"It's spooked people, it spooked the market," said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment strategist at Inverness Counsel in New York.
|
|
"I think Iowa just spooked people again, not about any one candidate, but spooked them about the process in general," she said.
|
|
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Spooked one week, sanguine the next.
|
|
When he became president in 2016, business types were spooked.
|
|
So I was pretty spooked by that, but still fascinated.
|
|
We've heard that this spooked some of the IPO buyers.
|
|
It's not the first time Alexa has spooked Echo users.
|
|
Nicholson added that Carney's words could have spooked investors further.
|
|
Although it had no political aim, it spooked the party.
|
|
S. businesses appear spooked by the president's capricious trade policy.
|
|
Agitated dogs may bite, or get spooked and run away.
|
|
Nevertheless, this referendum has spooked Iran's leaders all over again.
|
|
His spooked horse did, but it was missing a rider.
|
|
There's no question that Lamb's polling numbers have spooked Republicans.
|
|
Perhaps a victim struggled and spooked the attacker, he said.
|
|
"Clients are definitely spooked by (Trump's) executive orders," said Walker.
|
|
Tuesday's market action showed how easily spooked investors have become.
|
|
However, the animal was spooked and ran off, Abbott said.
|
|
Go deeper: China's grand infrastructure plan has spooked its rivals.
|
|
It didn't happen, but the league is spooked by Trump.
|
|
Still, the trade war has spooked investors and business leaders.
|
|
The $5.2 billion loss size spooked Wall Street on Thursday.
|
|
But the new security measures in Mexico had spooked her.
|
|
If the coronavirus has you spooked, you're in good company.
|
|
NIDA was spooked, and Mash put the trial on hold.
|
|
LPs were partially spooked by SoftBank's reckless investment in WeWork.
|
|
It's unclear what kind of animal may have spooked them.
|
|
Trade wars have spooked one of Iowa's top pork customers.
|
|
The ambivalence of the Trump administration has further spooked insurers.
|
|
No doubt the potential of the combination has spooked investors.
|
|
Or maybe you got spooked by a phony IRS pitch.
|
|
The market was spooked by this potential deluge of crude.
|
|
Go deeper: Stocks are bouncing back, but analysts are still spooked
|
|
A fairly reliable precursor of recessions, the inversion further spooked investors.
|
|
The only person who isn't spooked, it seems, is Mark Zuckerberg.
|
|
One journalist was so spooked that she temporarily fled the country.
|
|
It spooked him, and now he won't return to that spot.
|
|
Markets continue to be spooked by Trump's tariff threats against China.
|
|
And her getting spooked by ghosts and a mannequin chasing her?
|
|
A tumble in Italy's bank shares on Tuesday also spooked investors.
|
|
The uncertainty around Brexit has rocked global markets and spooked allies.
|
|
"The movement in the bond market really spooked investors," Madden said.
|
|
The spooked deer was not at the scene when police arrived.
|
|
The party is spooked by the thought of localists gaining power.
|
|
Stirrings of activism on some university campuses have already spooked them.
|
|
Investors in Wirecard remained spooked until BaFin intervened on February 18th.
|
|
Since the news, spooked investors have wiped 9% off Facebook's shares.
|
|
But as the vehicle approaches, the horse gets a little spooked.
|
|
When I first heard of Koniku, I was a little spooked.
|
|
I don't get spooked by the fact that I'm being logged.
|
|
Earlier on Thursday, Roche spooked investors by forecasting stagnant 2016 earnings.
|
|
The airline's aggressive expansion plan also spooked investors earlier this year.
|
|
Looming showdownElsewhere, China's reliance on violence has spooked the international community.
|
|
"Why not?" he asked, trying not to sound spooked or mad.
|
|
Luxford spooked and threw his jockey, Kieren Fox, to the ground.
|
|
Instead of encouraging trading, this volatility appears to have spooked investors.
|
|
The travel ban spooked markets, deepening worries about the economic slowdown.
|
|
If you're feeling a little spooked, remember, it's all just coincidence.
|
|
"The desperate nature of this underwriting has me spooked," Cramer said.
|
|
Now, as if spooked, the musical exhumes those ideas too insistently.
|
|
The outbreak in northern Italy has spooked the entire French government.
|
|
Yet the markets didn't become spooked by the threat until Feb.
|
|
The news spooked investors who pushed major indexes into the red.
|
|
The result was an epic housing crash that thoroughly spooked lenders.
|
|
The news spooked investors who pushed major indexes into the red.
|
|
Go deeper: NATO allies spooked by Trump despite White House soothing
|
|
When I shot my fly toward them, they spooked, and took off.
|
|
Caterpillar spooked the market even though it beat on earnings and revenues.
|
|
Official scrutiny, and the recent drop in prices, have spooked many investors.
|
|
Cautionary tales from Sears and Barnes & Noble have big-box retailers spooked.
|
|
Sunday's earthquake sparked a mass exodus of spooked vacationers from the islands.
|
|
The prospect of her return has spooked markets and raised the stakes.
|
|
Irma and Maria spooked storm-hardened Caribbean folk, which is not easy.
|
|
"Some individual investors got spooked in 2008 and sold low," Sallinger said.
|
|
Ever since I was a child I’ve been easily spooked.
|
|
As a kid, Halloween is all about the candy and getting spooked.
|
|
He is not spooked by the far left or the far right.
|
|
Alphabet, however, reported declining advertising prices and rising costs, which spooked investors.
|
|
Alphabet appears to have spooked investors with its fourth-quarter earnings report.
|
|
Could the post-Tamir, the post-DOJ Cleveland force be so spooked
|
|
Bryan doesn't offer much but spends the whole episode seeming pretty spooked.
|
|
Maybe he's spooked by the paparazzi and is trying to look busy.
|
|
It has pummelled banks and spooked Mrs Watanabe, the archetypal Japanese saver.
|
|
Any reading below 50 signals contraction, and that drop had spooked traders.
|
|
The city's 911 system received more than 4,400 calls from spooked citizens.
|
|
I am spooked and feel as if my privacy is being violated.
|
|
He has spooked the pop star several times before throughout their relationship.
|
|
Erratic policies have spooked Wall Street and exhausted and frustrated our allies.
|
|
The threat appears to have spooked the magazine, which buried the story.
|
|
But the animals occasionally get spooked by New York City's loud sounds.
|
|
There was also the the norovirus outbreak, which surely spooked some attendees.
|
|
Yes, I may have once thought that Sabrina the Animated Series: Spooked!
|
|
It was frightening enough that old hands at acrobatic wrestling were spooked.
|
|
London copper fell, however, after China's tightening of policy spooked metals markets.
|
|
Investors are already spooked about risky credit in a time of coronavirus.
|
|
"I'm a little spooked by how quiet it is today," he said.
|
|
The move spooked depositors, who rushed to withdraw funds from the bank.
|
|
Feeling spooked, he decided that the railroad bridge was a better option.
|
|
Nothing spooked the markets in 228, with stocks experiencing record low volatility.
|
|
"If more action follows rhetoric, more traders will be spooked," he said.
|
|
Under the threat of terrorism, residents are a little spooked these days.
|
|
Clearly, international investors are spooked by sudden sharp slides in U.S. equities.
|
|
A sudden spike in 10-year Treasury rates above 3.25% spooked markets.
|
|
Investors looking at that may be somewhat spooked investing in a bank.
|
|
"I think everyone is spooked by European stocks, especially the DAX, getting slammed today ... If the German 10-year bund yield gets below 0, they're just spooked by that," Jeremy Klein, chief market strategist at FBN Securities, said.
|
|
The retail slowdown has spooked suppliers such as Michael Kors Holdings Ltd KORS.
|
|
"I spooked em today," Marlow wrote to the fake Bannon on August 20.
|
|
That demand would only increase if China spooked investors by dumping US Treasuries.
|
|
Ellen DeGeneres decided to clown around — and Sean "Diddy" Combs was seriously spooked.
|
|
But it's not just more frequent flights that has the aviation industry spooked.
|
|
Halloween may be a week away, but Lea Michele is already getting spooked!
|
|
This phenomenon makes for a fantastic omelette, but we're just a little spooked.
|
|
"I was spooked at how natural and human the machine sounds," he says.
|
|
When asked if the realization ever bothered or spooked them, Mazzei said no.
|
|
They can get spooked in battle and even die if you're not careful.
|
|
Perhaps, some surmised, the hardliners' brief arrest of his brother had spooked him.
|
|
A little bit spooked by how much data Mountain View has on you?
|
|
The euro declined against the dollar, spooked by a slide in European equities.
|
|
But investors were spooked by a sudden drop in technology and transportation shares.
|
|
In the statement, police said the animal became "spooked," causing it to buck.
|
|
But the number and size of the longs clearly spooked short-position holders.
|
|
But the campaigns, spooked by legal and technical concerns, keep turning them down.
|
|
Its fall from grace has spooked financial markets and sparked fears of contagion.
|
|
It suggested paying agent Citibank was creating a backlog that had spooked markets.
|
|
But the other man, boy-howdy, well this other man got downright spooked.
|
|
And Sweden spooked markets recently when it went even deeper into negative territory.
|
|
Most equity markets in the region were spooked by the yuan's continued slide.
|
|
Spooked, the Army yanked the bot from Iraq after just a few months.
|
|
"I think he's spooked them for, unfortunately, a few more years," he added.
|
|
It has spooked investors and prompted warnings from top companies like Apple (AAPL).
|
|
Something spooked homebuyers last week, and it wasn't interest rates, because they fell.
|
|
This sent its shares to a record low last week and spooked clients.
|
|
President Trump's pivot on China has some of his most loyal supporters spooked.
|
|
Then the earthquake struck, and although he survived, the experience left him spooked.
|
|
The horse, called Gunny, was apparently spooked by a loud noise, police said.
|
|
Although I'm an avid meat eater, the shark bones spooked me a bit.
|
|
The deadly virus has spooked global markets, especially at the end of February.
|
|
The uncertainty has spooked business leaders from both sides of the English Channel.
|
|
Increased borrowing costs as well as the U.S.-China trade spat spooked investors.
|
|
Even Google, with its thousands of Ph.D.s, gets spooked by vertical-search problems.
|
|
If spooked, they can burst straight into the wall, shattering their own spines.
|
|
Spooked, he fled the country, writing much of his later work in Italy.
|
|
In late June of 2013, a cash crunch in China spooked global markets.
|
|
It's a really bad day at the office when the spooks are spooked.
|
|
Nobody really looked good, and that's another big part of what spooked me.
|
|
But Cramer said the CFO's commentary spooked analysts more than it should have.
|
|
Investors got spooked by market conditions, Brexit and the risks of shaft-sinking.
|
|
That in turn spooked equities, and the correction was off to the races.
|
|
Musk's casual mentions of a potential explosion spooked Arabsat executives, according to Bloomberg.
|
|
Perhaps spooked by calls to prosecute him, Mr. Jammeh evidently changed his mind.
|
|
South Korean regulatory plans to tackle cryptocurrency speculation spooked investors earlier this month.
|
|
Tariffs against China have already spooked Wall Street and lowered global growth projections.
|
|
The spooked Silicon Valley industry leaders and the humiliated gathering of news anchors?
|
|
Clearly the bond vigilantes that spooked politicians in the 1990s have lost their menace.
|
|
Allegations of fraud involving 1MDB have already spooked investors by weighing on Malaysia's currency.
|
|
"Izzy was so spooked by everything," Jack Weaver, 37, the couple's son, tells PEOPLE.
|
|
Rising rates have spooked equity markets in October, a trend Ablin expects to continue.
|
|
Listen, you're kinda spooked about the rise of artificial intelligence, and I get that.
|
|
Amazon successfully spooked the City Council out of enacting that tax earlier this year.
|
|
"Markets get spooked when they see an investment by Amazon," a Brazilian trader said.
|
|
Worries that the Fed would raise rates swiftly had spooked markets late last year.
|
|
CNN: Senate Democrats seemed spooked by such numbers and couldn't unify behind a message.
|
|
The bad news spooked investors and the Dow fell nearly 350 points, or 1.3%.
|
|
Spooked Los Angeles residents, including celebrities, all asked: What was that in the skies?
|
|
But those two things are no longer unthinkable, and that's got the markets spooked.
|
|
CVS spooked the Street earlier this year when it guided well below analysts' expectations.
|
|
For her part, Camilla said that one of her granddaughters was spooked at times.
|
|
Especially when passing wide tractor-trailers, the M850i gets spooked and violently jerks away.
|
|
It has spooked investors and prompted warnings from top companies such as Apple (AAPL).
|
|
Investors were spooked by more than just the company's lackluster performance this quarter, though.
|
|
Read MoreBulls getting spooked by market's wild ride Treasury yields held near earlier lows.
|
|
Jimmy Kimmel's Halloween challenge has spooked kids for a sixth year in a row.
|
|
Speculation about the discussions further spooked investors already jittery about its weak capital position.
|
|
Although there is no proof of any link, the twin disasters have spooked passengers.
