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2 Apr 2020

Deaths Surge in Spain; Chinese County Locked Down: Virus Update

Author: admintech | Filed under: World

Deaths Surge in Spain; Chinese County Locked Down: Virus Update(Bloomberg) — Spain reported 950 more deaths from the coronavirus, the most in a single day, taking total fatalities in the country to more than 10,000. There are signs that the worst may soon be over in Italy as growth in new cases there moderates.Earlier, China said the U.S. was trying to shift the blame for its own outbreak after American intelligence officials concluded Beijing concealed infections. A county in central China was locked down again after a flare-up in cases. Presidential hopeful Joe Biden said he expected the Democratic convention to be delayed until August.In Britain, almost one million people have claimed welfare payments in the past two weeks and a financial regulator proposed freezing some credit card repayments. Spanish jobless claims rose by a record, and filings for U.S. unemployment benefits are set to top 3 million again.Key Developments:Global cases top 942,000; 47,500 dead: Johns HopkinsLA urges city to mask up; NY, NJ deaths double in three daysLocked up, beaten and shamed: virus laws lead to abusePalantir’s new ‘driving thrust’: predicting virus outbreaksLife-or-death hospital decisions come with threat of lawsuitsBiden Says Sees Democratic Convention Delayed to August (7 a.m. NY)“I think it’s going to have to move into August,” Biden said in an interview on “The Tonight Show.” “I doubt whether the Democratic convention is going to be able to be held in mid-July.”Norway’s Wealth Fund Lost a Record $113 Billion in 1Q (6:41 a.m. NY)Norway’s sovereign wealth fund lost a record 1.17 trillion kroner in the first quarter as the coronavirus pandemic roiled stock markets. The loss comes as the fund for the first time faces forced asset sales to cover emergency spending by the government to weather the impact on the richest Nordic economy.Stanchart CEO Says U.K., U.S. Acted Too Late (6:35 a.m. NY)Standard Chartered Plc Chief Executive Officer Bill Winters said authorities in London and Washington have been too slow in ordering the type of lockdown that China used to control the outbreak. Speaking on Bloomberg Television, Winters became one of the highest-profile CEOs to criticize the Western response to the pandemic, saying the U.S. and U.K. had acted “too late.”“I find it interesting to listen to the debate now that we in the West, or in the U.K., or in the U.S., couldn’t have done what the Chinese did because we don’t have that kind of society,” Winters said. “Well, we are doing what the Chinese did; we’re just doing it too late.”EU’s Borrell Warns of Pandemic ‘Spiraling Out of Control’ (6:30 a.m. NY)European Union foreign-policy chief Josep Borrell said the bloc must mobilize help for poor countries. “Globally, it is to be feared that the worst is yet to come,” Borrell said in a letter to foreign ministers as they prepare to hold a video conference tomorrow. “Countries already affected by conflicts or mismanagement are particularly vulnerable.”Jobless Claims Soar As Lockdowns Bite (6:20 a.m. NY)Thursday’s U.S. jobless claims report may serve as a more timely barometer than Friday’s monthly payrolls figures. Filings for unemployment benefits are expected to total 3.7 million in the week ended March 28, compared with 3.28 million previously.Earlier on Thursday, Spain said claims rose by a record 302,265 in March. Spain, one of the countries at the center of Europe’s outbreak, already has an unemployment rate that’s among the highest in the developed world.Almost a million people have claimed welfare payments in Britain over the past two weeks and even Finland, one of the world’s best-funded welfare states, is starting to crack. In Ireland, more than 300,000 people are on government support and 200,000 are classed as unemployed — that’s a total of about half a million people in a country where around 2.3 million were in work before the crisis.And one-third of Thailand’s population has registered for government cash handouts designed to soften the blow of the novel coronavirus outbreak, far exceeding the funds available for the policy.Brexit Delay May Be Inevitable (6 a.m. NY)Prime Minister Boris Johnson says he won’t delay Britain’s final parting with the European Union at the end of the year. Empty meeting rooms across Whitehall suggest delay is all but inevitable.Business lobbyists say government officials have canceled most meetings to prepare for Brexit as civil servants are pulled away to deal with the growing coronavirus pandemic. It’s now only a question of how Johnson will sell a delay to the British public, rather than whether or not one will happen, they say.Iran Cases Top 50,000 (5:43 