2. Britain left the EU: London time was late 1 1, and Britain officially left the EU. At this moment, 47 years of EU membership has finally come to an end. Subsequently, Britain entered the transition period after Britain left the European Union. The transition period begins on February 1 day, 2020 and ends on February 3 1 day, 2020. During this period, Britain abides by all EU rules, but no longer participates in the EU decision-making process.
3. Global Black Monday is coming: On March 9, Beijing time, the Nikkei 225 index fell by 5%; South Korea's composite index fell by 4. 19%, the lowest since last September. Following the Asia-Pacific stock market crash, European stock markets opened sharply, with Germany's DAX index falling by 7.4% and Britain's FTSE 100 index falling by 8.3%. Nasdaq and Standard & Poor's 500 stock indexes both fell more than 4%. Among them, Standard & Poor's 500 index futures fell by 4.9%.
4. For the first time in history, US stocks blew three times a week: on March 9, global stock markets fell, and US stocks were not far behind. Us stocks triggered on the same day? Fuse mechanism? , the S&P 500 index fell 7.60% to close at 2746 points; Nasdaq index fell 7.29% to close at 7950 points; The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 7.79% to close at 2385 1, opening the first fuse in 2020. On March 12, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell to 7%, triggering the second fuse in that week, and the US stock market was suspended for 15 minutes. On the same day, the Dow reported 2 1200 points, down 9.99%; Nasdaq reported 720 1 point, down 9.43%; The Standard & Poor's 500 Index reported 2480 points, down 9.5 1%. On March 16, US stocks closed down sharply again, and the Dow fell nearly 13%. On the same day, the opening of the three major stock indexes triggered the fuse, and the decline did not stop after the opening again.