|
|
Investors were also spooked after the company lowered its first-quarter guidance last month.
|
|
The euro also gave up its gains, spooked by a slide in European equities.
|
|
But what is happening in the leveraged loan world right now has him spooked.
|
|
They have also been spooked by some strange goings on in LME warehouse stocks.
|
|
Seadrill's heavy debt and repeated delays to its refinancing plan have also spooked investors.
|
|
" He adds: "People often get spooked and discouraged when the market is under pressure.
|
|
He also has spooked US allies by calling for Russia's readmission to the G7.
|
|
"The deputies shot at him and spooked him, and he ran off," he said.
|
|
Slow growth and price competition have spooked investors away from telecom stocks, he said.
|
|
Given the recent price plunge, the mainstream has been spooked about speculating on cryptocurrencies.
|
|
The little guy was "pretty spooked" by the people gathered outside the bathroom door.
|
|
I'm not sure that warning would bother me now, but it spooked me then.
|
|
"I'm telling you, I think she's been watching," Renata tells a visibly spooked Madeline.
|
|
Foreigners from Western countries, especially Canada, have been a bit spooked by the arrests.
|
|
Investors were spooked Wednesday because of some bad news out of Germany and China.
|
|
People are being spooked by the novelty rather than the severity of the infection.
|
|
Bernie Sanders had a strong showing in Iowa Monday, the markets could get spooked.
|
|
That such tech could usher in an age of constant surveillance has many spooked.
|
|
But, she added, the Kremlin is nonetheless spooked by even modest gestures of defiance.
|
|
"We were all spooked," said Mélanie Boidard, 34, a resident of Les Contamines-Montjoie.
|
|
Saez watched the replay of the race and saw why Maximum Security got spooked.
|
|
Snap Judgement Presents Spooked Glynn Washington is one of the best storytellers in podcasting.
|
|
Concerns about rising rates and the trade war have spooked the markets this month.
|
|
Alarming profit warnings from industrial bellwethers like 3M (MMM) and Caterpillar (CAT) spooked investors.
|
|
DID WE GO CRAZY OVER A WAGE NUMBER THAT GOT EVERYBODY SPOOKED ON INFLATION?
|
|
Value investments are by definition good investment vehicles when global financial markets are spooked.
|
|
Liquidity concerns at non-banking finance companies caused a credit crunch that spooked investors.
|
|
Some said they had been spooked by travel guidance issued by their home countries.
|
|
Burn some sage and learn about why we're so spooked out by this date.
|
|
All of a sudden, something spooked the dog into booking it for dry land.
|
|
Adding to the rates rethink has been a recession-spooked recoil in world oil prices.
|
|
Some Names, in addition, have been spooked by the frequency of natural catastrophes of late.
|
|
Horses are spooked as the Woolsey Fire moves through a ranch Friday in Agoura Hills.
|
|
He's really spooked by the whole thing, because he knows that they are targets now.
|
|
The vote came amid a wave of environmentally focused anti-mining referendums that spooked investors.
|
|
She is visibly uncomfortable being in the prison hospital and easily spooked by the inmates.
|
|
If you've ever wanted to watch your favorite celebrity get seriously spooked, you're in luck.
|
|
However, consumers spooked by how matters have escalated are offloading their devices amid Android worries.
|
|
Germany's DAX lost 0.3 percent, however, still spooked by the recent rises in bond yields.
|
|
This fact may have even spooked potential buyers and led to the end of Vine.
|
|
High-profile solar failures — such as the bankruptcies of Solyndra and SunEdison — have spooked investors.
|
|
The first of these spooked business, the second upset many of the CDU's conservative supporters.
|
|
A very dramatic shootout ensues, and the Marinos sneak out with Wendy, unharmed but spooked.
|
|
Siddhartha's disappearance had spooked investors, which dragged Coffee Day Enterprises shares 20% lower on Tuesday.
|
|
LIESMAN: FOR YOUR COLLEAGUES, THE THREE QUARTERS OF AROUND 1%-ISH GROWTH HAS SPOOKED THEM.
|
|
While that move appeared to be only a reinforcement of existing regulations, it spooked traders.
|
|
While that moved appeared to be only a reinforcement of existing regulations, it spooked traders.
|
|
This, and the looming shift to mobile, spooked investors and caused Facebook's IPO to tank.
|
|
Fears of a trade war have spooked Wall Street and caused the dollar to drop.
|
|
Amazon has Casper and other mattress sellers spooked with its recent entry into the industry.
|
|
The move spooked global markets worried about a new front in the U.S. trade war.
|
|
"He's really spooked by the whole thing, because he knows that they are targets now."
|
|
But the GDPR's hefty new sanctions have spooked companies into redoubling their data-protection efforts.
|
|
Tai nods evenly and Tricia and Cori link pinkie fingers, but Maddy looks seriously spooked.
|
|
The potential for an exit from the EU spooked markets, sending sterling into a spiral.
|
|
Proposals floated by his MORENA party in Congress to curb bank fees also spooked markets.
|
|
Fears of too much capacity and an airline price war spooked investors earlier this year.
|
|
A PG-rated cartoon might have spooked away the adults the film would appeal to.
|
|
That spooked traders concerned that Italy's ruling parties will push for a bigger deficit target.
|
|
The tensions between the world's two largest economies has already spooked investors, and rightfully so.
|
|
High-profile solar failures - such as the bankruptcies of Solyndra and SunEdison - have spooked investors.
|
|
Investors were similarly spooked by oil's last major selloff, in late 2015 and early 2016.
|
|
Powell's comments about continuing to shrink the Fed's $4 trillion balance sheet particularly spooked investors.
|
|
It became clear, though, that lenders were spooked by the increasing number of retail bankruptcies.
|
|
It was harmless but I was spooked and jumped away, which we both found hilarious.
|
|
But the political crisis has spooked investors in one of Latin America's most stable economies.
|
|
"The U.S.-India development has spooked markets," said Deven Choksey, founder, KR Choksey Investment Managers.
|
|
I was spooked after reading an article saying Zamzam water had high levels of arsenic.
|
|
Moore's strong polling numbers early on should have spooked him into backing a strong candidate.
|
|
As someone who falls asleep to horror movies, I know I don't get easily spooked.
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO — At Facebook on Thursday, the questions from spooked employees came thick and fast.
|
|
"As I was coming down canyon, I spooked a pack of wild horses," he recalled.
|
|
It's possible that Trump, spooked by market turmoil, backs down on his latest tariff threat.
|
|
Carnell warned that if consumers get spooked, the impact on the economy could be significant.
|
|
Investors had been "spooked" by news of regulatory crackdowns from both South Korea and China.
|
|
That deal also spooked supermarket investors, who sent industry share prices reeling around the world.
|
|
Political uncertainty had spooked markets late last year, leading Italian debt to sell off sharply.
|
|
Slack reported a big loss and slowing sales growth in September, news that spooked investors.
|
|
At first, Newman said she thought India had just been spooked by one of those.
|
|
"History suggests consumers should be feeling a little spooked," ANZ Senior Economist Sharon Zollner said.
|
|
Central banks aren't spooked into action by daily, weekly or even monthly exchange rate fluctuations.
|
|
Such thoughts made me resist the two plays, when I wasn't reflexively spooked by them.
|
|
It's not only AI experts, but also Congress that now seems spooked by deepfake technology.
|
|
The Upton amendment follows from the earlier MacArthur amendment, which wooed conservatives but spooked moderates.
|
|
If it gets spooked and comes to the surface too fast, it will get the bends.
|
|
The double whammy of weaker economic outlook and the Fed's policy uncertainty has spooked the markets.
|
|
Even Get Out director Jordan Peele is spooked and impressed by its play-by-play remake.
|
|
It might have been spooked by seeing its reflection in a puddle on the muddy track!
|
|
But the trade fight has earned opposition from economists and at times spooked the stock market.
|
|
He has also claimed that Democrats winning a House majority in November's midterms has spooked investors.
|
|
The change of direction spooked some investors, with Colfax shares tumbling 15 percent on the news.
|
|
In recent field tests, the Census Bureau found that this question spooked some people, especially Latinos.
|
|
Unlike rates, the stock market saw wide swings, mostly lower, and that may have spooked homebuyers.
|
|
Wall Street spooked at the news, and the stock fell 28 percent, to its lowest ever.
|
|
But already, its menacing star, the "clown" Pennywise, has successfully spooked one group: the movie's cast.
|
|
He's reportedly spooked by possible protests of his visit — enough so that he delayed a visit.
|
|
While Mr Ramaphosa insists that land would be taken without harming the economy, investors are spooked.
|
|
Learn from the movies," says Glynn Washington, host of the popular radio show and podcast "Spooked.
|
|
The review has spooked investors, who are unsure how BOJ policy will change in the future.
|
|
As Interserve has debts of over £500m, it is easy to see why investors are spooked.
|
|
Felix, remembering that time this very host woke up during a similar procedure, is still spooked.
|
|
Coming a day after news that China's manufacturing sector contracted in December, that spooked investors globally.
|
|
Although markets were spooked by a rise in hourly earnings, perhaps they should not have been.
|
|
"The dog was spooked, panicked," Captain Ron Rock of the Island Queen ferry told the Gazette.
|
|
Luckily, I don't think too hard on it or I'd probably get spooked away from it.
|
|
Suitably spooked, The Economist dug a little deeper to find out what factors determine such beliefs.
|
|
The move has spooked global markets worried about a new front in the U.S. trade war.
|
|
I'll be dating a guy, and he will just be spooked by his perception [of fame].
|
|
Beijing's devaluation of the yuan in August spooked global markets, sending stocks lower and volatility higher.
|
|
A spooked Kristina climbs back on board and Nick comforts her, which needles Corinne even more.
|
|
But the prospect of three rate hikes next year, versus the two anticipated earlier spooked investors.
|
|
With the domestic market now also under pressure from price controls, some analysts have been spooked.
|
|
The recent investigation announcement spooked investors, causing the Nasdaq-listed shares to plunge nearly 10 percent.
|
|
The men were stooped over looking at a large object but were spooked by the eyewitness.
|
|
That has spooked the global airline industry and heaped pressure on Boeing, whose shares have plunged.
|
|
But some on Wall Street are spooked, with shares of Albemarle down 25 percent this year.
|
|
Concerns about an inverted yield curve — an important recession indicator — spooked U.S. financial markets on Friday.
|
|
Many of their friends and allies had fled, spooked in part by too much bad press.
|
|
Spooked by the Maidan revolution in Kiev in 2014, Azerbaijan copied some of Russia's repressive practices.
|
|
Concern about Brexit arrangements had been growing even before May's comments on Monday spooked executives further.
|
|
The political chaos, perhaps surprisingly, does not seem to have spooked financial markets as some expected.
|
|
His economic protectionism has spooked global markets and damaged relationships with key allies and trading partners.
|
|
However, impatience at its progress and worries about the reliability of its dividend have spooked investors.
|
|
King and her husband suspect that Katie bolted from the hotel after getting spooked by thunder.
|
|
Investors may have already been spooked by the theoretical danger of a recession to WeWork's business.
|
|
I startle so easily, I tell people I was a spooked horse in a past life.
|
|
She was initially spooked by a threatening letter from the department, but they haven't taken action.
|
|
A sheep, bleating and spooked, was packed into the back of an S.U.V. on plastic sheeting.
|
|
If he was not spooked then, perhaps he will stand a decent chance in the Bronx.
|
|
Markets have been spooked by the outbreak, with investors trying to assess the potential economic fallout.
|
|
The spread of the dangerous virus has spooked global markets and threatened prospects for economic growth.
|
|
Bond yields around the world rose Thursday as well, but climbing bond rates spooked stock investors.
|
|
What looked like a "ghost baby" appearing next to her son in bed had her spooked.
|
|
But the publicity surrounding the charges I faced may have spooked the agency's multinational staff members.
|
|
His loyalists were complaining that the White House was being too easily spooked and had overreacted.
|
|
"'No Country for Old Men' is purgatory for the squeamish and the easily spooked," he wrote.
|
|
Luckily, the Ecclestone's weren't home during the robbery, though Tamara is reasonably spooked by the event.
|
|
I've never kept a diary or a journal, because I get spooked by addressing no one.
|
|
" But if the President embarrassed him, Sanders and Warren spooked him: "They are way out there.
|
|
The French, who will vote in April on a new president, are understandably spooked by terrorism.
|
|
During its last earnings call, Snap said the app's redesign had spooked some of its advertisers.
|
|
China suspended a deleveraging campaign that spooked investors in 2018, and started easing monetary policy moderately.
|
|
The man said he was there for a consensual encounter but fled after he became spooked.
|
|
Fitch, a credit-rating agency, has put Qatar on a negative watch and foreign investors remain spooked.
|
|
The sharp rise in rates spooked investors across the globe, with world equities falling sharply last week.
|
|
He was unable to regain control of the spooked horse and lost his grip on the reins.
