KOSPI can only check on 2300 points

(RTTNews) – South Korea’s inventory market has fallen in two of the three business days since the end of the four-day streak of consecutive victories in which it jumped nearly a hundred numbers, or 4.2 percent.KOSPI is now just above 2325 numbers and can finish its losses on Tuesday.

Global forecasts for Asian markets are weak in the face of expansion considerations, as the number of international coronavirus cases continues to increase. European markets fell and US stock markets have fallen.But it’s not the first time They combined and Asian markets divided the difference.

KosPI ended with a sharp drop on Monday after losses in monetary stocks, generation stocks and oil companies, while industrial ones were mixed.

During the day, the index recoiled 27.63 emissions or 1.17% to close by 2,326.17 after trading between 2326.06 and 2381.50.The share volume of 1.6 billion valued 19 trillion won.There were 498 winners and 350 declines.

Wall Street’s advantage is weak as the Dow and S

The Dow Jones fell 223.82 points, or 0.78%, to finish in 28430.05, while the NASDAQ gained 79.82 points, or 0.68%, to end in 11775.46 and the S

The weakness of the Dow Jones came when the index welcomed 3 new shares: Honeywell (HON), Salesforce (CTM) and Amgen (AMGN); cut another 3: ExxonMobil (XOM), Pfizer (PFE) and Raytheon (RTN).

Apple’s (APPL) inventories increased Monday as inventory divisions for the company and Tesla increased.

Crude oil futures fell after initial gains and the stabilized decline Monday amid uncertainty about energy outlook as coronavirus cases continue to increase. West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures for October closed with a drop of $0.36, or 0.8%, to $42.61 a barrel.

Closer to home, South Korea will see the latest gross domestic product figures by the time of the quarter later in the day, as well as August figures for imports, exports and the industry balance sheet.The previous reading of GDP advised a 1.3% quarter-on-quarterly decline and a year-on-year gain of 1.4%.

Imports are expected to fall by 15.2% year-on-year after losing 11.9% in July.Exports are said to decline by 11.5% in line with the year after falling by 7.0% last month.The industry’s surplus is $4.27 billion in July.

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