p.m. HK)Iran reported 2,875 new cases and 124 new deaths in the past day, bringing the total to more than 50,000 cases and 3,100 fatalities.Netanyahu Quarantined Again (5:40 p.m. HK)Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu entered quarantine for a second time after the country’s health minister tested positive for coronavirus, his office said. Yossi Cohen, head of the Mossad intelligence agency, has also entered quarantine after meeting the health minister, the Ynet website reported.Earlier, the country took the unprecedented step of nearly sealing off an ultra-Orthodox Jewish city where a coronavirus outbreak is raging after many residents flouted social distancing orders.Spain Reports Rise in Cases, Infections (5:31 p.m. HK)Spain reported 950 new coronavirus fatalities on Thursday, the largest toll in a single day and taking the total number of deaths past 10,000. Total deaths rose to 10,003 in the past 24 hours, from 9,053 Wednesday, according to Health Ministry data. The number of confirmed cases increased by 8,102, bigger than Wednesday’s 7,719 gain, to 110,238.Spain is dealing with the second-most severe outbreak in Europe after Italy.Tokyo Finds 97 New Coronavirus Cases (5:28 p.m. HK)Tokyo found a record 97 new coronavirus cases on Thursday, national broadcaster NHK reported, a number quickly approaching a level medical professionals warned would merit more pronounced measures from the government.The Japan Medical Association warned this week that the jump in cases the nation’s most populous cities is putting more pressure on medical resources and that the government should declare a state of emergency to prevent collapses seen overseas from happening in Japan. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told lawmakers in parliament today the government can hold off from taking that action now, which would give local governors more powers to step up their response to the epidemic.Belgian Death Toll Tops 1,000 (5:20 p.m. HK)Belgian health officials reported 183 more deaths, up from 123 the day before. The country of 11.4 million has now joined the list of nations where the coronavirus pandemic has claimed more than a thousand lives.EU Says Each Month of Lockdown Causes 3% Annual GDP Slump (5:10 p.m. HK)Each month of lockdown causes a 3% annual GDP drop, EU economy chief Paolo Gentiloni said in a Bloomberg TV interview.Besides this estimate, the European Commissioner for Economic Affairs didn’t have a forecast on the depth of recession in the euro area this year, in the absence of clarity about the length of the crisis. He said mitigating measures can boost growth later in the year and cushion the blow.German Coronavirus Outbreak May Peak at Easter (5 p.m. HK)The virus may peak in Germany at Easter, World Medical Association Chairman Frank Ulrich Montgomery said. However, he cautioned against aiming to begin loosening restrictions on public life at a specific date, “as if the virus knows what Easter is.”A better gauge is to look at when the outbreak slows so the number of new infections doubles only every 14 days, Montgomery said, a rate that he said would ensure a slow enough turnover of patients in intensive care that beds are available for those who need them. Confirmed cases in Germany rose by more than 6,000 on Thursday to 77,981, after several days with a lower number of new infections. Deaths rose to 931 from 775.Germany is deploying 15,000 armed forces personnel to help civil authorities tackle the outbreak. “The fight against corona will be a long one,” Defense Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said in an interview with public broadcaster ARD. “It’s a marathon, and in the end it will be about everyone being able to stay the course.”Meanwhile in Austria, one of the first EU countries that clamped down on public life, the number of deaths fell for the fourth day, to 12, or 8%, in the last 24 hours, the health ministry said. That brings the number of total victims to 158. The Alpine country had 10,769 positive cases Thursday morning; the daily increase has been less than 10% for 5 days.Moody’s Cuts Outlook for Indian Banks (4:50 p.m. HK)Moody’s Investors Service slashed the outlook for the Indian banking system to negative from stable citing disruptions to economic activity from the pandemic that will worsen the ongoing slowdown and impair lenders’ asset quality.India has announced a raft of monetary easing measures including sharp cuts to policy rates and a $50 billion cash line to lenders in order to boost credit and ease financial stress in a sector that was battered by a crisis among shadow lenders and witnessed default by a private sector bank even before the viral outbreak hit India.The south Asian nation has the worst bad loan ratio among major economies and last month engineered its biggest-ever