|
|
The bond market spooked investors this week — and some traders are expecting the bond breakout to continue.
|
|
Investors appear to be seriously spooked, Bloomberg added, with shares of the company crashing by 32 percent.
|
|
Investors were spooked by an Apple Inc warning about weak iPhone demand and stock markets fell globally.
|
|
What I'm more spooked about is the erosion of trust, and the polarization of trust in media.
|
|
Markets were also spooked earlier by a La Stampa report that Economy Minister Tria planned to resign.
|
|
The city's inhabitants have already been spooked by an increasing number of confused old people wandering around.
|
|
Despite that, her mother's heart continued to take off like a spooked horse several times a day.
|
|
Bombardiers decision to trim 21.8 revenue estimates by $2250 billion to $22 billion spooked bondholders on Thursday.
|
|
Their protests were interrupted briefly when Spartacus, a stately Percheron draft horse, got spooked, sending bystanders scrambling.
|
|
Coming on the heels of information that Alexa has been "creepy laughing," the device has people spooked.
|
|
Cramer attributed Kimberly Clark's cut to its organic growth forecast as the earnings point that spooked investors.
|
|
Its plan to keep a 24% stake in Air India, and presumably board seats, spooked people further.
|
|
Spooked by rapidly depleting groundwater, the central government plans a vast nationwide campaign to revamp local reservoirs.
|
|
The town is spooked by the Hood, and her mother — the mayor — has been getting death threats.
|
|
It became a grimly funny pay-off for an experience which, at times, seriously spooked me out.
|
|
Flyers spooked by such stories should concentrate, perhaps, on the fact that the accident did not happen.
|
|
The larger-than-anticipated loss, coupled with more executive departures, spooked investors and Wall Street analysts alike.
|
|
It's all pretty chilling — so no wonder Cranston seemed spooked upon hearing of Manson's well-deserved demise.
|
|
The spectre of a repeat election, and of the tensions it might cause, has already spooked markets.
|
|
The reports should help calm fears of a recession that have spooked investors on the stock market.
|
|
The dip showed that traders were cautious but not overly spooked by news out of North Korea.
|
|
But as they sit inside the imposing government building, Valeria can see that her friends are spooked.
|
|
After filmmakers decided to flip that around, the dog seemed to become uncomfortable and spooked, he says.
|
|
During those prohibitionist years, the fear of losing custody of my children over a plant spooked me.
|
|
"What also spooked everybody was that they said it was going to cost $700 million," Lennon said.
|
|
They're also being used to ease those once spooked off by a bad marijuana experience back in.
|
|
Europe's fragile banks might be spooked by tumbling stock prices into choking credit to firms and householders.
|
|
That spooked equity markets, with the S&P 500 Index down nearly 3% in early afternoon trading.
|
|
The Conservatives, for their part, are spooked by Mr Corbyn's recent electoral gains, particularly among young voters.
|
|
U.S. government debt yields fell on Tuesday as Italian and Spanish political turmoil spooked euro zone markets.
|
|
For one, Republicans are spooked by the ambitious timeline that has been laid out by their leadership.
|
|
That spooked a lot of insurers and raised concerns that this year's open enrollment might be chaotic.
|
|
The FDA's plan to reduce nicotine in cigarettes spooked investors, even though action could be years away.
|
|
President Donald Trump spooked investors on Tuesday when he called himself a "Tariff Man" in a tweet.
|
|
But spooked by the sputtering economy, the government has begun discussing another postponement, sources have told Reuters.
|
|
Amazon, meanwhile, spooked investors in October by forecasting weaker sales for the holiday quarter than investors expected.
|
|
But frequent contract changes have spooked big oil firms in recent years, contributing to an output decline.
|
|
This spooked investors in these institutions, causing them to run for the proverbial doors, precipitating the crisis.
|
|
The Fed's move spooked investors rather than calm them, and stocks fell nearly 3 percent on Tuesday.
|
|
So to hear a company say, "We might never get there," I get why people are spooked.
|
|
What's not normal is how spooked the incoming administration seems to have made career diplomats and Democrats.
|
|
The incident so spooked the squadron that an aviation flight safety report was filed, Lieutenant Graves said.
|
|
New York (CNN Business)Beyond Meat is selling stock below its market price, and investors are spooked.
|
|
Part of me thinks about that and is spooked because it's sounds like a science-fiction narrative.
|
|
Mass demonstrations against voter fraud in the December parliamentary elections thronged Russian cities and spooked the Kremlin.
|
|
Generally speaking, when investors get spooked, they take money out of stocks and put it in bonds.
|
|
The president spooked investors in July when he criticized the U.S. central bank over tightening monetary policy.
|
|
But the Pelicans, after inflicting one rout upon the defending champions Friday night, had Golden State spooked.
|
|
The House bill did not include money for them, and Mr. Trump's mixed signals have spooked insurers.
|
|
His decision to impose the tariffs in 2018 spooked markets and sent Turkey's currency, the lira, tumbling.
|
|
That big number spooked several GOP senators, and led to a widespread public backlash against the bills.
|
|
Its bondholders have braced for "painful" talks as a pile-up of receivables and debt spooked investors.
|
|
These billion-dollar deals, and a growing presence of Chinese construction workers and entrepreneurs, have spooked Malaysians.
|
|
Chris's first instinct was to try to grab her, and the sudden move must have spooked her.
|
|
It's an inauspicious beginning to an election where the role of technology already has some voters spooked.
|
|
The Nasdaq Composite fell 1.13% to 7,908.68 The sharp decline came after disappointing manufacturing data spooked investors.
|
|
The uncertainty around the future of the $1.2 trillion trade deal has rattled markets and spooked investors.
|
|
It wasn't the risk of high waters that spooked buyers; it was the certainty of high premiums.
|
|
That spooked investors about a wider economic impact prolonging well into the second quarter of the year.
|
|
The arrests spooked the fighters, as more detentions followed, as well as frequent searches of fans' homes.
|
|
Financial markets have been spooked by the outbreak, with investors trying to assess the potential economic fallout.
|
|
Americans will be rightly spooked if the parade includes massive missiles and artillery rolling along Constitution Avenue.
|
|
Trump -- perhaps spooked at the possibility of Stone flipping -- conspicuously declined to rule out a presidential pardon.
|
|
An economic and debt crisis in Turkey has spooked emerging and developed markets in the past week.
|
|
Here's the history of March 15 and why you might feel a little spooked on this day.
|
|
Homebuyers seemed undeterred by last week's turnaround in interest rates, or perhaps they were spooked into action.
|
|
The vote spooked financial markets because the British economy has become deeply intertwined with the European continent.
|
|
"That spooked me and I ended up getting a C+ in the course," Gates wrote on Reddit.
|
|
Now Turkey is faced with a lot of debt that's spooked investors and fueled this economic tailspin.
|
|
The public outcry from Senate Republicans on both sides of the ideological spectrum has also spooked some. Sens.
|
|
And I don't think we're there, but that's why I also don't feel particularly spooked at this point.
|
|
Here's a refresher of where we stand: Now that we're all sufficiently spooked again, let's talk about costumes.
|
|
The move risks widening a trade war that has spooked investors and raised fears about global economic damage.
|
|
Voters are worried about the country's ability to assimilate refugees and spooked by a rise in gun violence.
|
|
Amazon helped spoil Blue Apron's stock market debut this summer after its blockbuster Whole Foods deal spooked investors.
|
|
Just as Brexiteers' anti-immigration arguments spooked London's techies, so Mr Trump's rhetoric on immigration worries Silicon Valley.
|
|
That has spooked government officials who in 2015 signed the Paris Agreement to curb climate change, experts say.
|
|
But it has spooked investors this year with its need to constantly ramp up spending to meet demand.
|
|
Spooked by poor Christmas sales and rising unemployment, it moved boldly, cutting rates by half a percentage point.
|
|
Gedikli dismissed concerns that foreign investors - spooked by security concerns and Erdogan's growing authoritarianism - could sell Turkish assets.
|
|
Now Turkey is faced with a lot of debt, which has spooked investors and fueled an economic tailspin.
|
|
North Korea's launch on Tuesday of a ballistic missile over Japan's northern island of Hokkaido initially spooked investors.
|
|
And Trump's tax proposal has already spooked conservative Republicans who don't know how it would be paid for.
|
|
It was a veiled threat to school administrators, and some teachers believe it spooked administrators at their schools.
|
|
Still, the unrest has spooked the regime, in part because demonstrators called for a complete change of government.
|
|
Valeant's stock came under siege last year when questions about the company's business and accounting practices spooked investors.
|
|
Perhaps Lucy was spooked by a predator, or perhaps she was asleep or settling in for the night.
|
|
This is the second major hack revelation in recent months and there's speculation that Verizon could be spooked.
|
|
And last year's episode showed that big spending plans can be self-defeating if financial markets are spooked.
|
|
However, the business mogul went viral for being spooked and backing away when the bird extended its wings.
|
|
"Fed hike expectations receded after China's weak trade data spooked equities worldwide," said analysts at Singapore's DBS Bank.
|
|
With many labour markets tight, central bankers are more likely to be spooked by oil-driven inflationary pressure.
|
|
The government had spooked markets by using 30-day grace periods to delay interest payments, lowering bond prices.
|
|
For those spooked by the thought of being tracked and analyzed while shopping, Raub said not to worry.
|
|
Environmentalists feared the "locally treasured" crested lark officially known as the Galerida cristata would be spooked by beachgoers.
|
|
The move spooked the Chinese stock market and could have had an echo effect on the cryptocurrency markets.
|
|
A woman in Georgia got spooked by a spider and wound up losing her van in the process.
|
|
The bubble broke in 2015 when the tourist VCs driving unicorns in so-called private IPOs got spooked.
|
|
The spread has narrowed from a peak of 20.5 basis points in May when the wildfires spooked investors.
|
|
It spooked markets, because a yield curve inversion traditionally means investors have become concerned about a future downturn.
|
|
But that line may now be less convincing to Taiwanese spooked by the civil unrest in Hong Kong.
|
|
That has spooked PDVSA's joint venture partners and customers, who are seeking clarity on the measure, sources said.
|
|
The horse, Gunny, was spooked by a sudden sound from a nearby truck, and tossed off the officer.
|
|
President Macri also "scored another own goal" recently when a statement aimed at reassuring markets actually spooked them.
|
|
If you're not easily spooked, these alternative career paths might be the stuff of dreams, rather than nightmares.
|
|
Potential homebuyers out shopping in April may have been spooked by a sharp rise in mortgage interest rates.
|
|
For fun, Familia has spooked reporters by quietly walking behind them and barking once loudly like a dog.
|
|
Favel said the pair got spooked and fled into the forest when they realised they were being watched.
|
|
Sonders said the new money that's coming into the market could be spooked if there's a sell-off.
|
|
Last year's arbitrary arrests of Saudi businessmen, government officials and even his uncles and cousins spooked global investors.
|
|
Nike spooked investors — many of whom had bought into the athleisure boom — by reporting slowing sales on Tuesday.
|
|
Carson recalls an instance with a spooked fan near the end of their tour with Yob in Tucson.
|
|
His positions on energy and NAFTA are less clear cut, but past statements have spooked many business leaders.
|
|
They say administration immigration policies have spooked many foreign-born artificial intelligence researchers based in the United States.
|
|
But the president's trade war has since spooked businesses, and business confidence, investment, and even hiring have suffered.
|
|
It won over many conservatives but spooked moderates who were worried about rolling back a popular Obamacare protection.
|
|
Spooked shoppers packed some supermarkets early in the morning despite calls for calm from authorities and supermarket owners.
|
|
Cuellar, perhaps spooked by the rash of Democratic incumbents who fell last cycle, assembled a formidable campaign apparatus.
|
|
Hacking-spooked Democrats have worked to protect the process from interference, but some experts still see notable risks.
|
|
When investors get really spooked, they demand higher rates to loan money even for shorter periods of time.
|
|
My favorite was the venom pump I would use in case I spooked a snake or a scorpion.
|
|
The discovery further spooked traders after the outbreak in China killed 26 people and infected more than 800.
|
|
It has spooked the firms' Western research partners, whose help they rely on to develop cutting-edge technology.
|
|
In the short term, Google is clearly aware that Fitbit customers are going to be a little spooked.
|
|
Facebook's plunge comes after company executives spooked investors with warnings about decelerating revenue and ongoing privacy policy changes.
|
|
Spooked—especially by the irritation of American politicians, who regulate them—some tech firms have changed their rules.
|
|
Stocks fell last week after a combination of weak retail earnings and bank stock performance spooked some investors.
|
|
Iraqi troops have been spooked by the ISIS drones, which sometimes hover in swarms of three to five.
|
|
But the move could ultimately bring about the kind of retaliation from Beijing that has spooked stock markets.
|
|
If the news has you spooked, then turn it off and stop checking the markets for a while.
|
|
It wasn't all smooth sailing, however, as an escalation in U.S.-Iran tensions during the period spooked investors.
