Thursday, June 11, 2020

Coronavirus latest: India's Panacea and Refana of US seek vaccine




We are slowly coming out from the full lockdown mode and seeing a slow restoration.  None has really counted the Damage yet, but it is huge..

It is now abudantly clear that CHINA has recieved a body blow which allows the entire world to politically unite and actually enter an era of strongly increased growth by globalization of industry out of CHINA.

This is the economic counter to the CCP.

The military counter will be a transition of NATO to Taiwan and South Korea and yes to INDIA while enclosing all SE Asia.  CHINA is without allies and RUSSIA is already in position.  North Korean will be figuring out how to jump.


All scary of course..
.

Coronavirus latest: India's Panacea and Refana of US seek vaccine


China's May air passenger numbers down 52%; IMF approves emergency credit to PNG



A small bottle labeled with a "Vaccine" sticker is held near a medical syringe in front of displayed "Coronavirus COVID-19" words in this illustration taken in April. © Reuters


Nikkei staff writersJune 8, 2020 08:35 JSTUpdated on June 10, 2020 16:38 JST





The Nikkei Asian Review is tracking the spread of the new coronavirus that originated in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.


Global cases have reached 7,238,723, according to Johns Hopkins University.


The worldwide death toll has hit 411,177.



To see how the disease has spread, view our virus tracker charts:



(Source photo by AP) 


Here are the latest developments (Tokyo time):


Wednesday, June 10


3:03 p.m. Corporate executives in Asia are being offered "fast track" treatment in a cautious re-opening of regional travel after economies such as Hong Kong, Singapore and South Korea prioritize business trips to try to reboot economic activity amid the coronavirus pandemic.



2:52 p.m. "The Japanese government and population do not have just one X-factor but a range of characteristics that have helped it to escape a worse fate so far," Shinya Yamanaka, director of the Center for iPS Cell Research and Application at Kyoto University explains in his latest column for Nikkei Asian Review.


2:07 p.m. Indian biotech firm Panacea Biotec announces its partnership with U.S.-based Refana to create a potential COVID-19 vaccine. The collaboration aims to make more than 500 million doses of the candidate vaccine, with over 40 million doses expected to be available early next year, Panacea says in a statement. Panacea's shares jumped 20% in morning trading on India's National Stock Exchange after the news.


1:44 p.m. Thailand reports four new coronavirus cases and no new deaths, bringing its total to 3,125 confirmed infections, of which 58 were fatalities.


11:44 a.m. Malaysia will ask Bangladesh to take back about 300 Rohingya refugees detained after their boat entered its waters this week, according to Reuters. Malaysia does not recognize refugee status but has been a favored destination for mostly Muslim Rohingya, who are fleeing a military crackdown in Myanmar and refugee camps in Bangladesh. Malaysia said it will no longer accept Rohingya refugees after tightening border controls to stem the coronavirus. "The Rohingya should know, if they come here, they cannot stay," said government minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob.


11:38 a.m. China reports that passenger numbers fell 52.6% in May from a year earlier to 25.83 million, compared with a year-on-year decline of 68.5% in April.


11:32 a.m. The International Monetary Fund approves emergency credit of about $364 million to Papua New Guinea to help the country deal with the pandemic. The IMF says the resource-dependent economy had been hit by measures to prevent a major outbreak of the virus and was facing a balance of payments shortfall of around 4% of gross domestic product and a budget deficit of more than 6% of GDP.


10:39 a.m. The Philippines' trade deficit narrows to its lowest in more than five years in April, as imports plunged by a record amount amid slowing activity due to the pandemic. The 65.3% drop in imports in April is greater than the record 50.8% fall in exports, resulting in a trade deficit of $499 million.


10:26 a.m. South Korea confirms 50 new cases, up from 38 on Tuesday and bringing the country's cumulative infections to 11,902. It has also suffered 276 deaths. Beginning today, people going to bars, karaoke rooms and clubs must register with a QR code.



South Korean job seekers take an exam outdoors amid social distancing measures. The pandemic took a deeper economic toll on South Koreans in May. © Reuters


9:16 a.m. Mexico confirms 4,199 new cases and 596 deaths, raising the cumulative numbers to 124,301 infections and 14,649 fatalities.


