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World News

Rally picks up steam as market shakes off charge fears, Dow climbs 650 factors

US stocks rose sharply on Monday as government bond yields fell from last week’s highs, alleviating inflation concerns and higher interest rates undermining stock valuations.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 660 points, or 2.2%, led by Boeing, which rose 6.8%. The S&P 500 gained around 2.1% as all 11 sectors traded in the green. The Nasdaq Composite, the tech heavy index that was hit hard last week, also fell 2.1%.

The 10-year government bond yield fell to 1.43% on Monday, a 3 basis point decrease from Friday and a decrease from its recent high of 1.6% on Thursday. The sudden surge in the benchmark yield has rocked stocks for the past week as rising interest rates can jeopardize the relative attractiveness of stocks and compress stock valuation by reducing the value of future cash flows.

Market breadth was strong on Monday with only about 8 stocks trading lower across the S&P 500. On the NYSE, 11 stocks rose for every stock that fell. Economic reopening games like Carnival and American Airlines were at least 3% higher due to optimism about vaccines and economic reopening. Meanwhile, high-growth technology stocks did better as interest rates fell. Apple and Tesla both rose 3%.

“Equity investors continue to view the rise in interest rates primarily as ‘a good thing’ rather than a threat, although the tree was mixed up in several stocks and other parts of the market last week,” said Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer at Bleakley Advisory Group . “The advantages of vaccines versus the challenge of higher rates will be the theme this year.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Advisory Board unanimously decided on Sunday to recommend the use of Johnson & Johnson’s one-off Covid-19 vaccine for people aged 18 and over. The company expects to initially ship four million cans.

Last week the blue-chip Dow and the S&P 500 lost 1.7% and 2.5%, respectively. Tech-heavy Nasdaq fell more than 4% over the same period after suffering its worst one-day sell-off since October on Thursday. Technology companies rely on being able to borrow money at low interest rates to invest in future growth.

“The oversized rotation suggests that there may be a tactical reversal as returns calm down,” said Keith Parker, equity strategist at UBS, in a note. “The result should more than make up for headwinds over the course of the year, albeit with downward trends in this upward trend.”

On the stimulus front, the House passed a $ 1.9 trillion Covid Relief Act, the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, early Saturday. The Senate will now review the legislation.

Key averages rose in February on the back of a strong earnings season, positive news on the vaccine launch and hopes for another stimulus package.

The Dow was up 3.15% in February for its third positive month in four years. The S&P 500 was up 2.61% and the Nasdaq Composite was up nearly 1% for the fourth positive month in a row.

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Categories
Business

Shares Rally After Rout in Bonds Subsides: Stay Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Stocks on Wall Street rallied in early trading on Monday, following global markets higher as a rout in government bonds subsided.

The S&P 500 rose 1.5 percent while the Stoxx Europe 600 index was up by about the same amount. Over the weekend, U.S. federal regulators authorized the one-shot Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine, adding to the positive market sentiment.

The Senate this week will begin work on a $1.9 trillion relief package passed by the House on Saturday. Democrats in the Senate, which is evenly split, face political and procedural challenges. Lawmakers are aiming to send the bill to President Biden for enactment by March 14, when unemployment benefits will begin to expire for some jobless workers.

The 10-year yield on U.S. Treasury notes was at 1.43 percent, down from as high as 1.61 percent on Thursday. Globally, long-dated bond yields fell from Australia to Britain on Monday. Last week, rising yields and higher inflation expectations led some traders to question when central banks would have to pull back on their easy-money policies. And the Bank of England’s chief economist said central bankers needed to avoid being complacent about how difficult it might be to tame inflation.

The prospect of tighter monetary policy knocked stock indexes down from their recent highs. Last week, the S&P 500 fell nearly 2.5 percent while the Nasdaq fell nearly 5 percent as technology stocks lost value.

On Monday, the Nasdaq rose about 1.7 percent. “We do not expect the tech sell-off to extend much further, and continue to see value in the sector for longer-term investors,” strategists at UBS wrote in a note.

  • Homebuilders such as Persimmon, Barratt Developments and Taylor Wimpey were the biggest gainers in the FTSE 100 index ahead of the British government’s budget presentation on Wednesday, when the chancellor is expected to announce a new mortgage guarantee program to help people buy houses with small deposits.

  • Johnson & Johnson climbed about 1.5 percent. Over the weekend, regulators in the U.S. approved the company’s coronavirus vaccine for emergency use, making it the third vaccine to be authorized in the country.

  • Boeing rose 4 percent after United Airlines said it was adding 25 planes to its order for the 737 Max jet, bringing its total to 180 in the coming years, and that it had sped up the delivery timeline as it seeks to position itself for the expected recovery in travel. United also rose 4 percent.

Credit…Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, plans to introduce legislation on Monday that would tax the net worth of the wealthiest people in America, a proposal aimed at persuading President Biden and other Democrats to fund sweeping new federal spending programs by taxing the richest Americans.

Ms. Warren’s wealth tax would apply a 2 percent tax to individual net worth — including the value of stocks, houses, boats and anything else a person owns, after subtracting out any debts — above $50 million. It would add an additional 1 percent surcharge for net worth above $1 billion.