|
|
Spooked, she searched Google for "Can Todai women get married?" and discovered it was a well-trod stereotype.
|
|
Chinese investors are likely spooked having heard the news and the market is on edge as a result.
|
|
But many people get spooked when the stock market is down and the same discounts apply to equities.
|
|
Back in the present, after being spooked by another possible Gunther sighting, Noah supplied the episode's big reveal.
|
|
The U.S. stock market has been experiencing substantial volatility this week, but billionaire investor Mark Cuban isn't spooked.
|
|
Now, they're getting spooked by signs that the pace of wage and price gains is picking up again.
|
|
Mr. Trump has spooked some here with comments about trade and complaints about American military costs in Japan.
|
|
But spooked by Mr. Biden's debilitating loss in New Hampshire, none of them backed him before the caucuses.
|
|
Facebook's decision to ban all ads for cryptocurrency products — including bitcoin and ICOs — has also "spooked" some investors.
|
|
Right now we are just having fun and resisting the urge to be spooked by any of it.
|
|
An aggressive expansion plan had spooked investors earlier this year as adding seats and flights could drive down fares.
|
|
Brazil's economy has plunged since late 2014 as hefty government spending and cheap credit fueled inflation and spooked investors.
|
|
Recent market volatility may have some investors spooked — and perhaps confused, given the otherwise good economic news of late.
|
|
That spooked investors and sent the pound tumbling 2-1/2 cents to its lowest level since April 2017.
|
|
Zuma spooked investors in December by replacing then finance minister Nhlanhla Nene with relatively unknown lawmaker David van Rooyen.
|
|
While there's nothing yet to indicate whether there was anything explosive in those emails, the administration is clearly spooked.
|
|
The reaction to Spicer's appearance at the Emmys, which prompted celebrities to apologize for laughing, further spooked media executives.
|
|
The prospect of Lopez Obrador, a social activist and economic nationalist, as president has spooked some leading Mexican businesspeople.
|
|
Freeman said that the first conversations captured on the body cams suggest both officers were apparently "spooked" by something.
|
|
The risk of large-scale political unrest, which spooked investors during the country's tumultuous years, now appears much lower.
|
|
Softness in consumer spending briefly spooked stock markets this week, which were already seesawing thanks to trade-war uncertainty.
|
|
Maybe Taylor Swift has something to do with that: But don't be spooked if you're a science-minded person.
|
|
The stock market had a disastrous fourth quarter of 2018 as the Fed's decision to raise rates spooked investors.
|
|
They don't research investments or seek out financial advice, and feel too spooked about how to handle their money.
|
|
Bitcoin has had a disastrous week, falling below $8,20173 today as investors remain spooked about the future of cryptocurrencies.
|
|
He also points out that foreign investors could be spooked by the volatile and arbitrary nature of the detainments.
|
|
Meanwhile, investors have been spooked by two U.K. property funds which has been halted after a string of outflows.
|
|
This will possibly bring to an end a nearly year-long legal row that spooked investors in Islamic finance.
|
|
Witnesses say Astrid, apparently spooked by the oncoming locomotive's lights and sounds, broke loose and ran toward the track.
|
|
"Once you get spooked by something, you start being very sensitive to other bumps in the night," Colas said.
|
|
Investors were spooked by last month's inversion in U.S. yields, when 10-year ones fell below 3-month rates.
|
|
He said safety was his priority, never mind that raising the alert level has spooked residents and tourists alike.
|
|
U.S. financial markets have been on edge after being spooked by a surge in annual wage growth in January.
|
|
The move surprised some investors and particularly spooked Italian lenders because many hoped the ECB would be more flexible.
|
|
Today we are gathered to remember Aubrey "Drake" Graham, who was spooked out of his mind by David Blaine.
|
|
Possibly spooked by another pachyderm, the elephant tossed the vehicles around with his trunk, slamming them to the ground.
|
|
But now that Allen was in jail, there was a chance that Stein would be too spooked to show.
|
|
The disappearance of Saudi-insider-turned-critic-in-exile Jamal Khashoggi has spooked friends that Saudi Arabia desperately needs.
|
|
In late January, the Burmese Muslims became spooked by the rise of Trump and rushed to update their statuses.
|
|
"I've never been one to leave for a storm but this one kind of had me spooked," Epperson said.
|
|
Rising yields spooked the stock market last week, following employment data on Friday that caused concerns about inflationary pressures.
|
|
By the time we exited the house, the sky was completely dark — and we were spooked to our core.
|
|
When Rihanna sings "It's hard to know which one of us is caving," her voice is tender and spooked.
|
|
Last August, Mr. Iger spooked investors when he said ESPN was losing viewers as consumers ditched expensive cable bundles.
|
|
Something about China's technological prowess has spooked America's traditional free market apostles, both in the public and private sectors.
|
|
Parker said in the first quarter, the market was spooked by how possible trade wars could impact the economy.
|
|
That spooked investors and caused U.S. Treasury yields and the euro/dollar currency pair to breach key technical levels.
|
|
The policies would cost many billions of euros and have spooked investors in Italian debt, shares and the euro.
|
|
When Osbourne discovers bones in a neglected basement jail cell, he sounds a bit triumphant — and a bit spooked.
|
|
Spooked, he called his Falcons teammates, telling them they needed a rendezvous much closer to the planned attack site.
|
|
That spooked investors, and it's too soon to tell if the two sides will find some synergy in 2016.
|
|
But after the stabbing incident spooked a bunch of our parents, they started pulling their kids out the group.
|
|
Rabbit took a back passage — customers got spooked if they saw children — and found the door to his house.
|
|
"I'm really trying to not get spooked by being in the house of Balanchine and Jerry Robbins," she said.
|
|
The tension between employees and the company spooked investors too, with Wayfair's stock taking a hit as employees protested.
|
|
That spooked Wall Street, because an inversion of the 2/10 curve has preceded every recession in modern history.
|
|
Spooked investors this week put so much money into 10-year Treasury bonds that yields fell to historic lows.
|
|
In February, they had been spooked by a lockdown ordered after someone reported a pop-pop-pop sound outside.
|
|
A rumor of gunshots sets off a panic among waiting passengers, who run through the station like spooked cattle.
|
|
Cashin, UBS director of floor operations at the New York Stock Exchange, said Friday's wage number "certainly spooked" traders.
|
|
Friends say that after Navalny published his video investigation on YouTube, Rybka's "incredible seduction guru" Lesley suddenly got spooked.
|
|
A jump in coronavirus cases outside of China spooked investors out of stocks in favor of bonds and gold.
|
|
She had apparently managed to unlatch the door, possibly spooked by a thunderstorm that had swept through the area.
|
|
He's been warning corporate clients and fund managers that it could cause another downdraft in an easily spooked market.
|
|
For one, analysts continue to watch creeping Treasury yields, which were lower Monday but spooked the market last week.
|
|
"I think Rand Paul is right to be spooked," he told CNBC hours before the spending bill was signed.
|
|
That is a huge positive because investors were spooked when the yield curve flipped upside down earlier this year.
|
|
Uncertainty around when that will happen and what Macy's will do with its remaining locations has spooked investors before.
|
|
"He's spooked by the release, the unilateral release by other people of what transcripts are out there," Grassley said.
|
|
Paint company PPG Industries (PPG) spooked investors on Tuesday by saying it's paying more for chemicals, oil and shipping.
|
|
Traders were clearly spooked after the death of Iranian Major-General Qassem Soleimani, head of the elite Quds Force.
|
|
We're all old enough and hardy enough not to get spooked by women eating fruit and looking for sex?
|
|
A bicycle was less expensive to buy and maintain than a horse, and it wouldn't buck you if spooked.
|
|
Waldo got spooked by a pedestrian, broke free and ran into the street where he was hit by a vehicle.
|
|
Julius Baer is opening three new UK offices as it looks to the bank for wealthy residents spooked by Brexit.
|
|
Investors have been spooked by the prospect of a slowing economy, even though many experts say conditions are still good.
|
|
Riyadh was spooked by the Obama administration's eagerness to the lift international nuclear sanctions against Iran, its main regional rival.
|
|
President Donald Trump's trade wars with Mexico and China have in recent days spooked markets, increasing attention on the Fed.
|
|
And cars, most likely, will flee like aristocrats amidst a revolution, spooked by an intentionally inconvenient 5 mph speed limit.
|
|
A report that Washington was delaying a decision about allowing some trade between U.S. companies and Huawei again spooked Asia .
|
|
Asia Pacific markets started off the trading week mostly on the back foot as China's disappointing trade data spooked investors.
|
|
Lupita Nyong'o spooked Stephen Colbert when she stopped by The Late Show Monday night wearing a pair of gold contacts.
|
|
Trump's comments may portend a future White House-Fed fight, which likely spooked the markets and contributed to the drop.
|
|
But European investors have not been spooked by this latest chapter in ongoing trade tensions between the two economic superpowers.
|
|
THE cars in Lusaka are moving even more slowly than usual: hidden speed cameras have spooked drivers in Zambia's capital.
|
|
Netflix (NFLX) spooked Wall Street in July when it said that it lost US streaming subscribers in the second quarter.
|
|
Argentine's turmoil has spooked global investors and markets, concerned about the rising possibility of debt restructuring under a new leadership.
|
|
The point is that this decision is a very big deal — one that has some experts on Iran really spooked.
|
|
Heavy selling of blue-chip shares dragged China's stock markets sharply lower on Monday as rising bond yields spooked investors.
|
|
Slowing iPhone sales growth has also spooked investors – revenue in that segment is expected to have dropped 12% this quarter.
|
|
It's the earliest recorded snowmelt ever seen in the Arctic Circle observatory—and researchers stationed there are, unsurprisingly, pretty spooked.
|
|
Perhaps spooked by the prospect of truncated summer evenings in the Biergärten, most Germans say they prefer year-round summertime.
|
|
If, on the other hand, you live to be spooked, it's the perfect time for skeletons, ghosts, and creepy crawlers.
|
|
And for anyone who relies on EpiPen and is spooked by the news, Dr. Ciaccio offers some words of reassurance.
|
|
The chance that the leftist PT could return to power has spooked markets, helping send Brazil's currency near historic lows.
|
|
Investors were spooked by the rapid weakening of the Chinese currency, which fell almost 2.5 percent in just three days.
|
|
U.S. government debt yields fell on Thursday as fears of a slowdown in global growth spooked investors across Wall Street.
|
|
Investors were quick to dump financial shares, spooked by Deutsche Bank's bigger than forecast quarterly loss of 3.15 billion euros.
|
|
Fears of the virus' spread have spooked farmers preparing for the year's peak meat demand during Lunar New Year celebrations.
|
|
But seconds later someone opened an apartment door directly above us, and it luckily spooked them enough to run away.
|
|
On Friday, markets were spooked when the yield curve inverted, a reliable recession signal though usually not an immediate one.
|
|
He said his family worried about his journey, spooked by President Donald Trump's talk of a crackdown on illegal immigrants.
|
|
More recently, the Trump administration's trade war with Mexico has further spooked an industry that has been suffering for years.
|
|
Despite a small beat on revenue, the firm's losses, cash burn, and production timelines spooked investors, sending its shares down.
|
|
The Lockheed Martin weapons system that has North Korea spooked just got another $200 million in Department of Defense funds.
|
|
Dollar-cost averaging means investors aren't missing out on those top 10 days if they get spooked during a downturn.
|
|
First they face the tough task of winning back voters disillusioned with Zuma's rule and investors spooked by ratings downgrades.
|
|
For no reason I could see, the mare suddenly got spooked and ran to the other side of the arena.
|
|
I was definitely a bit spooked by the flooring on the roof and that I could see the floor below ...
|
|
Brigid C. Harrison, a political-science professor at Montclair State University, said that Mr. Murphy's money spooked the other candidates.
|
|
Meanwhile daigou, who were initially spooked into dumping products at airports last March, say it's very much business as usual.
|
|
A report that Washington was delaying a decision about allowing some trade between U.S. companies and Huawei again spooked Asia.
|
|
Investors were spooked, but those fears have eased and shorting volatility is once again one of the most popular trades.
|
|
"The saber-rattling from Erdogan really spooked the market," said John Kilduff, founding partner at energy hedge fund Again Capital.
|
|
According to reports from the Washington Post and The New York Times, the prospect seems to have the president spooked.
|
|
If a deed fails to be recorded in a timely manner, lenders can get spooked by the potential for fraud.
|
|
Perhaps the hackers got spooked when the malware got too much attention, or perhaps their hosting providers shut them down.
|
|
The stock has fallen nearly 85% since mid-September when the IL&FS crisis spooked investors in the NBFC sector.
|
|
"Your largest investor might be stepping back, that's what spooked people," said John Briggs, a bond strategist at NatWest Markets.
|
|
The party establishment was spooked, having just lost two incumbents to retirement, Mr. Flake and Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee.
|
|
China has previously said it would retaliate against any new tariffs tit for tat, but the statement nonetheless spooked markets.
