China

China Articles

With millions of people in China fundamentally unable to leave their homes or the cities they live in, shipments of smartphones are expected to crater in the first quarter.
One of the biggest concerns in the financial markets at this time is that governments and central banks have few obvious policy tools to help keep their economies going if what was seen in China...
These stocks that are either defensive in general or are defying the big drop because they have some aspect of their business that might be immune to daily scares or because they are potential...
24/7 Wall St. routinely tracks many issues covering the economy and the personal well-being of the average person. With this in mind, we have looked back at our coverage of doomsday preppers from the...
Novavax shares made a big step forward on Wednesday after the firm provided an update on its treatment for COVID-19.
Car sales in China fell sharply in January, and the spread of the coronavirus will make the figure much worse in February. That is bad news for Ford and General Motors.
Day two of the coronavirus scare is now in the books and practically all major American averages are down over 3% for their second consecutive day. Currently all the gains for the year for each of...
NIO is known as "the Tesla of China" and a new partnership may come with great expansion and major funding to allow the electric vehicle maker to fight Tesla in the home market of China.
Chinese electric car maker Nio has signed a framework deal with the municipal government of Hefei, the city where the company has the bulk of its operations. The deal offers a cash lifeline for Nio...
Jabil, one of the world's top outsourced manufacturing companies, has announced that the Covid-19 outbreak is having a negative impact on its second quarter of fiscal 2020.
Gilead Sciences stock surged while the broader market was battered on reports that a senior official from the World Health Organization said that Gilead's remdesivir may currently be the best bet on...
The broad markets are getting crushed on Monday on renewed fears of the spread of the coronavirus (Covid-19). But a handful of stocks were acting as a natural hedge to the virus news.
PepsiCo made a big move in China over the weekend that was unrelated to the coronavirus. The food and beverage giant announced Sunday that it had agreed to buy the Chinese snack brand Be & Cheery.
Coca-Cola has outlined some exposure it has to Covid-19. China is its third-largest market in the world in terms of unit case volumes.
Ford and General Motors may have modestly good results in the United States this year, as they did in 2019. However, overall global results already have been hammered.