials in the US, has acquired 750,000 doses of chloroquine, 70,000 doses of hydroxychloroquine and 10,000 doses of an antibiotic. The success of the treatment will determine further demand for the medication and APIs. 

    • Total cases of the virus in India have hit 396, the ICMR says. The infection rate among the suspicious cases tested has remained steady over the last few days, but testing numbers have risen. 

    • The German Chancellor Angela Merkel is in quarantine after her doctor tests positive for the virus.

    • Anil Agarwal, Executive Chairman of Vedanta, has pledged Rs 100 crores to fight the novel coronavirus pandemic.

    • Bangalore's typically heavy-traffic ORR Ring Road goes quiet on Janata Curfew

    Photo by jaanakinihon

    • Mumbai's Marine Drive is empty, sky unusually clear on Janata Curfew

    Katta News Photo

    • What happens when a pigeon crosses the road?: Streets in Delhi go quiet as country observes Janata curfew 

    • HeroMotoCorp has paused its operations in India, Columbia, Bangladesh with immediate effect and all manufacturing plants have been put on hold till 31 March. To search for terms such as coronavirus in corporate filings, try Discover.

    • Future Retail says store operations in many states have been temporarily closed under government orders, and the company does not yet know what the coronavirus impact on sales will be. 

    • Coronavirus testing clinics in India have expanded to 111, and state governments are identifying public and private hospitals as first responders for cases. Coronavirus cases have risen to 315, out of 16,021 people tested. ICMR has now issued guidelines to private clinics to test for coronavirus. 

    • Brazil’s president Bolsanaro has come under heavy criticism for the government's half-hearted response to the coronavirus crisis.

    • Japan is set to reopen its schools in April, ending the lockdown for its students. The country has over 1000 active cases. 

    • Mainland China has reported no new locally transmitted cases of the coronavirus for the third day running. Cases have spiked in Spain and Italy amid shutdowns, and the UK introduced stringent new measures closing down businesses, and asking people to stay home. 

    • The virus does not negotiate: After Michel Barnier, Brexit negotiator for the EU, now David Frost who is the Brexit negotiator for the UK, is in isolation after showing coronavirus symptoms

    • Maharashtra CM Uddhav Thackeray has announced a lockdown of "non-essential shops and offices in Mumbai, MMR region, Pune, Pimpri Chinchwad and Nagpur" today.

    • The VHP in UP has cancelled the Shobha Yatras and rath yatras it had planned to celebrate Ram Navami. The celebrations were set to start on March 25.

    • Countries are now trying to be the first to make a coronavirus vaccine, with firms like German companies Curevac and BioNTech getting takeover offers from US and China.

    • The US government is planning to give every American $1,200 as part of a $500 billion economic revival effort. Europe is planning a economic infusion of $1.7 trillion. 

    • A little less clarity: At the EU's insistence, Netflix has agreed to slow its speed down by 25% inside Europe to ensure that a vast continent under quarantine can access its broadband effectively. Right now Netflix is a monster gobbling up bandwidth as millions try to entertain themselves while under virtual house arrest. 

    • Hero MotoCorp has filed an application today before the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India seeking the relaxation of the deadline set for sale or registration of BS-IV vehicles, currently 31st March. The company has asked for an extension of three months, noting that the coronavirus pandemic has made it difficult to meet the deadline. 

    • A new study published in the journal Nature Medicine, has found that the death rate in Wuhan, China from the coronavirus was lower than previous estimates. The study calculated that people with coronavirus symptoms in Wuhan had a 1.4% likelihood of dying, unlike the range of 2-4% estimated earlier. 

    • A clinical trial has been announced at the University of Minnesota, that will test whether hydroxychloroquine, a derivative of the anti-malarial drug chloroquine, can protect people from getting infected by the coronavirus. 

    • At 3,405 deaths, Italy's toll has taken over China's total on the same day China reported zero new domestic coronavirus cases. China is preparing to reopen its movie theatres at the end of the month.

    • India has temporarily stopped the landing of all international commercial passenger flights from March 22nd to 29th. The Civil Aviation Ministry and Railways will also suspend all concessional travel on flights and trains, except for students, patients and disabled people, to limit travel volumes and discourage movement during this week. 

    • The Kerala government has announced a revival package worth Rs 20,000 crore, including universal ration. The state government has been on an aggressive footing on tackling cases, and has included daily updates to journalists from the government on progress. 

    • In a national address, Prime Minister Modi recommended a slew of voluntary measures including self quarantining, restricting outdoor visits, no panic buying and 'janata curfew' on Sunday.

    Tracking the movement of the coronavirus around the globe.

    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline
    26 Mar 2020
    Stocks with a good cushion: High cash flow, low debt companies

    Stocks with a good cushion: High cash flow, low debt companies

    Even after the lockdowns end, the economy will be under pressure for at least a couple of quarters, as demand recovers and the government continues the battle against the coronavirus pandemic. This screener identifies the companies most well placed to weather this slowdown, in terms of both strong cash flows and low debt. 

