France loosened a months-long lockdown on Wednesday, allowing restaurants to serve customers on terraces and cinemas and museums to reopen to the public. New York state, the original U.S. epicenter of the pandemic, reported its lowest infection rate since September.
In India, daily deaths reached a record, even as reported new infections declined from the highs of early May. Taiwan extended a soft lockdown island-wide, while the virus continued to rampage through Thailand’s prisons.
New cases in Malaysia rose to the highest since the pandemic began, even after the government imposed nationwide restrictions on movement to curb the spread. Serbia received a delivery of 440,000 vaccine doses from China to immunize its military.
Key Developments:
- Global Tracker: Cases pass 164.2 million; deaths exceed 3.4 million
- Vaccine Tracker: More than 1.51 billion doses have been given
- How Mumbai officials made city more Covid-ready than Delhi
- China is winning the race to vaccinate the world, for now
- From Paris cafes to Roman gelato, Europe is finally waking up
- U.S. vaccine surge lifts region’s air-travel comeback past Asia
Subscribe to a daily update on the virus from Bloomberg’s Prognosis team here. Click CVID on the terminal for global data on cases and deaths.
N.Y. Positivity Rate Falls to 1% (11 a.m. NY)
The seven-day average Covid-19 positivity rate in New York state dropped to 1.06%, the lowest since Sept. 27, Governor Andrew Cuomo said in a statement Wednesday. It was the 44th straight day of decline. Hospitalizations fell to 1,521, the fewest since Nov. 8.
“New York is making tremendous strides in beating back Covid -- our positivity rates are the lowest we’ve seen in months and more than 10 million New Yorkers have received at least one dose of the vaccine,” Cuomo said.
The governor also announced that child-care facilities and summer camps must collect vaccination status for all staff and children, and implement daily health screenings. Children and staff over age 2 who aren’t fully vaccinated must wear face coverings except when eating, drinking, showering, or sleeping.
Separately, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city would keep the mask mandate in place in municipal offices because there are vaccinated and unvaccinated people working together. He said the three measures tracked closely by the city -- cases, deaths and hospitalizations -- have all dropped below the city’s threshold. The closely watched hospitalization rate that has dropped below 1 per 100,000 residents.
Over 70% of U.K. Adults Have Gotten 1 Dose (10:45 a.m. NY)
More than 70% of U.K. adults have received at least one dose of Covid vaccine, the Department of Health and Social Care said, and about 40% of people are fully vaccinated. The country’s health services have administered 57.8 million vaccines as of May 18, an effort that began in December, according to a statement. The U.K. remains on track to offer a first dose to all adults by the end of July, the agency said.
Emergent Failed to Address Problems: Panel (10:10 a.m. NY)
A probe by the U.S. Congress into Emergent BioSolutions Inc. found that the contract manufacturer failed to address deficiencies in vaccine production at its facilities despite warnings following a series of inspections in 2020.
Emergent, which was tasked with manufacturing the underlying drug substance used in the Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca Plc Covid-19 vaccines, has faced production setbacks after conflating the active ingredient used in the two vaccines. The error at its Baltimore plant in late February led it to discard 15 million doses worth of an ingredient used in the J&J shot, and has delayed the vaccine maker’s ability to supply the U.S. and world.
Swiss Earmark Funds for Vaccines (9:11 a.m. NY)
Switzerland has earmarked an additional 50 million francs ($55 million) for Covid-19 treatments and vaccines. The government has already decided to order vaccines for 2022, and intends to extend business with developers Moderna Inc. and the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE partnership beyond that date to guard against emerging variants of the virus.
Switzerland also wants to work with businesses and institutions of higher education to ensure that in the event of another pandemic, the country is well placed to develop and manufacture vaccines.
WATCH: Kids, Covid-19 Vaccines and Getting back to School
Source: Bloomberg
Pakistan Relaxes Restrictions (9:01 a.m. NY)
Pakistan will reopen the tourism sector and outdoor restaurants to full capacity starting on May 24, according to a statement. Educational institutions in districts with less than 5% Covid-19 positivity rates, as well as outdoor marriage ceremonies with a maximum of 150 people, will reopen on June 1.
Dogs Sniff Out Covid From Sweat (8:25 a.m. NY)
Dogs are able to detect Covid-19 in humans, a new study showed, paving the way for the broader use of sniffing canines in a global effort to contain the pandemic.
The dogs’ detection reached 97% sensitivity in the French study, meaning that’s how well the canines could identify positive samples. The sensitivity rating beats that of many 15-minute antigen tests, which tend to be better at ruling out infection than at finding it.
China Delivers Vaccines to Serbia (7:16 a.m. NY)
Some 440,000 vaccines made by China’s Sinopharm were flown to Serbia, of which 240,000 were paid for and 200,000 were donated by China’s national defense ministry for inoculation of Serbia’s military.
Serbia’s defense minister welcomed the delivery at the airport. The Balkan country, a candidate for European Union membership, has imported more than 3.5 million Sinopharm shots, as well as jabs from western and Russian drugmakers.
France Hopes to Turn Corner (7:12 a.m. NY)
France hopes to “turn the Covid-19 page” in November or December, when a big enough part of the population is vaccinated, and if there are no new virus variants, Health Minister Olivier Veran said in an interview with the LCI TV channel.
While he’s optimistic, “we will remain vigilant and the French people should remain vigilant” to avoid a fourth wave of the pandemic, he said. The health crisis isn’t over yet, but the French “shouldn’t live in fear” until then, Veran added.
Malaysia Reports Record New Cases (3:27 p.m. HK)
Malaysia reported 6,075 new cases, the biggest single-day increase since the pandemic began, even after the government imposed nationwide restrictions on movement to curb the spread of the virus.