|
|
Some foreign tourists were spooked by the sound of waves crashing on the beach as they rushed up the hill.
|
|
The fourth quarter of 2018 was particularly abysmal amid jolts of volatility that spooked investors and sent markets into tailspin.
|
|
US support of Indian interests in Afghanistan has spooked Pakistan, which aims to help install a friendly regime in Kabul.
|
|
This was a perfectly groundless fear, but I'd been spooked anyway and like a fool I'd canceled the side trip.
|
|
Even as yields moved up, the stock market continued to gain, opposite recent sessions where higher interest rates spooked equities.
|
|
"We have people who are totally spooked about the prospect of a Warren presidency and a wealth tax," he said.
|
|
Many millennials remain spooked by the market and reluctant to invest outside of workplace retirement accounts like 401(k)s.
|
|
Bearish comments from co-founder of the Ethereum blockchain Vitalik Buterin over the weekend may have also spooked ether investors.
|
|
Markets plunged this week as fears about the contagion spooked investors after a surge of new cases over the weekend.
|
|
Key staff abandoning Vision Fund and potential investors are spooked The Vision Fund has also been losing some key staff.
|
|
Related: The virus's spread has spooked global markets, as investors dump stocks and move into traditional safe havens like gold.
|
|
Obama's selection of Joe Biden in 2008 did more than strategically mollify voters spooked by his race and relative inexperience.
|
|
Spooked by the epidemic, several oil companies based in Asia said last week they would skip IP Week this year.
|
|
Facebook was the far bigger weight on the market than rising rates, but analysts said Trump also spooked the market.
|
|
Authorities said the llamas were participating in animal therapy at an assisted living facility when they got spooked and escaped.
|
|
Stocks were spooked by a quick jump in interest rates, which pushed the 250-year Treasury yield to 22 percent.
|
|
The revived competition between bonds and stocks spooked investors, leading to declines in utility stocks and other high-dividend equities.
|
|
Even when at home, try to keep your pet's collar on, especially during storms if your pet is easily spooked.
|
|
The departure of Sikka, who was the first chief technology officer (CTO) at German software firm SAP, spooked Infosys' investors.
|
|
In a video of the raccoon rescue, one worker secured the spooked animal as another pulled up the sewer grate.
|
|
Many Muslims are also spooked by the win of a Hindu ascetic accused of plotting a bomb attack on Muslims.
|
|
Grassley said on Thursday Feinstein's action "spooked" other potential witnesses, including Trump's son-in-law and close adviser, Jared Kushner.
|
|
Bitcoin is picking up steam, zooming past the $4,000 milestone as spooked investors search for places to park their money.
|
|
" Spooked by the sudden fall but not willing to book a loss, many investors are embracing a mantra known as "HODL.
|
|
South Korean businesses were spooked after Trump on Thursday said the U.S. would impose hefty tariffs on imported steel and aluminum.
|
|
Teck Resources Ltd reported a better-than-expected quarterly profit, but weaker demand at the start of the year spooked investors.
|
|
Airlines also incur significant costs in re-routing and re-booking passengers, a factor that may have spooked investors on Tuesday.
|
|
His remarks spooked investors, sending the Dow and S&P 500 to their worst one-day percentage drop since May 31.
|
|
The political and social impact is unclear but, judging by past behavior, financial markets would be spooked and sterling would fall.
|
|
But on that initial occasion, Patterson said he was spooked after seeing a large number of vehicles in the family's driveway.
|
|
Although its 12 percent growth did, in fact, outperform the sector as a whole, the rate of its deceleration spooked investors.
|
|
The fall in the price of its peer Alstria during marketing of OfficeFirst's IPO in recent weeks may have spooked investors.
|
|
But there is enough disquiet in the financial sector about Mr Trump's rhetoric to suggest that markets may be easily spooked.
|
|
In the meantime, innocent people may be spooked into taking a plea deal instead of risking a longer sentence at trial.
|
|
All they need to do is tie a red balloon on a sewer grate and they've successfully spooked an entire city!
|
|
Fair warning: if (like me) you're the type of person who gets spooked easily, you may want to look away now.
|
|
Trace the 0003+ comments below the Cracked piece to their start and you'll find that readers were amused, or occasionally spooked.
|
|
Global financial markets have been spooked in the past few months as traders and policy makers worried the heated Sino-U.
|
|
Investors were spooked by the country's large fiscal and current-account deficits, and a rapidly growing pile of foreign-currency debt.
|
|
Spooked by the attacks in Aden, one southern secessionist activist said he had moved to Sanaa, which is under Houthi control.
|
|
Investors have been spooked by rising levels of household debt just has Sweden's long-soaring property market has started to dip.
|
|
Investors are likely to be spooked when trading resumes on Monday and remain jittery until the Constitutional Court ruling, analysts said.
|
|
The company moving up the lockup date release by more than a month may have spooked investors and caused the swing.
|
|
Julius Baer is opening three new UK offices as it looks to be the bank for wealthy residents spooked by Brexit.
|
|
"I remember seeing the glint of a silver car and the horse getting spooked and jumping," she told the Daily Mail.
|
|
The presence of a diver's bubbles or a whirring camera would have spooked the fish, whose process can take several hours.
|
|
Centrists were spooked by the amendment, which exposed them to the attack that they were undermining Obamacare's protections for sick people.
|
|
That spooked investors already worried that Mr Erdogan's pronouncements on monetary policy are hampering the central bank's freedom to raise rates.
|
|
This moves have already spooked the American farmers and others who may have to suffer the consequences of those Chinese tariffs.
|
|
Citizens of a small Missouri town are getting spooked after faceless and headless dolls have started popping up around the community.
|
|
The shares rose 2.4 percent as investors, spooked by concerns over global growth, flocked to gold and pushed up its price.
|
|
The Washington Examiner's David Drucker reported that Puzder's personal life "spooked" Republican senators, even if they didn't consider the attacks reasonable.
|
|
Liu is chairman and chief executive at JD.com, and the incident spooked investors as the company has no clear succession plan.
|
|
SZ) in 2016 spooked Germany, as did the surprise purchase earlier this year of a 9.7 percent stake in Daimler (DAIGn.
|
|
Some '90s kids got spooked by Are You Afraid of the Dark or the creepier scenes from The Nightmare Before Christmas.
|
|
The killings in Katrasoo have been followed by a crackdown by the army and police that locals say has spooked them.
|
|
S. trade war and Argentina's peso crash, spooked equity investors and sent them to the relative safety of gold or bonds.
|
|
The Dow dropped after investors were spooked to see a yield curve inversion that's a potential sign of a coming recession.
|
|
Spooked U.S. law firms are now advising digital coin clients to be much more cautious, according to several lawyers and executives.
|
|
Concerns around the coworking startup's governance, real estate holdings, succession plan, employee retention, and questionable patent purchases have spooked potential investors.
|
|
His company has done quiet firework shows for school groups, senior citizen homes and venues near easily spooked animals like horses.
|
|
"It sounded like they were coming from right outside the wall and it really spooked me," Larson said of the gunfire.
|
|
Interest-only loans are on the rise, which has some analysts spooked that the economy is already trending toward a recession.
|
|
The use of words typically reserved for times of crisis — even though there were no outward signs of one — spooked investors.
|
|
Spooked by rising prices, price-sensitive importers India and Argentina backed out of awarding tenders this week, and quickly reissued them.
|
|
Spooked investors flocking to the safety of the U.S. dollar are making things worse for Asian markets by exacerbating capital outflows.
|
|
Given the persistence of those macroeconomic themes, the volatility that spooked high-yield issuers in December could easily return in 2019.
|
|
However, Just Eat spooked investors by announcing an extra 50 million pounds of investments to stay ahead of food delivery rivals.
|
|
He was similarly shocked (and spooked) when he saw trainees practicing surgery on a severed head — where did they get it?
|
|
Of all the outbreaks around the world outside China, it will be Italy that most has governments and medical authorities spooked.
|
|
That said, the scene is pretty long and you should be able to watch most of it without getting too spooked.
|
|
More news from Facebook • It spooked some publishers again by saying it would let users rank the trustworthiness of news outlets.
|
|
I sometimes try to think about what 1 million impressions in a day really means, and I get totally spooked out.
|
|
"We need to make sure people aren't spooked by a buzzing thing in the sky descending on them," Mr. Yett said.
|
|
MarketWatch points out that investors weren't spooked by the taunts and threats between Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim last year either.
|
|
After all, spooked banker types aren't the people she has to persuade—they're the people whose money she wants to take.
|
|
Investors were spooked, and almost $680 billion flooded out of the country in 2015, according to the Institute of International Finance.
|
|
Trump spooked investors on August 1 by announcing plans to impose a 10% tariff on $300 billion of imports from China.
|
|
Scaramucci, a successful investor, said that Trump's claims had contributed to stock market losses because they had "spooked" the financial world.
|
|
Shares have slid 10.98% in the last week as the rising number of coronavirus cases outside of China has spooked investors.
|
|
Investors were spooked after the Centers for Disease Control confirmed the first U.S. coronavirus case of unknown origin in Northern California.
|
|
The rapid outbreak of the coronavirus spooked financial markets in the previous session, with stock markets around the world sharply lower.
|
|
Initial storylines include a Santeria tale from Florida, Brosnahan getting spooked in Michigan, and a creepy seaside Minnesota tale starring Butterfield.
|
|
"Certainly, the market is spooked by it," said Phil Blancato, chief executive officer of Ladenburg Thalmann Asset Management in New York.
|
|
But since then, two continuing trends have spooked government officials: a rise in violence and a decrease in the prison population.
|
|
An email accidentally sent out this week from Frontier Airlines spooked flyers across the country ahead of the Thanksgiving travel rush.
|
|
Even more so if traditional core bond holdings are vulnerable to a sell-off in fixed income markets spooked by inflation.
|
|
Watson put ads on the New York City subway that spooked people into thinking cancer diagnostics and treatment were changed forever.
|
|
The stock market had already been spooked by a climb in bond yields earlier in the year, sliding sharply in February. .
|
|
With Halloween just a few short weeks away, there's no better time to queue up the frightening flicks and get spooked.
|
|
Spooked by the epidemic, several oil companies based in Asia said last week that they would skip IP Week this year.
|
|
When you are literally standing on top of five millenniums of art history, even the most assured artist can be spooked.
|
|
Harsh rhetoric between Tehran and Washington spooked investors at first, but the S&P 2566 regained its footing during the day.
|
|
Trump's threat to withdraw from NAFTA if he cannot rework it to the benefit of the United States has spooked investors.
|
|
While the week certainly spooked many traders, several Wall Street strategists believe the recent volatility shouldn't affect the rest of 2018.
|
|
Yemen's Houthi rebels said Wednesday they intercepted a Saudi F-15 warplane, according to Reuters, which Kilduff said "spooked" the market.
|
|
The sudden stress in U.S. dollar funding markets in recent days has spooked people by stirring memories of the 21 crisis.
|
|
Its government spooked investors last month after one minister said it was preparing a bill to ban trading via cryptocurrency exchanges.
|
|
Spooked investors have fled the stock since the mistake was disclosed, shaving more than a billion pounds off its market value.
|
|
There's a lot of reading between the lines when it comes to China, and investors were likely spooked by the tone.
|
|
The sudden stress in U.S. dollar funding markets in recent days has spooked people by stirring memories of the 24 crisis.
|
|
Concerns over Italy's burgeoning deficit have spooked bond investors and ratings agencies while Spain has made progress in controlling public finances.
|
|
He assumed they didn't know what to say or that their parents were spooked by the thought of a sick kid.
|
|
Investors were so spooked that they refused to put their money into anything other than super-safe, short-term government bonds.
|
|
But investors could get spooked by Sunday's "no" vote, making it difficult for the bank to raise the funds it needs.
|
|
That injunction, according to the people, spooked Valor, a Chicago-based firm best known for its investments in SpaceX and Tesla.
|
|
Spooked investors had bought supersafe government bonds in recent days after being startled by the market sell-off, bringing yields lower.
|
|
While the software giant was spooked by Google's low-cost laptops three years ago, they've mostly only been selling well to schools.
|
|
If you're really looking to get spooked, there are hundreds of videos on YouTube dedicated to "real" ghost sightings and the paranormal.
|
|
Stocks investors are spooked about a lot of things, and the strong dollar biting into earnings growth is now one of them.
|
|
Expect him to reiterate his argument that the 2015 rules have spooked internet providers, causing them to invest less in their infrastructure.
|
|
Video Kamens, though, said Mallory reached out to his old CIA contacts months before he was supposedly spooked by the airport inspection.
|
|
The move spooked Wall Street and shaved about $12.8 billion in market value from drugstores CVS, Walgreens Boots Alliance and Rite Aid.
|
|
The specter of a possible war with the federal government has already spooked Wall Street — driving down shares of these tech superstars.
|
|
Banking shares have been spooked after talks between a group of lenders and telecoms firm Etisalat Nigeria over a debt renegotation collapsed.
