Marketplace®

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Jay Siebold

Technical Director, Marketplace Morning Report

Latest from Jay Siebold

  • After the pandemic caused stocks to collapse in parts of the first quarter, the quarter that just ended was a blockbuster.
    Courtney Crow/NYSE via Getty Images

    The second quarter was a blockbuster for stocks. Americans remain banned from traveling to Europe. Can you care for your children while working from home? And, Florida citrus sales are up during the pandemic. 

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  • PPP loans frozen by the calendar
    Getty Images

    The deadline has passed for small businesses to submit applications to the Paycheck Protection Program, but an extension is already in the works. Melbourne suburbs go back into lockdown in Australia today. How climate change threatens Canada’s maple syrup.

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  • The tail fins of Air France aircraft.
    Chesnot/Getty Images

    The EU drops travel restrictions for some countries, but the U.S. isn’t on the list. Dozens of arrests have been made in Hong Kong following a new security law. Kellogg’s in South Korea introduces green onion-flavored Chex.

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  • Most airlines, for example, require masks in-flight, but only a few threaten to ban noncompliant passengers.
    Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images

    America’s top two economic policymakers talk today about the past and future of special pandemic payments. Also, China’s national security law for Hong Kong. And, pressure to create a national policy for wearing masks.

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  • Graffiti asking for rent forgiveness in Los Angeles, California. As state eviction moratoriums start to expire, tenants will have to pay back rent or move out.
    Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images

    Housing groups say they are bracing for a wave of eviction notices. And the deadline to file your tax return this year is July 15, despite calls for another extension. Plus, what it’s like to work as a contact tracer.

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  • A government advertisement promoting China's planned national security law.
    Isaac Lawrence/AFP via Getty Images

    China has passed a security law giving it new powers over Hong Kong. Delhi becomes India’s biggest COVID-19 hot spot. Shell warns that it’ll take a charge of up to $22 billion this quarter.

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  • Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced policies to address complaints about content on the platform amid a growing advertiser boycott.
    Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    The consensus forecast is around 3.5 million jobs added for June. Plus, the social media advertising boycott goes global. The Boeing 737 Max begins test flights. And, migrant workers’ remittances are expected to drop 20% this year.

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  • This marks the end to the almost 30-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement.
    Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

    Global trade may be down, but trade agreements forge ahead. This week, the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement goes into effect. NBC plans to take over broadcasting the U.S. Open golf championship. And, the future of education and online learning.

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  • Police officers inspect the site after gunmen attacked the Pakistani stock exchange building in Karachi, Pakistan on June 29, 2020.
    Sabir Mazhar/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

    Fatalities following an attack by gunmen on the Pakistan Stock Exchange building in Karachi. Amazon workers in Germany strike over COVID-19 safety fears. Fears of food insecurity in East Africa grow amid a new wave of desert locusts.

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  • May saw the biggest increase in consumption ever, but we are still down 12% from spending in February.
    Cindy Ord/Getty Images

    Consumers spending jumped a record 8.2% in May, but “we’re not even close” to back to normal. Airlines executives are going to the White House today to talk COVID-19 concerns. And, Ibiza’s clubs are shut down for the foreseeable future.

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