The proposal, which mirrors the plan Ms. Warren unveiled while seeking the 2020 presidential nomination, is not among the top revenue-raisers that Democratic leaders are considering to help offset Mr. Biden’s campaign proposals to spend trillions of dollars on infrastructure, education, child care, clean energy deployment, health care and other domestic initiatives. Unlike Ms. Warren, Mr. Biden pointedly did not endorse a wealth tax in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries.

But Ms. Warren is pushing colleagues to pursue such a plan, which has gained popularity with the public as the richest Americans reap huge gains while 10 million Americans remain out of work as a result of the pandemic.

Polls have consistently shown Ms. Warren’s proposal winning the support of more than three in five Americans, including a majority of Republican voters.

“A wealth tax is popular among voters on both sides for good reason: because they understand the system is rigged to benefit the wealthy and large corporations,” Ms. Warren said. “As Congress develops additional plans to help our economy, the wealth tax should be at the top of the list to help pay for these plans because of the huge amounts of revenue it would generate.”

She said she was confident that “lawmakers will catch up to the overwhelming majority of Americans who are demanding more fairness, more change, and who believe it’s time for a wealth tax.”

Mr. Biden did not propose any tax increases to offset the $1.9 trillion economic aid package that he hopes to sign later this month. Mr. Biden has said he will pay for long-term spending — as opposed to a temporary economic jolt — with tax increases on high earners and corporations.

Business groups and Republicans have already begun to raise concerns about Mr. Biden’s tax plans. Those same groups are not fans of Ms. Warren’s plan, which was a centerpiece of her 2020 Democratic presidential campaign.

Critics say the tax would be difficult for the federal government to calculate and enforce, that it would discourage investment and that it could be ruled unconstitutional by courts. Ms. Warren has amassed letters of support from constitutional scholars who say the plan would pass muster.

Berkshire Hathaway released its latest annual results on Saturday, and the accompanying letter to investors from Warren Buffett, the conglomerate’s chairman and chief executive, revealed a clear theme: The investor known as the Oracle of Omaha isn’t taking as many risks — or big swings at deal-making — as he used to, according to the DealBook newsletter.

Berkshire is spending more of its $138 billion in cash on smaller investments, rather than deploying it on the huge acquisitions that he famously made in the past. Berkshire bought back nearly $25 billion of its own shares last year, a record for a company that until recently was reluctant to spend its cash this way.

In his letter to investors, Mr. Buffett sang the praises of buybacks — at Berkshire and at the companies it invests in — writing, “As a sultry Mae West assured us: ‘Too much of a good thing can be … wonderful.’”

When it came to deal-making, Mr. Buffett admitted a big mistake in his last major corporate takeover. He wrote that the $37 billion he paid for Precision Castparts, a maker of airplane parts, was too much. (The 2016 transaction resulted in a $10 billion write-down last year.) “No one misled me in any way,” he wrote. “I was simply too optimistic.”

Berkshire’s biggest bets today include a $120 billion stake in Apple and majority stakes in Burlington Northern railroad and Berkshire Hathaway Energy. That relative conservatism comes as Berkshire’s stock has underperformed the S&P 500 in recent years.

Fed Board Governor Lael Brainard during a 2017 speech.Credit…Brian Snyder/Reuters

Lael Brainard, a governor on the Federal Reserve’s Washington-based board, said that the coronavirus pandemic made clear that the global financial system has some weak spots, and offered suggestions for fixing some of the top problems.

Ms. Brainard pointed out that when spooked investors dashed for cash last March, it caused strains in both short-term markets and the market for government debt, and it took big interventions from the Fed to stem the meltdown.

“A number of common-sense reforms are needed to address the unresolved structural vulnerabilities” in key markets, Ms. Brainard said, speaking from prepared remarks at a webcast event.

Some money market mutual funds, which companies and ordinary investors use to earn more interest than they would if they kept their cash in a savings account, saw massive outflows last year and required a Fed rescue — the second time money funds have needed an emergency intervention in a dozen years. Ms. Brainard suggested that solutions like swing pricing, which penalizes people who pull their cash out during times of trouble, are worth considering.

While banks held up pretty well amid the pandemic meltdown, Ms. Brainard said that strength was owed to post-financial crisis reforms that required big banks to hold shock-absorbing buffers. The Fed’s rescues also helped, she noted.

“Bank resilience benefited from the emergency interventions that calmed short-term funding markets, and from the range of emergency facilities that helped support credit flows to businesses and households,” she said, noting that bank capital fell at the onset of the crisis before rebounding later in the year.

Ms. Brainard’s tone seemed to contrast with that of her colleague, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Randal K. Quarles. Mr. Quarles suggested during a webinar last week that banks’ strong performance signals that efforts to limit their payouts to conserve capital during times of stress — such as the ones the Fed employed last year — should be rare.

But when it comes to the need for a re-examination of what happened in money market mutual funds, the two are more aligned.