    While companies from some sectors like real estate are also in the list, these will see a longer slowdown than others. Tech and healthcare stocks, as well as consumer companies would see a more rapid recovery. 

    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    logo
    The Baseline
    19 Mar 2020
    LIVE: Indian Railways chase down escaped quarantine patient, Israel's Mossad messes up

    LIVE: Indian Railways chase down escaped quarantine patient, Israel's Mossad messes up

    • This post is no longer being updated. Check out the live tracker here. 
    • Sometimes being a low population country can also be a problem. Iceland with a population of 360,000 now has 250 cases, translating into 70 cases per 100,000 people - the highest in the world.
    • Mossad messed up: Israel's intelligence service Mossad has come under fire after it bought 100,000 Covid-19 testing kits that turned out to be incomplete, because they do not contain a patented liquid the swabs need to be dipped into. .
    • Brexit negotiator for the EU Michel Barnier has tested positive for the coronavirus. 

    • Mauritius has announced its first three cases of coronavirus, all international travellers - a man from London and two cruise ship workers. 
    • Chasing the virus: An Assamese waiter working in Kerala, and suspected of being exposed to a coronavirus patient jumped quarantine and escaped. Police and the Indian Railways tracked him down in a joint effort after his phone pings showed him on a train to Assam. He was caught on the Kanchanjunga Express and hauled back into quarantine. The man has not yet tested positive.  
    • Two new cases in Lucknow, and two new cases in Maharashtra of coronavirus reported. Religious organizations in Maharashtra have suspended gatherings and services. 
    • Indigo and Vistara are reportedly considering grounding domestic flights temporarily to limit travel as governments work to control the coronavirus.
    • China says that its domestic challenge with coronavirus is now over, with no new local infections. All new infections are now among international visitors and being quarantined. The government said that it would be able to report conclusively in the next few weeks. 
    • Raman Gangakhedkar, the head of ICMR- NIV, said that no evidence of community transmission has emerged in the random testing conducted so far. 
    • Several London Underground stations are closing as the city tightens measures to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
    • Two women in Mumbai have tested positive for coronavirus on Thursday, taking Maharashtra's total cases to 47.
    • Chinese officials in Brazil tweeted that Eduardo Bolsonaro, the son of Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro, has a "mental virus" after he said that China was to blame for the epidemic.
    • Australia's Central Bank has cut interest rates for the second time this month by 25 basis points, bringing the cash rate to 0.25%.
    • The United Arab Emirates said it is suspending the issue of all types of work permits and the entry of valid residence visa holders who are still abroad, for two weeks.
    • A 20 year old man who travelled from Delhi to Tamil Nadu has tested positive for coronavirus, India's first case with no international travel history. India currently has 161 cases, including 25 foreigners. 
    • The US Federal Reserve has announced relief for mutual funds, via $10 billion in emergency loans. 
    • US markets have continued to fall sharply and closed 5% lower, despite the stimulus announced by the government, spooked by the rapid spread of cases within the country. The S&P500 fell over 6% as state governments announced new restrictions on movement, and closed malls and stores. 
    • US markets have lost their 'Trump bump', the rise in stocks that began after Trump's inauguration in January 2017. The Dow Jones industrial average fell below that closing level on Wednesday. 
    • The UK FTSE and Germany's DAX also closed lower, ending -4% and -5.6% down respectively.
    • Facebook is launching a 'coronavirus information centre' which will show updates from national health services at the top of Instagram and Facebook feeds. This is first launching in Italy, France, Germany, Spain, the UK and the US, which are among the top affected countries.
    • With most colleges in the US suspending classes, the Indian Embassy has issued guidelines for students seeking assistance. 
    • Pharma giant Pfizer says that it’s working on a potential COVID-19 vaccine with German firm BioNTech. It's one among several companies racing to build a vaccine, although even with best efforts a vaccine may be well over a year away. 
    • As cases grow in the United States, the country is temporarily suspending routine immigrant and non-immigrant visa services from Wednesday in most countries worldwide. The US did not specify in which countries they were halting services, but said emergency visa services would continue.
    • Chinese authorities have delivered over one million masks to France, which is deep in the grip of the virus, with over 9000 testing positive.
    • Coronavirus cases in Pakistan climb to 260. The country has recorded two deaths. 
    • Germany is expanding entry restrictions into the country to include flights from Italy, Spain, Austria, France, Luxembourg, Denmark and Switzerland. While such internal restrictions are typically not within the legal framework of the EU, many EU countries are now ignoring these guidelines. 
    • UK's shadow foreign minister Lloyd Russell-Moyle has said he's tested positive for the coronavirus.

    Tracking the movement of the coronavirus around the globe. 

    Copy LinkShare onShare on Share on Share on
     
    more
    loading
    Logo Trendlyne

    Stay ahead of the market

    Company

    PrivacyDisclaimerTerms of Use Contact Us

    Resources

    Blog FAQsStock Market Widgets

    Copyright © 2025 Giskard Datatech Pvt Ltd