|
|
I had Sergachev a bit higher earlier in the week, but the Lightning making him a healthy scratch spooked me a bit.
|
|
The shares rose over 2 percent as investors, spooked by concerns over global growth, flocked to gold and pushed up its price.
|
|
The U.S. and China have been embroiled in a trade dispute since last year that spooked world markets and hurt global growth.
|
|
All of this, mixed with sluggish international growth have spooked investors sending Netflix shares down roughly 25% in the past three months.
|
|
Many Fed officials remain spooked by the steep stock market drop earlier this year and by weak first-quarter U.S. economic data.
|
|
The news spooked investors in the energy giant, whose preferred shares hit their lowest in more than a month before recovering marginally.
|
|
Many investors and traders remain spooked by political dramas, a coup plot last year and by an authoritarian president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
|
|
The government is spooked by an accumulation of research showing just how vulnerable the country is to damage caused by climate change.
|
|
Fears of a slowdown in China and the global economy spooked investors this week, creating a turbulent start to the trading year.
|
|
The shares rose nearly 3 percent as investors, spooked by concerns over global growth, flocked to gold and pushed up its price.
|
|
In June the British vote to leave the EU heaped on additional volatility and spooked some companies hoping to tap equity markets.
|
|
But the team was still spooked enough by the government's intervention to walk away from the partnership before it ever went forward.
|
|
My horse cavalry were spooked by the handful of camel archers they encountered, who then mercilessly pelted my infantry with deadly arrows.
|
|
"That really spooked people and the broader market, because now it's not clear what's off-limits going forward," Smith told VICE News.
|
|
And what happened then, was rates around the world began to accelerate to the downside, and that basically spooked the equity markets.
|
|
Italy's populist leaders, Matteo Salvini and Luigi Di Maio, spooked markets by appearing to threaten the independence of the country's central bank.
|
|
The kids from Stranger Things also made an appearance, being lured into the flat and then spooked by their inter-dimensional pal.
|
|
Trump's battle with China over trade deficits, alleged intellectual property theft and forced tech transfers has repeatedly spooked investors around the world.
|
|
Match Group shares plunged 17 percent on Wednesday after the company gave fourth-quarter revenue guidance that missed estimates, and spooked investors.
|
|
Don't get spooked by prices: Amazon, Walmart, Best Buy, and Macy's all have deals today on tech accessories, kitchen gear, and more.
|
|
Trump also spooked investors on Tuesday by firing Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who was viewed as a supporter of free trade.
|
|
Memories of the violence during the 1977 blackout spooked some tourists visiting the city, including Dave and Dara Campbell, of Gilbert, Arizona.
|
|
Why it matters: Trump's dual desires to be seen as a bipartisan dealmaker and have good press have Republicans in Congress spooked.
|
|
Investors shouldn't be spooked by Tuesday's stock market tumble, instead they should look at it as a buying opportunity, experts told CNBC.
|
|
For now, at least, Trump's election—and the chaos that has followed—may have spooked voters into supporting more traditional political parties.
|
|
The fall in the oil price is now hurting some countries even more, turmoil has spooked investors and terrorism has wrecked tourism.
|
|
The power crisis has spooked investors just days before a national budget, prompting a sharp slide in the rand and government bonds.
|
|
Lopez Obrador's pledges to review energy contracts and opposition to a $13 billion new airport for the capital spooked many business leaders.
|
|
A $7.2 billion U.S. fine in 2017 for its role in the mortgage market scandal was a major blow that spooked clients.
|
|
Spooked investors stampeded to the safety of sovereign debt and drove yields on 255.03-year Treasuries to all-time lows at 20.3%.
|
|
Traders may also have been spooked by movements in the yen Thursday, when the Japanese currency unexpectedly rose sharply against the dollar.
|
|
CLEARLY INVESTORS ARE SPOOKED BY THIS IDEA THAT THE U.S. CONTINUES TO IMPOSE TARIFFS ON OUR MAJOR TRADING PARTNERS, ON MAJOR ECONOMIES.
|
|
At the same time, the far-right National Front is striving to gain support among a population spooked by terrorism and joblessness.
|
|
Trump apparently believes the Fed's action in raising interest rates four times this year has spooked the markets and choked off growth.
|
|
Investors spooked that the trade war and a slowdown in global growth will hammer equities are running out of places to go.
|
|
Trade-related frictions had spooked markets earlier this year, with investors at the time concerned over the impact of tariffs on growth.
|
|
As flames shot up on the ridges, residents began evacuating, with some trying to coax into trailers horses spooked by the fires.
|
|
Spooked investors stampeded to the safety of sovereign debt and drove yields on 20.3-year Treasuries to all-time lows at 21%.
|
|
Andrew Cuomo getting spooked, when he thought it was haunted by the spirit of a groundskeeper, who served the house's original owners.
|
|
The Kings believe Katie was spooked by thunder, and bolted from the hotel room after figuring out how to open the door.
|
|
You look at the fixed income market, and it doesn't seem to be telling the same story, and it's gotten people spooked.
|
|
An approaching car spooked Mr. Matt, who ran into the backyard of a nearby home and attracted the attention of the driver.
|
|
"They are spooked about me being an elected official," Hubbard wrote in an email afterward to his mentor, former Governor Bob Riley.
|
|
He remembers the time when, at 6, Alison went to an amusement park and got spooked and she jumped into his arms.
|
|
The bankruptcy filing of iconic Toys R Us last month, which took many insiders by surprise, further spooked an already rattled industry.
|
|
Spooked both at the prospect of domestic responsibility and of a scandal, Chaplin arranged a marriage, which took place in October 1918.
|
|
Mann's images are murky, spooked, painterly, expressionistic; they seem as much portraits of the psyche under duress as documents of actual places.
|
|
A month after the stock market got spooked by worries of inflation, the number was reassuring and suggested more gains in stocks.
|
|
The market is a little spooked from that and anytime you hear that, that definitely puts a sour taste in people's mouths.
|
|
My friends and I attempted to brew love potions for our seventh grade crushes at sleepovers and spooked ourselves with Ouija boards.
|
|
Outside the ring, though, Air Time is a timid creature that is easily spooked and frightened by everything from insects to birds.
|
|
Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Shiller isn't getting spooked by rising interest rates or fresh stock market records, at least not yet.
|
|
"What spooked investors was a lack of signaling the ability or willingness do more — may be much more — if necessary," Innes wrote.
|
|
India's benchmark indexes, Sensex and Nifty, have been on a downward streak as the global coronavirus outbreak has spooked markets across regions.
|
|
And Stephens' comments come after the Wall Street Journal spooked investors by suggesting that the DOJ might sue to stop the deal.
|
|
Those rising yields had spooked the stock market in early February, when data showed wages rising at a faster-than-expected pace.
|
|
Initially spooked by the group's ambition, tax professionals who counsel the wealthy now speak of the effort with a kind of pity.
|
|
If financiers get spooked, the move could kill the proposed deal, putting the Weinstein Company on an almost certain path to bankruptcy.
|
|
Faster inflation, which reduces the return of fixed income, spooked the bond market and had sparked a selloff in equities on Wednesday.
|
|
There was no difference in color discrimination and, surprisingly, city birds turned out to be more easily spooked than their rural brethren.
|
|
The clash with Beijing has been Mr. Trump's biggest trade conflict and the one that has spooked economists and investors the most.
|
|
He remembers how spooked he was by gunshot sound effects at a fund-raiser at a memorial exhibit days after the shooting.
|
|
There was no word on whether it was the same one that spooked the Red Sox in their dugout on Tuesday night.
|
|
A day earlier, stock markets, spooked by economic paralysis caused by the virus, had their worst day in more than 30 years.
|
|
And he spooked foreign investors with his anti-Western belligerence and meddling with the central bank to keep interest rates artificially low.
|
|
The thing that will dismay some tenderhearted viewers — and that may have spooked the distributor — is the film's steely refusal of hypocrisy.
|
|
Biden has been playing the electability card against Sanders, arguing that he could hurt Democrats' chances if Americans get spooked by socialism.
|
|
TalkTalk, which spooked investors in November when it lowered guidance and cut the dividend, also lowered its full-year guidance on Thursday.
|
|
ET. * Wall Street slipped on Thursday, as financial stocks fell and a larger-than-expected fall in Chinese exports spooked global markets.
|
|
The situation has spooked investors, prompting the government to temporarily restrain some trading and to make emergency loans to struggling financial institutions.
|
|
Spooked by concerns over trade, geopolitical tensions and the possibility of recession, stockmarkets had their worst day of the year so far.
|
|
Experts told CNBC earlier this week that investors had been "spooked" by news of regulatory crackdowns from both South Korea and China.
|
|
It's not clear whether the financial results of either company were affected, but the attacks have nonetheless spooked investors in the past.
|
|
SMITH I have this feeling it gets spooked out of us around the time we start feeling beholden to tests and performances.
|
|
As the train passed, Parks said Molly got spooked and jumped onto the vehicle's folding center console which had his handgun underneath.
|
|
If it's too close when it strikes, the prey will get spooked and move away; too far away, and it won't reach.
|
|
A neighbor on a riding lawnmower is seen in the street and could be one of the reasons the animal was spooked.
|
|
First, Trump appears to have been spooked by an air traffic controllers' "sick-out" and subsequent ground-control stops at LaGuardia Airport.
|
|
The swift and unexpected crackdown spooked investors just days after the Saudi sovereign wealth fund hosted a major investment summit in Riyadh.
|
|
He said concerns over the trade war were dragging down markets, with investors spooked by the ratcheting up of trade war tensions.
|
|
Economists' big fear is what could happen if consumers — already spooked by the trade war — get more skittish during an impeachment saga.
|
|
William Shatner had a buck of a scare when his horse got spooked, and tossed him from the cart it was pulling.
|
|
Boulogne-sur-Mer, France's largest fishing port, has been spooked by a surge in attempted and even successful thefts of fishing boats.
|
|
Some contend that the episode spooked her, that she spent the rest of her tenure trying to make amends with the police.
|
|
However, some prominent business leaders came to Echevarria's defense, saying that consumers and investors were becoming spooked by the acrimonious political mood.
|
|
And Nixon, who's mounting a progressive challenge against Cuomo, seems to have successfully spooked the governor, already succeeding in pushing him left.
|
|
Still, Trump's apparent ability to convince companies to change course has spooked financial markets, with the peso hitting historic lows against the dollar.
|
|
With traders spooked by rising U.S. Treasury yields and fears of a deepening U.S.-China trade conflict, the benchmark S&P 2500 index .
|
|
Trump previously warned of "severe punishment" for the kingdom if it was found to be involved in Khashoggi's disappearance, which has spooked investors.
|
|
Even still, the mere threat of the action has companies spooked, particularly given how damaging they could be to the southern auto sector.
|
|
Concerns about Zambia's rising debt, alongside accusations of additional hidden borrowing and government corruption, have spooked investors and Western donors in recent months.
|
|
ESA has been including the hashtag #fictionalevent on all tweets related to the event, but some Twitter users have been a little spooked.
|
|
The world's two largest economies have been embroiled in a trade dispute since last year that spooked world markets and hurt global growth.
|
|
Leialoha had five cats who ran away because the lava spooked them and hasn't been able to relocate them since evacuating, she said.
|
|
The spooked Republicans recently rolled out a voter-registration PAC of their own, called Engage Texas, which aims to sign up new Republicans.
|
|
This is a typically convoluted process and the accompanying political spats repeatedly spooked bond markets over a period of several weeks last year.
|
|
According to WNEP, the Sisters got spooked after the cashier tripped an alarm, and the two fled the bank without snagging any cash.
|
|
Trump has vowed to renegotiate or withdraw from a trade deal with Mexico, which has spooked the market and prompted distress in Mexico.
|
|
Donald Trumpʼs "America first" agenda, though only in its early stages, has spooked allies and weakened ties with the rest of the world.
|
|
He spoke with Centene's chairman and CEO Michael Neidorff, who said the company has handled the red flags that may have spooked investors.
|
|
We're guessing Stormy was spooked by the FBI probe into possible police corruption in connection with her arrest at an Ohio strip club.
|
|
A large number of investors are agnostic between the loan and bond asset classes and many were spooked by New Look, lenders said.
|
|
Environmental closures in May, triggered by a "red mud" leak at Xinfa Group's Jiaokou alumina refinery in Shanxi, spooked the local supply chain.
|
|
Yet European leaders and officials are spooked as they contemplate a no-deal Brexit, or even a hard one as Mrs May intends.
|
|
For the squeamish and easily spooked, however, Halloween TV means rewatching your favorite characters don dorky costumes and whine about passing out candy.
|
|
His apparent worries about security guarantees suggest that he may indeed have been spooked by America's talk of the "Libyan model" for denuclearisation.
|
|
Both measures appear to have spooked compliance officers in international banks, the more cautious of whom are advising against all dealings with Venezuela.
|
|
The strong pro-democracy result reportedly spooked Beijing, with multiple Chinese officials insisting afterward that Hong Kong could never be independent of China.
