Dona Ferentes
Pengurus pengatur
- Joined
- 11 January 2016
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indeed, the numbers moving from an education Visa at graduation to 457 or, hopefully, PR is astoundingly highThey could but the thing about education exports is that actual education is only part of what's really being sold.
If the student doesn't physically end up in Australia then to considerable extent the value of the transaction has been eroded. Online etc is thus really only a very short term interim sort of solution.
Almost 400 million people are now under some from of coercive quarantine
They could but the thing about education exports is that actual education is only part of what's really being sold.
If the student doesn't physically end up in Australia then to considerable extent the value of the transaction has been eroded. Online etc is thus really only a very short term interim sort of solution.
Australia will feel the full force of any slowdown.Update on the COVID-19 virus from World Health Organsiation. China is struggling to control the outbreak. Pouring billions in factories to keep them solvent. The risk to stability around the world is, they suggest, bigger than terrorism.
I suggest the economic impact will be felt far more quickly than markets are currently factoring.
That was what I meant. The economic side of the flu will be worse than the overall health impacts.16% in a day is no meh -
Shares in Blackmores sank 16 per cent after the high-flying vitamins producer unveiled a profit downgrade triggered by the coronavirus outbreak, which the company has conceded could disrupt its shipments to China for up to three months.
The pain will also be immediate, with the uncertainty around coronavirus and eroded margins prompting Blackmores to skip its interim dividend.
It is the latest company to warn that the spread of the coronavirus will play havoc with sales into China, as well as disrupting supply chains and transport links.
A2M has a pretty big suitcase trade too. Yet it is up.
This one's a good illustration of the disconnect between the market and reality at present.Shares in Blackmores sank 16 per cent
Where does BKL source their ingredients from? It may be a supply chain issue as well as difficulties getting products into China.This one's a good illustration of the disconnect between the market and reality at present.
Shares in BKL were trending up, reaching a recent high on Thursday last week and then we have today's plunge.
Pretty clearly the expectations were very different from reality.
We seem to be seeing quite a bit of the conventional business and economic ideas being called into question recently.Well if we consider most of our junk comes from China and these days companies don't carry a lot of inventory, the retail wreckage thread come become very busy.IMO
I will rephrase this as:That was what I meant. The economic side of the flu will be worse than the overall health impacts.
I was just about to whinge about this the other day. Nobody carries stock anymore. I try to get parts and end up having to wait a week all too frequently. Year's ago it was in and out with the part.Well if we consider most of our junk comes from China and these days companies don't carry a lot of inventory, the retail wreckage thread come become very busy.IMO
Get ready for price hikes all round.Tonight when I checked the mail, I asked the guy over the road about the issue, he imports outdoor furniture. He said he already has a problem with delays and people are cancelling their orders because of the delays, so it will become a big issue very quickly IMO. I wonder how companies like Hardly Normal will go, I wouldn't think they carry a big inventory, other than floor stock.
When we ordered a extendable dinning table and six chairs, we had to wait a couple of months, so I don't think it was in Australia. I could be wrong, time will tell.
The FIA, Formula 1's governing body, has accepted a request from Chinese organisers to postpone the Shanghai race, due to take place on 19 April.
It's not really suckers, the outcome is more nuanced than a binary set of options....Who are the suckers?
“I don’t think we can say that it is just a quarterly shock that then everything goes back to normal,” Alexandra Heath, head of economic analysis at the Reserve Bank of Australia, said on Wednesday.
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