Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories

Jay Siebold

Technical Director, Marketplace Morning Report

Latest from Jay Siebold

  • Manufacturing and construction can start again in Spain.
    Miquel Benitez/Getty Images

    Italy, Spain and Austria start to go back to work while France extends its lockdown until 11 May. India is forecast to see no economic growth this year, as it extends its lockdown. India’s call center sector faces job losses.

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  • It's not just your experience: Grocery stores are having trouble keeping up with demand for online shopping.
    Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

    A whole lot of “meh” from the markets when it comes to price changes for oil. Online grocery delivery companies are having trouble keeping up with demand. Britain’s textile industry gets an unexpected boost from COVID-19.

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  • The $1,200 per person is part of the federal government's effort to take some economic pressure off individuals in this pandemic.
    Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

    The IRS says it has started distributing emergency aid payments. Public health advocates call for limits or bans on the sale of tobacco products during COVID-19. Some are buying firearms for the first time right now.

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  • Medical staff in Spain celebrate as COVID-19 infection rates slow.
    Oscar Gonzalez/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Countries in Europe start to relax COVID-19 restrictions to revive economies. Are oil production curbs enough to tackle price slumps? Entertainers make ends meet by working in local grocery stores.

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  • The Federal Reserve's lending system is much more like printing money than it is borrowing.
    Eva Hambach/AFP via Getty Images

    Innovation from the likes of Amazon and WeWork to make the COVID-19 workplace function. Wholesale food businesses turn to door-to-door delivery. Where does the Federal Reserve find $2.3 trillion?

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  • OPEC and Russia have reached a deal on oil production. But can that stop the downward price trend?
    David McNew/Getty Images

    OPEC and OPEC-adjacent Russia have reached a deal to cut oil production by 10 million barrels a day. State workers process the millions of unemployment claims. Have you done a puzzle lately? You’re not alone.

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  • Cyclists near the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Germany.
    Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images

    Eurozone finance ministers agree on protections worth $590 billion for businesses and workers. Russia tells OPEC it will cut oil production. Wholesale food businesses rush to sell directly to consumers.

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  • The number of people filing for unemployment is starting to sound more intense than even the Great Recession of a dozen years ago.
    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    More than 6.6 million Americans have filed for unemployment claims in the past week, and they’re spreading into new industries. The Fed will make $2.3 trillion more available to backstop the economy. President of the Boston Fed surveys the economy.

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  • Dhanwantari Foundation International members serve food to homeless people on a street during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown as a preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus, in Hyderabad, India, on April 9, 2020.
    Noah Seelam/AFP via Getty Images

    Warnings that the pandemic could push half a billion people into poverty. Nobel laureate Esther Duflo offers advice for aiding the poor. We’re in for another awful report on layoffs in the U.S. today.

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  • Italy calls on united economic action from EU countries.
    Philippe Huguen/AFP via Getty Images

    Italy’s Prime Minister says European countries must agree over debt sharing. Sub-Saharan African nations face their first recession in 25 years. Brazil’s top companies agree on no job cuts for 60 days.

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Jay Siebold