8:57 a.m. Japan's April core machinery orders dropped 12% from March, their fastest rate of decline since September 2018, amid the nation's peak coronavirus threat. The highly volatile data set indicates where capital spending will be in the coming six to nine months.


8:06 a.m. South Korea's May unemployment rate surged to its highest level in more than 10 years. The seasonally adjusted gauge climbed to 4.5% in May from 3.8% in April to its highest reading since January 2010, according to Statistics Korea.


7:19 a.m. Brazil reports 32,091 new cases and 1,272 additional deaths, bringing its totals to 739,503 infections and 38,406 fatalities.


6:11 a.m. AMC Entertainment expects to reopen its movie theaters globally in July after the COVID-19 crisis forced it to shut them for months, hurting its first-quarter results.


4:40 a.m. People with type O blood are between 9% and 18% less likely than those with other blood types to become infected with the new coronavirus, according to preliminary results of a study done by genetic-testing company 23andMe.




Genetic-testing company 23andMe found differences in a gene that influences a person’s blood type can affect a person’s susceptibility to COVID-19. © Reuters


The study, involving 750,000 participants, is looking at genetic factors to try to determine why some people who contract the new coronavirus experience no symptoms, while others become gravely ill.


4:15 a.m. The leaders of Denmark, Spain, Germany, France, Belgium and Poland have urged joint research and development of vaccines to prepare for future pandemics, Reuters reports.


4:09 a.m. Migrant workers and other marginalized groups have borne the brunt of India's lockdown, exposing a weakness of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's economic recovery plan. Read more in this week's Big Story.


3:00 a.m. Grand plans by Indonesia and Egypt to move their capitals to new ground have stalled as their governments divert resources to fighting the coronavirus.


2:47 a.m. "The worst is behind us," Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman says at a conference hosted by the Wall Street bank. Gorman says Morgan Stanley will make smaller provisions for loan losses this quarter, Reuters reports.


2:30 a.m. The World Health Organization's regional director for the Americas, Carissa Etienne, warns that coronavirus cases are showing "exponential" rises in some parts of Central and South America.


12:00 a.m. SoftBank has conducted 44,000 coronavirus antibody tests on employees and their families as well as more than 500 medical institutions, the largest testing initiative by a private Japanese company. Here's what it found.


Tuesday, June 9


10:58 p.m. Indonesia is lifting its ban on air travel, allowing planes to carry up to 70% of their passenger capacity starting Wednesday. Travelers on international flights will be required to show negative results from coronavirus PCR tests, while domestic passengers can simply show a doctor's letter stating they are free from flu-like symptoms.


The transportation ministry says travel restrictions are similarly lifted for long-distance bus and rail services that have been suspended owing to the pandemic.


6:14 p.m. Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc agrees to allow bars and karaoke establishments to reopen. They were the last businesses to receive such permission since Hanoi eased nationwide social distancing rules on April 23. Vietnam has reported no new coronavirus cases for 54 straight days.


6:09 p.m. Malaysia's movement restrictions expire Tuesday, allowing a full-fledged economic restart after nearly three months. Almost all business activity will return to normal starting Wednesday, albeit under stringent health guidelines.


6:01 p.m. Japanese biotechnology company Takara Bio has developed a method to simultaneously process more than 5,000 tests to screen for the coronavirus in just under two hours. Typical tests take a whole day to produce results.


5:52 p.m. Indonesia's new daily infections top 1,000 for the first time, just a few days after the capital Jakarta began easing movement restrictions. The country reported 1,043 new infections for a total of 33,076. There were 40 new deaths, bringing that overall number to 1,923. New cases in Jakarta in the last 24 hours came to 232, up from 89 the day before.




People walk around Gorky Central Park of Culture and Leisure after quarantine restrictions were partially lifted in Moscow on June 8, 2020. © Reuters


5:45 p.m. Nearly 13 million Muscovites dip their toes in a semblance of normalcy as a two-month lockdown of their city is lifted despite the Russian capital still reporting over a 1,000 daily cases. For the day, Russia reports 8,595 new infections, bringing the nationwide total to 485,253, and 171 deaths, raising that total death toll to 6,142.