|
|
The one that spooked me the most was when I was emptying trash cans while my aunt vacuumed and my brother did dishes.
|
|
I've been spooked ever since what Finisar said, there was a Siena downgrade, I'm going to say absolutely no, don't buy, to optical.
|
|
Oil prices plunged to a new, 12 year low on Monday, as slowing growth in China spooked investors' hopes for demand in 2016.
|
|
If your friend is fast, and no mules get spooked by rattlesnakes en route, the process will take a little over a month.
|
|
Markets got spooked when the federal Energy Information Administration reported that U.S. commercial stockpiles jumped by 8.2 million barrels over the prior week.
|
|
Spooked by the opposition's warning that investment deals bypassing Congress would not be valid, foreign oil companies were closely following the political showdown.
|
|
"It wasn't the only factor but the call from Poland certainly spooked the market," one carbon trader said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
|
|
Spooked last month by an outbreak of harmony among top central banks about tightening policy, debt markets jitters appear to have evaporated again.
|
|
That followed Caterpillar's 281.2 percent decline on Tuesday, when despite its earnings beat, investors were spooked by the company's warning of higher costs.
|
|
Investors have been fleeing stocks and running to safe havens such as bonds and gold, spooked by the direction of the world economy.
|
|
Dianne Feinstein's unilateral release of the Glenn Simpson transcript "spooked" other witnesses, so the Trump Tower section of the investigation is now done.
|
|
Without cast-iron assurances big banks, spooked by the gigantic fine of $20123 billion levied on BNP-Paribas in 2014, are steering clear.
|
|
Though Waldo was on a leash, the dog reportedly broke free after getting spooked by a pedestrian and running out into the street.
|
|
Both ruling parties have been spooked by the rise of the far-right Freedom Party, led by anti-immigrant nationalist Heinz-Christian Strache.
|
|
Its rapid fall from grace has also spooked investors and sparked fears of a crisis in the country's non-banking financial services sector.
|
|
"Investors were spooked by sharp drops in U.S. shares and unloaded risky assets," said Yutaka Miura, a senior technical analyst at Mizuho Securities.
|
|
Frightened Hawk Hitches a Ride in a Taxi to Escape Hurricane Harvey It's not just domesticated animals who are spooked by the storm.
|
|
"The market was spooked after the dollar dipped below 108.50 yen," said Norihiro Fujito, senior investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.
|
|
Retail stocks overall were spooked by a dismal earnings report from Macy's that suggested conditions were worse for department stores than originally suspected.
|
|
A bird spooked, was shot with precision, got picked up by a dog and promptly stuffed into the back of a hunter's vest.
|
|
She knew from the time she was 4 that she wanted to act, but at 16, stage fright spooked her away from performing.
|
|
The escalation has spooked global markets, wiping between 2.9% and 3.5% from all major US indices and setting off a global sell-off.
|
|
The Cubs have not won a championship in more than a century, and many fans are convinced the franchise is cursed, spooked, damned.
|
|
The suddenly negative rhetoric coming from the North has everybody spooked, and no one's really sure if Kim is truly committed to denuclearization.
|
|
Gastelum was already improving his defences at that point, but he seemed somewhat spooked by Woodley's wickedly fast and obviously dangerous right hand.
|
|
Investors got spooked by political uncertainty in Italy and a White House announcement that it again plans to implement tariffs on Chinese goods.
|
|
Full list of attendees: Go deeper: Via NYT, the massive companies with global supply operations are also spooked by Trump's hawkish trade posture.
|
|
He rarely speaks to most of the people who helped him build Wiseguy; he says the federal investigation spooked most of the crew.
|
|
She, too, became pregnant out of wedlock; Chaplin, spooked this time by the prospect of criminal charges, secretly married her in November 1924.
|
|
And they called up the label and they was like, I don't know what they fuck they said, but the label was spooked.
|
|
Spooked by the odd request, Chantelle ran down the stairs of their home in Sweden to tell her mother what was going on.
|
|
"China has been very spooked by Mahathir's election," said a Malaysian official familiar with talks before the visit, speaking on condition of anonymity.
|
|
"I think they were spooked by the politics of this and the pushback," said Gottlieb, a physician, health advocate and Pfizer board member.
|
|
Financial institutions worldwide have only recently started cooperating to mitigate the economic damage from the rapidly spreading illness, but investors are still spooked.
|
|
They commenced that effort even before the voting in Pennsylvania on Tuesday, spooked by late polls that suggested serious trouble for Saccone, 60.
|
|
There was an especially tantalizing detail near the end of the story: Christie, the paper claimed, had been spooked by her own house.
|
|
Investors were spooked not by Democrats and the media's exaggerating a "common cold"–level virus, but by the administration's evident lack of preparedness.
|
|
Brokers said many buyers have been spooked by rising interest rates and rumors of proposed changes to the application process for uninsured mortgages.
|
|
Beijing, spooked by the unprecedented capital outflows and a weakening currency, had imposed restrictions on overseas investment at the end of last year.
|
|
The intensifying chatter about Sanders as an easily caricatured radical spooked some of them, giving them extra incentive to cluster around an alternative.
|
|
The number of cases spiking, especially outside of China, raised concern of a prolonged global economic slowdown and spooked investors out of stocks.
|
|
Such a threat has spooked investors around the world, causing the Dow to plummet nearly 2,000 points, or 6.5%, so far this week.
|
|
If his claim about markets being spooked by the Democratic debate held water, you would've expected the Dow to plummet again on Wednesday.
|
|
The social media giant missed projections on revenue and user metrics and spooked investors with warnings about continued sales deceleration and weaker margins.
|
|
Meanwhile, Turkey is also trying to buy Russia's S-400 missile defense system, a move that has spooked U.S. lawmakers and defense officials.
|
|
THAT'S UNSETTLING: An email accidentally sent out this week from Frontier Airlines spooked flyers across the country ahead of the Thanksgiving travel rush.
|
|
The fact Cohn, widely viewed as one of Wall Street's own, was willing to push that position spooked big banks' representatives in Washington.
|
|
Brazil's economy shrank nearly 73 percent in 2015 as the massive Petrobras corruption scandal spooked investors, and the negative trend continued in 2016.
|
|
New clusters of viral infections, concentrated in South Korea and in Italy's Lombardy region, spooked investors about widespread damage to the global economy.
|
|
But it was a little tricky, and I was often spooked that I would hit accelerate when I meant to hit the brake.
|
|
Most notably, stocks have rebounded after posting their worst day of the year so far on Monday as the coronavirus outbreak spooked investors.
|
|
Investors worldwide have been spooked by the rapid spread of the Chinese coronavirus, with stock markets around the globe sharply lower on Monday.
|
|
If the president is spooked by those howls, a major tax measure that both the president and Congress have promised may never happen.
|
|
The Dow and the both lost 5.2 percent on the week, while the Nasdaq shed 5.1 percent as rising interest rates spooked investors.
|
|
Escalating tensions between China, the biggest commodity consumer, and the U.S. have spooked metals markets and raised the prospect of reduced Chinese demand.
|
|
The S&P healthcare sector ended down 1 percent as a report of a U.S. government pricing probe spooked shares of several drugmakers.
|
|
The decision could add to wariness about Kenya's nascent mining industry among investors already spooked by resource nationalism in neighbouring Tanzania, analysts said.
|
|
Recent comments by a Socialist Party candidate about a new legislative superbody created by Maduro have also spooked some in the oil sector.
|
|
"'No Country for Old Men' is purgatory for the squeamish and the easily spooked," A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times.
|
|
That man has since come forward and told media he was helping victims of the shooting when he became spooked by police and fled.
|
|
Despite being massively outnumbered, the pro-Trump enclave didn't appear to be spooked by the hundreds of anti-Trump protesters hurling abuse at them.
|
|
Now they are not so sure, voting for populist parties whose prospective government has spooked investors fearful that Italy might quit the monetary union.
|
|
The 10-year note yield was at 3.16 percent Tuesday, well below the 3.26 percent level that spooked the market just a week ago.
|
|
Investors were spooked this week by a leaked coalition plan - subsequently denied - that the parties would demand debt forgiveness from the European Central Bank.
|
|
In October, Powell said the Fed was a "long way" from a neutral rate that neither harms nor helps the economy, which spooked markets.
|
|
The big-box retailer missed earnings and same-store sales estimates, and management spooked Wall Street by deciding not to issue a 2019 forecast.
|
|
One of his caretakers says he was knocked into a pond once when Poncho got spooked by something, according to the Guinness news release.
|
|
Facebook's 1 percent fall weighed on both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq after the company's outlook on advertising growth and expenses spooked investors.
|
|
Chains clinging around his wrists and ankles, he yelled incomprehensible sounds, spooked and cuddled children, leaving marks of the black paint on their faces.
|
|
The self-funded company has been seeking a buyer since late last year, but claimed these changes "spooked" potential buyers in its sale process.
|
|
I said, 'You're the only one that ever pitched down there in Atlanta, and I didn't want people getting spooked by the launching pad.
|
|
The dishes here are very reliant on molecular gastronomy techniques, so be warned that picky eaters might be a little spooked by the presentation.
|
|
At another haunted car wash in Spring, Texas, CNN affiliate KTRK broadcasted video from a viewer who filmed a young boy getting royally spooked.
|
|
After an American soyabean export embargo in 1973, spooked Japanese companies invested in Brazil, which then grew to become a colossal competitor to America.
|
|
Even The Boy Who Lived — or at least the actor who played him, Daniel Radcliffe — was spooked when he first met Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes).
|
|
Aurora's big round seemingly spooked Tesla investors, in fact, with shares in the electric car maker dropping as media outlets reported on the details.
|
|
Markets were also earlier spooked by a La Stampa report that economy minister Giovanni Tria planned to resign but the ministry denied the report.
|
|
"We're all a little spooked," said Araceli, 45, who asked to be identified by only her given name because of her fear of deportation.
|
|
His successors, though spooked by the collapse of the Soviet Union, kept experimenting even in the political realm in the 1990s and early 2000s.
|
|
China's export reticence and market dominance has spooked manufacturers, including Japanese electronics maker Panasonic Corp, which said it is moving to find fresh supply.
|
|
While the broader real estate market is strengthening nationwide, wealthy buyers have been spooked by volatile stock markets, election uncertainty and money-laundering investigations.
|
|
Experts who spoke with CBS have a few theories: Prospective sponsors could have been spooked by a federal policy requiring sponsors to be fingerprinted.
|
|
The , often viewed as a barometer of risk appetite, fell 0.5 percent to $0.7187 as markets worldwide were spooked by the euro zone concerns.
|
|
"That spooked investors a little bit — it was a main cause of the downdraft but we're seeing prices mostly back to normal," Kelly said.
|
|
Fans of France's new president may have been spooked by his early wobbles on tax policy and a spat with the military top brass.
|
|
The spooked cows had trotted down a side road, away from the trailers set up on a bayou bridge about a mile down 937.
|
|
Her stronger-than-anticipated performance spooked markets and ensured the bloc will have influence, both in Congress and over campaigning for the second round.
|
|
Facebook spooked media outlets this week when it confirmed a test in which it kicked all publishers and brands out of the News Feed.
|
|
White Ops said the scheme was "bringing whole new levels of innovation to ad fraud," operating at an unprecedentedly large scale that spooked advertisers.
|
|
The announcement calmed foreign exchange markets, initially spooked on Monday that the yuan's weakening under the key psychological level could spark a currency feud.
|
|
Mr Xi was spooked by the umbrella protests, in which thousands of young people blocked busy streets for weeks to press for greater democracy.
|
|
Before the inauguration he spooked the financial markets by saying that he would stop Mexico's biggest infrastructure project, a new airport for Mexico City.
|
|
The wave of plunder has spooked many in Ciudad Guyana, leading more people to stay indoors come nightfall and dissuading some stores from opening.
|
|
Anthem, like other insurers, is spooked over uncertainty in Washington about the health care law, especially President Trump's threat to stop paying some subsidies.
|
|
Kala is spooked by a friend of Rajan delivering a very late wedding present that I am positive is a bomb of some sort.
|
|
Airlines, hotels and cruise operators serving Latin America and the Caribbean are facing growing concern among travelers spooked by the mosquito-borne Zika virus.
|
|
Johnson's insistence that Britain is boosting preparations to leave without a divorce agreement has spooked markets, and last week it sent the pound tumbling.
|
|
Indeed, it was fear of repercussions at the ballot box that spooked many Republicans as their leaders urged them to vote for the bill.
|
|
But recent layoffs at the company and heightened speculation around a takeover has spooked some employees, who have begun to look for new jobs.
|
|
Second, the markets are now completely aware regarding the reality of Brexit and no longer spooked by the prospect of even a "hard" separation.
|
|
Clearly, there was something about Clapper's testimony that spooked the White House, and something that required the President to reclaim Clapper as a defender.
|
|
GoPro's shares closed down 7 percent in regular trading, with investors spooked by fellow consumer gadget maker Fitbit Inc' dismal revenue forecast on Wednesday.
