Fed cuts rates and NYC, LA close restaurants to fight coronavirus
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[March 16, 2020]
By Lindsay Dunsmuir and Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With panic buying on
Main Street and fear-driven sell-offs on Wall Street, the U.S. Federal
Reserve cut interest rates to near zero on Sunday in another emergency
move to help shore up the U.S. economy amid the rapidly escalating
coronavirus pandemic.
The mayors of New York City and Los Angeles ordered restaurants, bars
and cafes closed, with takeout and delivery the only options for food
sales. Movie theaters, small theater houses and concert venues were also
ordered closed as the U.S. death toll from the outbreak hit 65.
"The virus can spread rapidly through the close interactions New Yorkers
have in restaurants, bars and places where we sit close together," said
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio. "We have to break that cycle."
For the second time since the financial crisis of 2008, the Fed cut
rates at an emergency meeting, aiming for a target range of 0% to 0.25%
to help put a floor under a rapidly disintegrating global economy.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who had openly pressed the Fed for further
action, called the move "terrific" and "very good news."
Store shelves have been stripped bare of essentials, schools closed and
millions of jobs in jeopardy as businesses temporarily shut their doors.
"We're learning from watching other countries," Trump said. "It's a very
contagious virus ... but it's something that we have tremendous control
of."
Trump has faced criticism at home and abroad for sometimes downplaying
the seriousness of the coronavirus and overstating his administration's
ability to handle it.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious diseases expert, said the
United States was entering a new phase of coronavirus testing but
tempered the president's optimism.
"The worst is yet ahead for us," Fauci said, a warning he has issued
frequently in the past week. "It is how we respond to that challenge
that is going to what the ultimate end point is going to be."
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence said testing for coronavirus was
expanding with more than 2,000 labs across the country ready to process
tests and 10 states operating drive-through testing.
The United States has lagged behind other industrialized nations in its
ability to test for the coronavirus. In early March, the Trump
administration said close to 1 million coronavirus tests would soon be
available and anyone who needed a test would get one, a promise it
failed to keep.
With limited testing available, U.S. officials have recorded nearly
3,000 cases and 65 deaths, up from 58 on Saturday. Globally more than
162,000 are infected and over 6,000 have died.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control on Sunday recommended that events
with gatherings of 50 or more people over the next eight weeks be
postponed or canceled.
DON'T HOARD
The White House appealed to Americans not to hoard as the coronavirus
spreads, reassuring them that grocery supply chains were strong.
Trump held a phone call on Sunday with 30 executives from grocery stores
including Amazon.com Inc's <AMZN.O> Whole Foods, Target Corp <TGT.N>,
Costco Wholesale Corp <COST.O> and Walmart Inc <WMT.N>, the White House
said.
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Carrie Hopkins, of Marysville, worships during a "drive-in" church
service at The Grove Church where people stayed in their cars and
tuned in to the pastor on their car radios after Washington Governor
Jay Inslee banned large gatherings due to the coronavirus (COVID-19)
outbreak, in Marysville, Washington, U.S. March 15, 2020.
REUTERS/Jason Redmond
"Have a nice dinner, relax because there's plenty, but you don't
have to ... you don't have to buy the quantities," Trump said.
"We're doing really, really well. A lot of good things are going to
happen."
Trump tested negative for coronavirus, his doctors said on Saturday,
as the president extended a travel ban to Britain and Ireland to try
to slow the pandemic.
Trump's spokesman, Judd Deere, said temperature checks will be
conducted on everyone who enters the White House grounds, beginning
Monday morning.
Travelers returning to the United States and being screened for the
coronavirus were met by long lines and massive delays at some major
airports, prompting federal officials to deploy more staff and Trump
to appeal for patience.
Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders, squaring off in a Democratic debate,
blasted Trump's handling of the coronavirus and touted their own
plans to deal with it.
In their first one-on-one debate, the two Democratic contenders to
face Trump in the November election said the Republican president
had contributed to worries about the pandemic by minimizing the
threat before declaring a national emergency on Friday.
CLOSURES EXPAND
The U.S. containment measures have so far been mild compared to the
nationwide lockdowns imposed in Italy, France and Spain.
"I think Americans should be prepared that they are going to have to
hunker down significantly more than we as a country are doing,"
Fauci said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Even though Americans are not barred from going to the movies,
ticket sales in North America fell to their lowest level in more
than two decades this weekend, according to measurement firm
Comscore.
Democratic New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that
schools in New York City, Westchester, Nassau and Suffolk counties
would close from Monday, and he called on Trump to mobilize the Army
Corps of Engineers to create more hospital beds.
Cuomo had been criticized for not closing schools as other states
have done, given that New York has a large cluster of coronavirus
cases.
A clinical trial to evaluate a vaccine designed to protect against
coronavirus will begin on Monday, the Associated Press reported,
citing an unnamed U.S. government official.
It would take a year to 18 months to fully validate any potential
vaccine, the AP added, citing public health officials.
(For an interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus,
open https://tmsnrt.rs/3aIRuz7 in an external browser.)
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu, Lindsay Dunsmuir, Andrea Shalal, Nandita
Bose, Matt Spetalnick, Humeyra Pamuk, John Whitesides, Steve Holland
in Washington; Writing by Lisa Shumaker and Matt Spetalnick; Editing
by Daniel Wallis, Diane Craft, Lincoln Feast and Gerry Doyle.)
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