4:15 p.m. The novel coronavirus may have been spreading in China as early as last August, according to research by Harvard Medical School, which analyzed satellite images of hospital travel patterns and search engine data. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying calls it "outrageously absurd" to conclude there was an outbreak based on such evidence alone.


3:10 p.m. As Australia begins relaxing a lockdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus, South Australia's state government gave the all-clear for more than 2,000 fans to attend an Australian Rules Football game in Adelaide this weekend. Pro sports resumed last month after a two-month hiatus and Australia will be among the first countries to admit spectators.


2:10 p.m. Cathay Pacific Airways announces a recapitalization plan worth HK$39 billion ($5.03 billion) led by the Hong Kong government, which will be issued HK$19.5 billion of preference shares and HK$1.95 billion of warrants. The government will also provide a HK$7.8 billion bridge loan, Cathay says.


2:05 p.m. The number of bankruptcies in Japan dropped 55% to 314 in May from a year earlier, the smallest number in 56 years. But experts say the fall was likely an anomaly as many law firms and local courts may have reined in operations due to the pandemic.



Thailand, a favorite destination for Chinese, Japanese and other Asian tourists, has not had a local coronavirus transmission for 15 days in a row. © Reuters


1:50 p.m. Thailand reports two new coronavirus cases and no new deaths, bringing its total to 3,121 confirmed cases, of which 58 were fatalities. The two cases were quarantined Thai nationals returning from Saudi Arabia and the Netherlands. Thailand has recorded no new local transmission for 15 days in a row.


12:30 p.m. Japan's average overtime pay for April dropped 12.2% from a year earlier to 17,984 yen ($165), the sharpest fall since January 2013 amid the coronavirus pandemic. The preliminary data on monthly wages showed average overtime hours fell 18.9% to nine hours.


11:00 a.m. South Korea's Hyundai Development has told creditors of Asiana Airlines it wants to reconsider the terms of its agreement to buy the troubled carrier due to "unexpected negative situations coming to light." A consortium led by Hyundai Development agreed late last year to purchase Asiana Airlines for about 2.5 trillion won ($2.09 billion).


10:24 a.m. South Korea confirms 38 new cases, unchanged from Monday. Its cumulative totals are now 11,852 infections and 274 deaths.



Ahead of a major announcement, Cathay Pacific Airways plus its major shareholders Swire Pacific and Air China halt the trading of their shares in Hong Kong. © Reuters


10:20 a.m. Cathay Pacific Airways plus its major shareholders Swire Pacific and Air China halt the trading of their shares in Hong Kong pending announcements. Cathay has grounded most of its jetliners, flying only cargo and very few passenger flights to major destinations.


9:30 a.m. Japan's April inflation-adjusted real wages fell at their fastest pace since December, newly released government data shows, fanning fears about consumer sentiment going forward. Real wages, which gauge household purchasing power, fell 0.7% from a year earlier, the second drop in a row.


7:00 a.m. Brazil reports 679 new COVID-19 deaths and 15,654 additional confirmed cases on Monday, as controversy grew over the country's official coronavirus data amid allegations of manipulation from a senior lawmaker. Brazil's Health Ministry removed data from its website over the weekend and stopped releasing cumulative totals for coronavirus deaths and infections


6:30 a.m. More than 136,000 new coronavirus cases were reported worldwide on Sunday, the most in a single day, the World Health Organization says. "More than six months into the pandemic, this is not the time for any country to take its foot off the pedal," WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. Nearly 75% of the cases were reported from 10 countries, mostly in the Americas and South Asia.


3:40 a.m. Travel on U.S. roads fell by 39.8% in April as coronavirus stay-at-home orders prompted tens of millions of Americans to work from home and avoid travel. The U.S. Transportation Department said U.S. motorists drove 112 billion fewer miles compared with April 2019, for a total of 169.6 billion miles.



Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange wear masks as the COVID-19 outbreak continues. © Reuters


12:57 a.m. The coronavirus will cause global economic output to contract by 5.2% in 2020, the World Bank says, warning that its latest forecasts would be revised downward if uncertainty remains over the pandemic and lockdowns. The organization said that advanced economies are expected to shrink 7.0% in 2020, while emerging market economies will contract 2.5%, their first since aggregate data became available in 1960. On a per capita GDP basis, the global contraction will be the deepest since 1945-1946.


Monday, June 8


10:37 p.m. Japanese drugmakers Daiichi Sankyo and Nichi-Iko say they will work with the University of Tokyo to develop a potential inhalation treatment for the coronavirus.


10:04 p.m. India begins a gradual lifting of a nationwide coronavirus lockdown by first allowing restaurants, hotels and shopping malls to reopen.


10:04 p.m. Moscow will lift all major restrictions relating to the novel coronavirus this month, says Mayor Sergei Sobyanin.


6:00 p.m. China challenges U.S. Sen. Rick Scott to show evidence to prove that Beijing is trying to slow down or sabotage the development of a COVID-19 vaccine in Western countries. "[P]lease let him present the evidence. There's no need to be shy," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a daily briefing in response to the Republican senator's comments to the BBC.


5:45 p.m. Indonesia reports 847 new infections, up from 672 yesterday, and 32 new deaths. That brings the total to 32,033 cases, including 1,883 deaths. Long lines appeared at commuter rail stations across Greater Jakarta as the capital began easing restrictions on movement and workplaces on Monday.


4:40 p.m. Pakistan has registered 2,067 deaths and 103,671 infections, prompting authorities to begin strict enforcement of safety measures. The country lifted its lockdown last month but promulgated protocols for the reopening of markets, industries and public transport -- including mandatory wearing of masks and social distancing. "We directed administrations to crack down on places protocols are not being followed," Pakistan's planning minister said.


4:25 p.m. Tokyo confirms 13 new infections, down from 14 a day earlier, sources tell Nikkei. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government issued an alert last week, asking residents to avoid unnecessary trips and especially to stay away from nightlife districts.


3:00 p.m. India's COVID-19 tally has topped 250,000 with another biggest single-day spike of 9,983 new infections. The country's total confirmed cases now stand at 256,611 with 7,135 deaths, which rose by 206 over the past 24 hours.


2:10 p.m. Thailand confirms seven new infections, with all of them found in quarantine, taking the country to two weeks without a local transmission. Thailand has reported 77 cases in the past 14 days, and all were contained after being imported from overseas.


1:00 p.m. New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says all coronavirus measures will be lifted, starting Tuesday, other than border closure restrictions, as the virus has been eliminated in the country.


11:30 a.m. Japan's Nikkei Stock Average rises past the 23,000 mark for the first time in three and a half months on hopes of a quick economic recovery, buoyed by better-than-expected U.S. unemployment data. The benchmark index ended the morning session at 23,075.3, up 0.93% from the previous day's close.


11:10 a.m. Global coronavirus cases have surpassed 7 million, with more than 400,000 deaths from COVID-19, according to Johns Hopkins University.


11:00 a.m. New Zealand has no known active cases of COVID-19 in the country for the first time since Feb. 28, the country's Ministry of Health says. The last person being monitored for coronavirus has been released from isolation as he is free of symptoms.


10:23 a.m. South Korea confirms 38 new coronavirus cases, down from 57 the previous day. To date, there have been 11,814 infections and 273 deaths. The country reported more than 50 cases a day over the weekend, but the number dropped on Monday.


10:00 a.m. Vietnam reports two new coronavirus infections, both of which involved Vietnamese citizens returning from Mexico. Those travelers were quarantined on arrival. The country has gone 53 days without a domestically transmitted infection, and has a total of 331 cases with no deaths.


9:09 a.m. Japan's economy shrank 2.2% at an annualized pace in January-March, the government announced on Monday, a milder decline than the preliminary estimate of a 3.4% contraction.


4:42 a.m. Chinese drugmaker Shanghai Junshi Biosciences has launched early-stage trials of a potential antibody therapy for the coronavirus in uninfected subjects, official newspaper Liberation Daily reports. The treatment is being developed in collaboration with Eli Lilly.