bank rescue to maintain confidence in the financial system.German Companies Apply for State Aid Worth $11.6 Billion (4:30 p.m. HK)“We expect to see a significant increase in the volume and number of applications in the next few weeks,” said Guenther Braeunig, head of state development bank KfW, which is tasked with shoring up the finances of the country’s virus-hit companies. So far, a total of 2,500 companies have applied for liquidity help.Trump, Pelosi Put 2017 Tax Law on Table in Next Aid Round (4 p.m. HK)Some of the most contested pieces of the 2017 tax overhaul are being revisited as the White House and Congress begin to discuss another round of economic stimulus, including restoring the break for entertaining business clients and lifting the cap on state and local deductions.House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said the next coronavirus response bill should suspend the $10,000 cap on deductions for state and local taxes. President Donald Trump wants to restore a tax break for corporate client outings, dinners, sporting games, concerts and cruises, which were limited under the tax overhaul.Global Food Prices Fall to Five-Month Low (4 p.m. HK)World food prices fell 4.3% from the prior month to 172.2 points in March, the United Nations’ Food & Agriculture Organization said. The drop to the lowest level since October was driven by demand contractions because of the pandemic.Global cereal markets are expected to remain “balanced and comfortable” despite worries over the impacts of COVID-19, the agency said.Russia Reports 28% Increase in Cases (3:34 p.m. HK)Russia reported 771 new cases overnight, bringing the total number of infected to 3,548, Interfax reported, citing Russian consumer health watchdog Rospotrebnadzor. Moscow accounts for 595 out of the new cases.China Rejects U.S. Intelligence Claim ( (2:53 p.m. HK)China rejected the American intelligence community’s conclusion that Beijing concealed the extent of the coronavirus epidemic, and accused the U.S. of seeking to shift the blame for its own handling of the outbreak.Hua was responding to a Bloomberg News report saying that the U.S. intelligence community had concluded in a classified report to the White House that Beijing under-reported both total cases and deaths from the disease. “Some U.S. officials just want to shift the blame,” Hua said.China’s public reporting on cases and deaths is intentionally incomplete, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday, citing three officials, who asked not to be identified because the report is secret. Two of the officials said the report concludes that China’s numbers are fake. President Donald Trump said he hadn’t received the report, but said “their numbers seem to be a little bit on the light side.”U.K. Proposes Freeze on Credit-Card Payments (2:19 p.m. HK)The Financial Conduct Authority, the U.K.’s top market regulator, set out its expectations of firms to offer a temporary payment freeze on loans and credit cards where consumers face financial difficulties from the virus.Boeing May Announce Staff Buyouts (1:16 p.m. HK)The U.S. planemaker is expected to announce voluntary staff buyouts in a message to its 161,000 employees on Thursday, said a person familiar with the plans. Boeing and rival Airbus SE face a contraction in demand as airlines around the world pare schedules during the outbreak.No details were available on the size of the workforce reductions at Boeing, or the areas where they might occur, said the person, who asked not to be identified as the matter is confidential.Philippine Lockdown Protesters Can Be Shot (1:09 p.m. HK)Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte gave authorities the green light to shoot dead protesters who attempt to riot or disrupt food distribution during a lockdown prompted by the Covid-19 outbreak.Chinese County Back Under Lockdown (1:05 p.m. HK)A county in central China has been put under lockdown again after a flareup in cases, pointing to the difficulty of sustaining containment when carriers show no signs of sickness.Jia county, with a population of about 640,000, issued a directive Wednesday asking all residential compounds to be sealed off, and those visiting and leaving homes to produce identity cards, wear masks and submit to temperature checks.Outbreak Approaches Key Milestones (12 p.m. HK)The world will hit 1 million confirmed coronavirus cases this week. While the real figure is almost certainly past that mark due to undercounting or lack of testing, the official tally may surpass 1 million in the next 24-48 hours.The U.S. will also shortly have twice as many confirmed cases as any other country. If you’re in America, this may possibly happen by the time you wake up in the morning. Read more here.For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.