From Reuters:
“Coronavirus infects 100,000-plus
worldwide, 21 cases found on ship off San Francisco”
Twenty-one people aboard a cruise
ship that was barred from docking in San Francisco have tested positive for
coronavirus, U.S. officials said on Friday, adding to the more than 100,000
cases of the fast-spreading illness across the world. Vice President Mike Pence, recently appointed
as the U.S. government’s point man on the outbreak, said the cruise ship Grand
Princess will be brought to an unspecified non-commercial port where all 2,400
some passengers and 1,100 crew members will now be tested. “Those that need to
be quarantined, will be quarantined. Those that require additional medical
attention will receive it,” Pence told reporters at the White House.
The outbreak has killed more than
3,400 people and spread across more than 90 nations, with seven countries
reporting their first cases on Friday. The economic damage has also
intensified, with business districts starting to empty and stock markets continuing
to tumble. President Donald Trump on Friday signed a bill to provide $8.3
billion to bolster the capacity to test for coronavirus and fund other measures
in the United States. Cases have now been reported in more than half of the 50
U.S. states. Fifteen people have died in the country. In many affected countries, people were being
asked to stay home from work, schools were closed, large gatherings and sports
and music events were canceled, stores were cleared of staples like toiletries
and water, and face masks became a common sight. The World Health Organization
(WHO) said every country should make containing the epidemic its top priority,
pointing to Iran’s national action plan to combat one of the worst outbreaks
after a slow start. Iran’s death toll
from the virus jumped to 124, as more than 1,000 new cases were diagnosed over
24 hours. The Vatican reported its first
case, a patient in its health services, worsening the prospects of the virus
having already spread further in the Italian capital, since most employees in
the walled city-state live in Rome, and those who live in the Vatican
frequently go in and out to the city that surrounds it. Italy is the worst-hit European country, with
a death toll as of Friday of 197. South
Korea on Saturday reported 174 additional cases from late Friday, taking the
national tally to 6,767. Mainland China, where the outbreak started, reported
99 new confirmed cases but about a quarter of them came from outside the
country, data showed. About 3.4% of
confirmed cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, have died, far
above seasonal flu’s fatality rate of under 1%, the WHO said this week.
SUPPLY CHAINS BROKEN : Moves by some major economies, including the
United States, to cut interest rates and pledge funds to fight the epidemic
have done little to allay fears about the spread of the disease and the
economic fallout. Supply chains have been crippled around the world. “There’s concern that while there has been a
response from the Fed, given the nature of the problem, is this something the
central bank can really help with?” said John Davies, G10 rates strategist at
Standard Chartered Bank in London. In New York, JPMorgan (JPM.N)
divided its team between central locations and a secondary site in New Jersey,
while Goldman Sachs (GS.N) sent some traders to nearby secondary offices in
Greenwich, Connecticut, and Jersey City. Bank of America Corp (BAC.N) is splitting its
trading force from Monday and sending 100 New York-based staff to nearby
Stamford, Connecticut, sources familiar with the matter said. In London, Europe’s financial capital, the
Canary Wharf district was unusually quiet. S&P Global’s large office stood
empty after the company sent its 1,200 staff home, and HSBC asked around 100
people to work from home after a worker tested positive for the illness. France’s prime minister said nurseries and
schools would close for 15 days from Monday in the two areas worst hit by
coronavirus infections, one north of Paris and the other in the northeastern
part of the country. The South by
Southwest music and tech festival in Austin, Texas, and two music festivals in
Florida were canceled over concerns about events that bring crowds of people
into close proximity. The NCAA Division III men’s basketball tournament was
scheduled to go ahead at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore this weekend,
but without spectators. Saudi Arabia
will suspend public attendance at all sports events starting Saturday, the
ministry of sports said. The United
Nations said it had canceled some meetings in Bonn, Germany, and elsewhere
planned in the run-up to a crucial U.N. climate summit to be held in Scotland
in November.
MARKETS HIT: Yields on U.S. Treasuries plunged to
historic lows on fears the outbreak will slam the global economy, and MSCI’s
gauge of stocks across the globe .MIWD00000PUS shed 3.10%. [MKTS/GLOB]U.S.
stocks fell but ended well above their session lows. [.N] Airline and travel stocks have been among the
worst affected as people canceled non-essential travel. Norwegian Air Shuttle
(NWC.OL), the hardest-hit stock among European carriers, lost more than quarter
of its market value on Friday and has fallen almost 70% since the start of
February. “If this really ramps up, we
could see a lot more kitchen-sinking updates from the travel industry and
airlines,” said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG.
^ Since Covid-19 changes every day
it only seems smart to keep having updates on it. ^
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus/coronavirus-infects-100000-plus-worldwide-21-cases-found-on-ship-off-san-francisco-idUSKBN20T1G4
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.