Daily cases this month topped 4,000 for the first time since February amid the detection of new variants. The Southeast Asian nation is also struggling with the slow pace of inoculation, with less than 3% of the population fully vaccinated.
French Cafes, Cinemas Open (3:03 p.m. HK)
French cafe and restaurant terraces, as well as museums and cinemas, opened on Wednesday after a months-long lockdown. An accelerating vaccination campaign and a third round of curbs on public life have begun to slow the virus’s spread, with a noticeable drop in intensive-care unit occupancy.
A waiter serves customers at a cafe terrace in Paris, on May 19.
Photographer: Nathan Laine/Bloomberg
Should the situation worsen again, the easing of restrictions would be called into question, President Emmanuel Macron told journalists as he and Prime Minister Jean Castex sat at a cafe to mark the day.
Mauritius Detects Variants (2:47 p.m. HK)
Mauritius confirmed nine cases of the variant first detected in South Africa and two initially found in the U.K., according to Health Minister Kailesh Jagutpal.
The Indian Ocean island nation, whose economy is reliant on tourism, said 122 of 135 local samples showed the B.1.1.318, “a variant of interest detected on majority of cases” during its second wave of infections, Jagutpal told lawmakers.
Taiwan Extends Soft Lockdown (2:29 p.m. HK)
WATCH: Taiwan’s Covid-19 cases have surged from 0 to quadruple-digit numbers.
Source: Bloomberg
Taiwan’s Centers for Disease Control raised the island-wide alert level, extending containment measures to all of Taiwan, Health Minister Chen Shih-chung said at a briefing.
The restrictions limit the number of people who can gather and the government is urging companies to adopt social-distancing measures. Curbs were already in place for Taipei and New Taipei City.
The new limits follow a growing number of cases outside the Taipei area. Taiwan added 267 local cases Wednesday, including 129 in New Taipei City, 70 in Taipei City and 28 in Changhua County.
UAE, Bahrain Plan Sinopharm Boosters (1:37 p.m. HK)
The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain will offer a third Sinopharm shot to people who’ve already had two doses, amid concerns over the efficacy of the vaccine.
Bahrain will prioritize front-line workers, residents older than 50 and those with underlying conditions for the booster shots. The Gulf nations, which approved the Sinopharm vaccine late last year, are among the first in the world to unveil plans for booster shots.
India’s Record Deaths (11:57 a.m. HK)
India’s daily deaths rose by a record 4,529 to reach 283,248, government data showed.
Relatives wearing PPE tend funeral pyres at a crematorium in New Delhi on May 19.
Photographer: Prakash Singh/AFP/Getty Images
New cases totaled 267,334. That’s way down from the daily highs of more than 400,000 infections that were recorded earlier this month.
Asia’s Virus Surge Has Traders Seek Data (11:22 a.m. HK)
Equity investors in Asia are screening hospitalization rates and watching predictions on virus peaks as countries in the region struggle with a fresh jump in cases.
The pandemic’s resurgence has already worsened Asian stocks’ performance against global peers this year. With efforts by countries to reopen their economies taking a hit, the severity of restrictions, the pace of increase in caseloads, the preparedness of governments and progress in vaccination rollouts have become key yardsticks for stock traders.
WATCH: Here’s why Mumbai has been able to control the Covid-19 outbreak more effectively than the rest of India.
Source: Bloomberg
Okinawa to Seek Emergency Declaration: Jiji (10:47 a.m. HK)
Okinawa in southern Japan will ask the central government to expand a coronavirus state of emergency to include the prefecture, Jiji reported in a one-line dispatch.
Bankers Among Singapore’s New Cases (10:04 a.m. HK)
Employees at DBS, HSBC and Mizuho Bank Ltd. were among 27 new coronavirus cases identified in the local community by Singapore authorities on Tuesday as the number of unlinked infections in the country persists.
Eleven of the 27 confirmed cases in the community have not been traceable. There are now 19 active virus clusters in the country, up from 11 a week earlier, according to health ministry data. The government is lengthening the time between vaccination doses in an effort to administer first shots to more adults as it races to stem transmissions.
Thailand’s Prison Case Flareup (9:15 a.m. HK)
Infections spread further among inmates and workers in Thai prisons, accounting for almost half the 3,394 new cases reported Wednesday. In all, more than 10,000 new Covid-19 cases have been reported in about a dozen densely-packed Thai prisons.
Thailand to Borrow $22 Billion for Relief (8:51 a.m. HK)
Thailand plans to borrow an additional 700 billion baht ($22.3 billion) to fund measures to counter the worst wave of Covid-19 to hit Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, people familiar with the matter said.
A meeting of the cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha on Tuesday approved the new borrowing plan from the finance ministry, the people said, declining to be identified before a public announcement.
Quebec to End Curfew, Reopen Restaurants (6:59 a.m. HK)
Quebec, the Canadian epicenter of the crisis early on in the pandemic, has announced a reopening plan as the local government estimates 75% of adults will be at least partially vaccinated by June 15.
A curfew in place since January will be lifted on May 28. Three days later, restaurants will be able to open in most regions of Quebec, followed by bar patios on June 11. The government is also set to allow visits inside private homes from June 14.
Serum Sees Shot Export Delays Until Year-End (6:00 a.m. HK)
India’s Serum Institute will prioritize making vaccines for its home country, delaying deliveries to other nations and the World Health Organization-backed Covax initiative until the end of the year. The firm, the largest vaccine manufacturer, is licensed to churn out at least one billion doses of AstraZeneca’s shot.
— With assistance by Angus Whitley, Shelly Banjo, and Keshia Clukey