|
|
"The markets are clearly spooked by this move in the bond market," said Stephen Massocca, senior vice president at Wedbush Securities in San Francisco.
|
|
The company employs some 1,600 people in the deeply polarized country, where hunger, shortages of medical supplies and blackouts have spooked many international investors.
|
|
Voters were spooked by the detention, a few months ago, of several Hong Kong residents who had been selling gossipy books about Beijing's leaders.
|
|
The pan-European STOXX 600 index fell 0.6 percent and Germany's DAX lost 0.8 percent, still spooked by the recent rises in bond yields.
|
|
The U.S.-China trade war has pressured economies and spooked stock markets in 2019, sending investors to the safety of gold and government bonds.
|
|
While llamas are gentle creatures that seldom spit at humans, some people find their large stature intimidating or get spooked at seeing livestock indoors.
|
|
Preiss added that investors could be spooked if certain parts of the U.S. economy slow at the same time that interest rates are rising.
|
|
But the scariest bill of the lot is one you could face if your spooked pet injures a party guest or trick-or-treater.
|
|
Southeast Asians are spooked by Chinese claims of sovereignty over the South China Sea, bolstered by the construction of artificial islands with landing grounds.
|
|
And he faces a critical meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday amid a brewing trade war that has spooked some U.S. businesses.
|
|
However, operating losses spiraled in the same period, which may have spooked investors as its stock dropped 11% on its first day of trading.
|
|
But now, one week later, they've recovered to their pre-crisis levels, making Cramer wonder why investors were so spooked in the first place.
|
|
That spooked some investors in the budget carrier, one of Malaysia's best-known international brands, even as Fernandes on Sunday apologised for endorsing Najib.
|
|
Lithgow reveals that he spooked Metcalf a day earlier when he casually, and falsely, mentioned that Clinton was confirmed to attend that night's performance.
|
|
Fair Game When a company delays the release of its financial results because of an accounting error, spooked investors typically flee, and shares plummet.
|
|
The oceanside host city is buckling under a surge in violent crime amid a national Zika epidemic that has spooked athletes and spectators alike.
|
|
Spooked by economic data, the president last week sought the advice of finance bosses on the prospects for the US economy, according to reports.
|
|
Wall Street has been exceptionally volatile all December, with investors already jumpy about signs of a global slowdown repeatedly spooked by Trump's own comments.
|
|
Brent broke below $30 a barrel in Asian trade, as fresh worries about oversupply from top producers Saudi Arabia and Iraq spooked the market.
|
|
Brands will test the waters with one message but get spooked by the number of people they anger and move in the other direction.
|
|
Government bond yields rose sharply ahead of the vote, underperforming euro zone peers, as the possibility of more months of political impasse spooked investors.
|
|
"One" is obviously a classic, but slam "Blackened" or "Eye of the Beholder" today and get spooked by their relevance after almost 30 years.
|
|
HIGHER INTEREST RATES - NO BIG DEAL: The spike in U.S. Treasury yields spooked stocks but rising rates are less concerning if they are gradual.
|
|
Voters and superdelegates would be spooked; party officials would be looking around for an alternative to Clinton, and their only option would be Sanders.
|
|
Investors have been spooked by worries about the global economy, and were in no mood to buy into companies that produced positive earnings surprises.
|
|
However, this arithmetic failed to account for the trade war's fallout on the psyche of global business people, who have been spooked by it.
|
|
Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner and CNBC contributor Scott Gottlieb said the Trump administration was "spooked" by the political backlash of banning flavors.
|
|
And I suppose that spooked him, because, you see, this particular top man at the C.I.C. school seems to have been a German spy.
|
|
FedEx (FDX) spooked the market on Wednesday when it said its international business, especially in Europe, has weakened significantly over the last three months.
|
|
The bronze raptor, which looks as though it were just spooked, is one of the more memorable objects associated with the Downtown Brooklyn library.
|
|
Monday's crash spooked markets that were already freaking out about the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on the global economy and demand for oil.
|
|
He had been spooked by her meeting with Mr. Rambo, and was refusing to disclose their relationship to his own employers in the Senate.
|
|
Nate Odum, 53, an owner of the badly-damaged local marina, said that some people might have been spooked enough to leave for good.
|
|
If financiers get spooked, Mr. Schneiderman's move could ultimately kill the proposed deal, putting the Weinstein Company on an almost certain path to bankruptcy.
|
|
His comments have already spooked investors, sending Amazon stocks tumbling Wednesday after an article on the website Axios about his anger toward the company.
|
|
SPX, with stock investors spooked as Treasury yield increases intensified with a monthly payrolls report showing the biggest wage gains for workers since 123.
|
|
The comment, which was made in a Twitter post, spooked markets concerned that Mr. Trump could take a similar approach with other trading partners.
|
|
The uncertainty — as well as the remote possibility that the E.U.'s fourth-biggest economy might leave the currency union — spooked markets this week.
|
|
The 10-year yield fell below the 2-year yield for the first time since 2007 — marking the "yield curve inversion" that spooked investors.
|
|
Lawmakers know the transformative potential of telehealth but, in the past, have been spooked by high cost estimates from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).
|
|
But when word got out that Toys "R" Us had hired restructuring advisers, the company's vendors were spooked heading into the crucial Christmas season.
|
|
This Friday the 13th brings us a full moon — the first full moon to fall on a Friday the 13th in 13 years. Spooked?
|
|
"This has spooked market players and triggered a sharp pullback in risk assets," said Tamas Varga, of oil broker PVM, referring to Apple's statement.
|
|
There have been several instances over the years when, spooked by questions of my own validity and relevance in my industry — Is this it?
|
|
That lack of clarity has spooked a number of foreign investors, according to Marcelo Awad, a Chilean executive with Wealth Minerals Ltd of Canada.
|
|
Earlier this year, a substantial mid-contract pay increase for American's pilots and flight attendants spooked investors and temporarily sent the carrier's shares tumbling.
|
|
But the market is spooked, and the weakness of February has returned but with then market leader, tech, weakened by the Facebook data scandal.
|
|
Spooked children have mezcal spat into their faces; rashy ones have mezcal rubbed onto their skin; fussy ones have it massaged into their gums.
|
|
Unfortunately for Turkey, tourists from the richest countries, who tend to be the biggest spenders, are also the most easily spooked by security worries.
|
|
Finding razors and poison in candy Reports of hidden blades and laced candy have spooked parents of trick-or-treaters and officials for decades.
|
|
While that program didn't survive either, historians have said it spooked the Soviets into ramping up military spending, further unbalancing their already-teetering economy.
|
|
But after the scene at the airport, she was deeply spooked and paranoid that the media was out to reveal her foster daughter's identity.
|
|
Gold climbed to a two-year high of $1,358.20 an ounce on Friday after the Brexit results were released as spooked investors sought safe-havens.
|
|
But Trump's inability to deliver on some of his promises spooked investors and the index slumped to its lowest since early 2015 earlier in September.
|
|
U.S. citizens and permanent residents were less likely to feel spooked by immigration rhetoric, while temporarily protected parents felt just as vulnerable as undocumented parents.
|
|
Europe slipped too as a 20.8 percent slump in fashion giant H&M and near 20.2 percent drop Italian luxury goods firm Ferragamo spooked retailers.
|
|
MILAN (Reuters Breakingviews) - Spooked by hostile markets, Rome's anti-austerity government is offering to trim its 163 budget deficit goal by 0.4 percent of GDP.
|
|
Passengers spooked by news of the active volcano also took to Twitter to ask airlines about cancellation options, and several mentioned cancelling their plans altogether.
|
|
The horse appeared to get spooked, falls, then bucks the woman off before quickly kicking its front legs into the air while the crowd screamed.
|
|
Spooked by Chavez, a first wave of engineers, doctors and other professionals began fleeing for the United States, Canada and Europe in the early 2000s.
|
|
That is important for the world's largest online retailer since a revenue slowdown it forecast last month spooked some investors and sent its stock tumbling.
|
|
Interest rate hikes from a Federal Reserve chairman the president appointed — and routinely criticizes — along with a widening trade war with China have spooked investors.
|
|
The prospect of higher borrowing costs spooked investors, who pulled a net $9.2 billion from equity funds in the week to May 25, BAML said.
|
|
S. trade talks spooked investors who had sent oil higher in early trade on concerns that tanker attacks in the Middle East could disrupt supplies.
|
|
But the party is spooked by the role played by NGOs in upheavals in authoritarian countries elsewhere, such as during the Arab spring of 2011.
|
|
A $7.2 billion U.S. fine in 2017 for its role in the mortgage market crisis was a major blow that spooked clients and concerned regulators.
|
|
Savona has decades of experience in academia, banking and government but has spooked markets with his eurosceptic views that chime with those of the League.
|
|
The speaker's decision spooked investors betting that a more business-friendly government would take power imminently, weakening Brazil's currency over 4 percent in afternoon trading.
|
|
Technology stocks bore the brunt of the slump, as a recent spate of bad news about tech companies like Facebook, Tesla and Amazon spooked investors.
|
|
And it is the threat from Mr Putin, more than any scolding tweets from Mr Trump, that have spooked European governments into raising defence spending.
|
|
So the fact that they switched from more aggressive monetary policy to fiscal, I think, sort of spooked markets worldwide," he told CNBC's "The Rundown.
|
|
A horse that likes you will run faster, be less easily spooked, have more stamina, and be able to hear your whistle from farther away.
|
|
Equity market volatility returned viciously in February and rising interest rates and inflation continue to preoccupy investors who are already spooked by late cycle dynamics.
|
|
Democrats, spooked by President Trump's waffling on the matter after the "shithole" meeting, felt they had to shut down the government to force the issue.
|
|
Stocks had their worst day in eight months on Wednesday after a sharp downturn in tech shares, coupled with persistently higher interest rates, spooked investors.
|
|
But after just one episode, he seems to have decided that he's a little too spooked by all of the weird happenings in Hawkins, Indiana.
|
|
Facebook users, spooked by the recent Cambridge Analytica scandal, started downloading their data and were alarmed to find the call history records and SMS data.
|
|
Shares in the group rose 2500 percent in early trading, more than recouping the losses it suffered when Publicis spooked the market on Feb. 236.
|
|
The Australian dollar - often viewed as a barometer of risk appetite - fell 0.9 percent $0.7162 as markets worldwide were spooked by the euro zone concerns.
|
|
The International Energy Agency, a global forecaster, recently spooked the market by saying that higher prices were likely to dent consumption of crude next year.
|
|
In the first half of 2017 a sharp rise in maritime migration from Libya spooked Europeans, still recovering from the refugee crisis of 2015-16.
|
|
But his rhetoric on interest rates has spooked investors, sending the lira lower and piling pressure on the debt-laden companies he aims to help.
|
|
Jitters over the Chinese economy had spooked global stock markets earlier this week, sending investors sprinting to safe-haven assets, and pushing gold sharply higher.
|
|
Unions fought it bitterly, and investors were spooked by swings in the value of Brazil's currency, bureaucratic delays and a Rio de Janeiro oil spill.
|
|
The warnings from the private lenders in Asia's third largest economy, which have been dealing with a large pile of stressed loans, have spooked investors.
|
|
The announcement spooked investors as they expected retail inflation, which is at 5.21 percent and above the central bank's 4 percent target, could rise more.
|
|
A measure of market volatility is finally starting to rise as traders spooked by the latest geopolitical headlines buy protection from a drop in the .
|
|
Shares in the group rose 7.5 percent in early trading, more than recouping the losses it suffered when Publicis spooked the market on Feb. 7.
|
|
The oil price collapse has hammered currencies from commodity-producing nations and spooked financial markets as investors worry about the health of the global economy.
|
|
Financial markets and economists have been spooked this year by moves from Donald Trump's U.S. administration to ramp up tariffs on countries such as China.
|
|
Stocks rallied early in the day, but sold off in the afternoon, after the Fed spooked the market with comments on equities being highly priced.
|
|
Following results from Dropbox, Workday, Box and Salesforce that spooked the street, all eyes are on Oracle ahead of its earnings report on March 1.803.
|
|
The world's top two economies have been embroiled in a trade dispute that spooked world equity markets last year and dented the global growth outlook.
|
|
On the drive to return Anne to her minder, Marilla is impressed by the girl's ability to keep her cool when their horse is spooked.
|
|
Anything that allows Mr Trump to claim outsider status is good for business; anything that makes his rivals look spooked or weak is doubly so.
|
|
The result spooked markets on fears of a return to protectionist policies and the end of free-market economic reforms should Fernandez triumph in October.
|
|
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Spooked by a global economic slowdown, the U.S. Federal Reserve is seen launching on Wednesday its fifth interest rate-cutting campaign since 2500.
|
|
In May, he also spooked markets by saying he thought low inflation was transitory, at a time when investors were looking for a rate cut.
|
|
The government had spooked markets by making use of 30-day grace periods to delay a series of interest payments, causing their prices to fall.
|
|