Cemetery workers bury a man who died from COVID-19 in Breves, Brazil, on June 7. The country has the third-highest death toll from the virus, behind the U.S. and U.K. © Reuters


2:30 a.m. The global death toll from the COVID-19 virus reached at least 400,000, according to Johns Hopkins University. The U.S. leads the world with nearly 110,000 confirmed virus-related deaths, followed by the U.K. and Brazil. At least 6.9 million people have been infected by the virus.


1:32 a.m. The approval rating of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government sank 11 points from the previous month in June to 38% in a new Nikkei survey, matching the lowest level during his second stint in office. While Japan has logged relatively few coronavirus infections, the economic response has been criticized as too slow, especially the 100,000 yen ($930) cash payments to every resident.


12:15 a.m. U.S. Sen. Rick Scott accuses China of trying to sabotage coronavirus vaccine development by Western countries. "What I really believe is, whether England does it first or we do it first, we're going to share," he said. "Communist China, they're not going to share."


Sunday, June 7


11:32 p.m. Thailand holds its first virtual live music festival, with thousands attending via the Zoom video meeting platform.


10:58 p.m. Gilead Sciences, maker of the potential COVID-19 treatment remdesivir, has been approached by U.K.-based AstraZeneca about a possible merger, Bloomberg News reported.


5:41 p.m. Indonesia reports 672 new coronavirus infections, taking the total to 31,186, and 50 new deaths, taking the total to 1,851.


5:02 p.m. Malaysia will lift most coronavirus-related restrictions on businesses Wednesday, including a ban on interstate travel, after a nearly three-month lockdown, although international borders will remain closed. Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin announces in a televised address the outbreak is under control and Malaysia will begin a new recovery phase until Aug. 31.


4:03 p.m. Taiwan will further ease restrictions related to control of the coronavirus, the government says, as the island has kept the pandemic well in hand with only 6 active cases and no local transmission for 56 days.


12:23 p.m. China's exports contracted in May as global coronavirus lockdowns continued to devastate demand, while a sharper-than-expected fall in imports pointed to mounting pressure on manufacturers as global growth stalled. Overseas shipments in May fell 3.3% from a year earlier, after a surprising 3.5% gain in April, customs data shows.


11:39 a.m. China's foreign exchange reserves rose unexpectedly in May even as the yuan weakened on worries over an escalation in Sino-American tensions. The country's foreign exchange reserves -- the world's largest -- rose $10.233 billion in May to $3.102 trillion, central bank data shows.


Saturday, June 6


10:30 p.m. Potential coronavirus treatment Avigan is now expected to take until July at the earliest to complete a clinical trial, further delaying government approval in Japan, Nikkei has learned. A sharp decline in COVID-19 cases in Japan has made it difficult to secure enough patients for testing, according to people familiar with the matter.


5:42 p.m. Indonesia reports its biggest daily rise in coronavirus infections, with 993 new cases, taking its total to 30,514. It also reports 31 new deaths related to COVID-19, taking total deaths there to 1,801.


4:38 p.m. India reports a record 9,887 new coronavirus cases in one day and overtakes Italy as the world's sixth-biggest outbreak, two days before relaxing a lockdown with the reopening of malls, restaurants and places of worship.


1:49 p.m. Thailand reports two new coronavirus cases and no new deaths, taking its total confirmed cases to 3,104 and 58 deaths since the outbreak began in January. The two cases are men who returned from Russia and Kuwait and are in quarantine.


10:30 a.m. The group of 20 rich and emerging economies issues a statement saying it has pledged more than $21 billion to fight the coronavirus.


5:00 a.m. The Dow closes 3.2% higher and the S&P 500 climbs 2.6%. For the week, they were up 6.8% and 4.9%, respectively, the sharpest gains since the week ending April 10.


3:26 a.m. New York City has logged its first day of no COVID-19 deaths in roughly three months. The tally of zero was recorded on Wednesday, data from the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene shows.


2:30 a.m. China's tourism ministry has advised the public to avoid travel to Australia, warning of racial discrimination and violence against the Chinese in connection with the coronavirus pandemic.


To catch up on earlier developments, see last week's latest updates.

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