Corona virus wreaks financial havoc as infections near 100,000
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[March 06, 2020]
By Lawrence White and Dan Whitcomb
LONDON/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Business
districts around the world began to empty and stock markets tumbled on
Friday as the number of coronavirus infections neared 100,000 and the
economic damage wrought by the outbreak intensified.
An increasing number of people faced a new reality as many were asked to
stay home from work, schools were closed, large gatherings and events
canceled, stores emptied of staples like toiletries and water, and face
masks a common sight.
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, while HSBC has asked around 100 people to
work from home after a worker tested positive for the illness.
In New York, meanwhile, JPMorgan divided its team between central
locations and a secondary site in New Jersey while Goldman Sachs sent
some traders to nearby secondary offices in Greenwich, Connecticut and
Jersey City.
The outbreak has radiated across the United States, surfacing in at
least four new states plus San Francisco.
More than 2,000 people were stranded on the Grand Princess cruise ship
after it was barred from returning to port in San Francisco because at
least 35 people aboard developed flu-like symptoms. Test kits were
delivered at sea to the vessel.
Moves by some major economies including the United States to cut
interest rates and pledge billions of dollars to fight the epidemic have
done little to allay fears about the spread of the virus and the
widening economic fallout.
SINKING MARKETS
European stocks continued their slide after the Japanese market dropped
to a six-month low, with 97% of shares on the Tokyo exchange's main
board in the red.
Airline and travel stocks have been among the worst hit as people
canceled non-essential travel.
"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. "What's impressive about the current move is
it probably understates the degree of disruption we could be facing
across the U.S. and Europe."
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A man is seen wearing a protective face mask at Waterloo station in
London, Britain, March 6, 2020. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes <US10YT=RR> fell to a
record low of 0.7650% as investors sought safe havens.
More than 98,000 people have been infected in over 85 countries and
over 3,300 people have died, according to a Reuters tally. Mainland
China, where the outbreak began, has accounted for more than 3,000
deaths, while the toll in Italy stood at 148.
At current rates, the number of confirmed cases of the virus will
surpass 100,000 on Friday.
In the United States, the world's economic powerhouse, at least 57
new cases of coronavirus were confirmed as the virus struck for the
first time in Colorado, Maryland, Tennessee and Texas, as well as
San Francisco in California. Some 230 people have been infected in
total, and 12 have died.
Google <GOOGL.O>, Facebook, Amazon <AMZN.O>, and Microsoft <MSFT.O>
advised employees in the Seattle area to work from home, after some
caught the virus. The companies' work-from-home recommendation will
affect more than 100,000 people in the area.
The U.S. Senate on Thursday passed an $8.3 billion bill to combat
the outbreak, joining a slew of countries including China and South
Korea in bolstering their war chests.
(Additonal reporting by Steve Gorman and Cath Turner in Los Angeles,
Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo, Pamela Barbaglia, Karin Strohecker,
Thyagaraju Adinarayan, Ritvik Carvalho and Tommy Wilkes in London,
Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru; Writing by Pravin Char; Editing by Mark
Heinrich)
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