COVID-19 Outbreak (Update: More than 2.9M cases and 132,313 deaths in US) (31 Viewers)

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Based on the data I put together these are the cities most likely to see full blown outbreaks. This is based on a combination of proximity to cases, travel connections to impacted areas, population density and weather forecast. I'm seeing a strong correlation between weather and sustained outbreaks.

1) Tehran- pretty sure they're already full blown.
2) Milan, Florence and most of Italy- Don't think it will be contained.
3) Seoul- South Korea is full blown but it is going to make it's way into Seoul quickly and be sustained.
4) Japan- The whole country really fits the profile.
5) Paris- Think this is the next city to go and most of France will go with it.
6) Milan and Barcelona spreading through Spain
7) London
7) New York City/Jersey
8) Baltimore/DC
9) Dublin, Lisbon and the rest of central and northern Portugal as well as most of Ireland.
10) San Fransisco

Just want to put it out there to see how the forecast holds up. :)
 
And the Dow continues to free fall



The 10-year Treasury is a closely watched barometer for the U.S. economy. The drop in yields signals growing concern among investors that the virus outbreak could further dent an already slowing global economy, analysts say.

"The drop in yields was a big red flag," says Matt Nadeau, wealth advisor at Piershale Financial Group. "It reinforced fears among investors that there's extra pressure on the global economy."
Here we go people.

100 years ago, maybe it’s the matrix:

 
Interesting that they don't have the 1918 Spanish flu as a cause for the depression. It seems it would have been a huge factor.

The Market didn't crash until 1929. Most of the 20's was a time of a booming economy and prosperity
 
Interesting that they don't have the 1918 Spanish flu as a cause for the depression. It seems it would have been a huge factor.
It didn't cause a crash but it did give up 35 years of gain during the time the pandemic was rolling. It also quickly recovered and turned into the roaring 20's but it was dual faceted because we were also coming out of a world war. Other problem is we weren't relying on global supply chains and didn't shut down commerce. It's really no comparison and there really isn't anything to compare it to.
 
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