“The March 2020 market turmoil highlighted some structural vulnerabilities” in the funds, Mr. Quarles said in a letter last week, written in his capacity as chair of the global Financial Stability Board. Mr. Quarles said the board will provide reform recommendations in July and a final report in October.

Heidelberg residents who give up their cars can ride public transportation free for a year.Credit…Felix Schmitt for The New York Times

Heidelberg, Germany, is at the forefront of a movement: the push to get rid of cars entirely.

Heidelberg, a city of 160,000 people on the Neckar River, is one of only six cities in Europe considered “innovators” by C40 Cities, an organization that promotes climate-friendly urban policies and whose chairman is Michael Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York. (The others are Oslo, Copenhagen, Venice, and Amsterdam and Rotterdam in the Netherlands.)

Eckart Würzner, Heidelberg’s mayor, is on a mission to make his city emission free, Jack Ewing reports for The New York Times. And he’s not a fan of electric vehicles — he wants to reduce dependence on cars, no matter where they get their juice.

Heidelberg is buying a fleet of hydrogen-powered buses and designing neighborhoods to discourage all vehicles and encourage walking. It is building a network of bicycle “superhighways” to the suburbs and bridges that would allow cyclists to bypass congested areas or cross the Neckar without having to compete for road space with motor vehicles. Residents who give up their cars get to ride public transportation free for a year.

“If you need a car, use car sharing,” Mr. Würzner said in an interview.

Battery-powered vehicles don’t pollute the air, but they take up just as much space as gasoline models. Eckart Würzner, Heidelberg’s mayor, complains that Heidelberg still suffers rush-hour traffic jams, even though only about 20 percent of residents get around by car.

“Commuters are the main problem we haven’t solved yet,” Mr. Würzner said. Traffic was heavy on a recent weekday, pandemic notwithstanding.

Some critics, including some ACLU chapters, say facial recognition is uniquely harmful and must be banned.Credit…Ting Shen for The New York Times

A police reform bill in Massachusetts has managed to strike a balance on regulating facial recognition, allowing law enforcement to harness the benefits of the tool while building in protections that might prevent the false arrests that have happened before, Kashmir Hill reports for The New York Times.

The bill, which goes into effect in July, creates new guardrails: Police first must get a judge’s permission before running a face recognition search, and then have someone from the state police, the F.B.I. or the Registry of Motor Vehicles perform the search. A local officer can’t just download a facial recognition app and do a search.

The law also creates a commission to study facial recognition policies and make recommendations, such as whether a criminal defendant should be told that they were identified using the technology.

Lawmakers, civil liberties advocates and police chiefs have debated whether and how to use the technology because of concerns about both privacy and accuracy. But figuring out how to regulate it is tricky. So far, that has generally meant an all-or-nothing approach.

City councils in Oakland, Calif., Portland, Ore., San Francisco, Minneapolis and elsewhere have banned police use of the technology, largely because of bias in how it works. Studies in recent years by MIT researchers and the federal government found that many facial recognition algorithms are most accurate for white men, but less so for everyone else.

WeWork could soon go public following a $1.5 billion settlement with co-founder Adam Neumann.Credit…Simon Newman/Reuters

SoftBank said on Friday that it had settled its legal dispute with Adam Neumann, a WeWork co-founder, opening the way for the co-working company to go public just 16 months after SoftBank rescued it from collapse.

SoftBank had offered to buy $3 billion of stock from WeWork shareholders, including Mr. Neumann, who stepped down as C.E.O. during the company’s disastrous attempt at listing in 2019. In April, as the coronavirus was emptying WeWork offices, SoftBank said that it wouldn’t go ahead with the purchase, prompting Mr. Neumann to sue.

As part of the agreement, SoftBank is now spending only $1.5 billion on the stock, according to two people with knowledge of the settlement. But the lower bill is because SoftBank is cutting the number of shares it will buy in half; that means Mr. Neumann will get $480 million instead of up to $960 million. (SoftBank has invested well over $10 billion in WeWork, making it the company’s largest shareholder and allowing it to operate despite losses.)

According to these people, SoftBank also pledged to pay $50 million for Mr. Neumann’s legal fees, to extend a $430 million loan it made to him by five years and to pay the last $50 million of a $185 million consulting fee it owed him.

Settling the dispute removes a big obstacle to taking WeWork public. SoftBank has been in talks to merge with BowX Acquisition, a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, run by Vivek Ranadivé, the founder of Tibco Software and owner of the N.B.A.’s Sacramento Kings.

Such a deal, which would give WeWork a public listing, raises some crucial questions.

SoftBank owns 70 percent of WeWork’s shares but has direct control of just under half of shareholder votes. Would those numbers change after an offering? Who does control WeWork?

Would investors balk at WeWork’s financial performance, again? It’s not clear how the company has performed recently; it last publicly disclosed a full set of financials some 18 months ago. A glut of office space is coming onto the market, which might be more attractive to companies than taking WeWork space. And individuals may be less likely to use a co-working space now that they’ve gotten used to working from home.

Categories
Health

Why I Overcame My Vaccine Hesitancy

At the mass vaccination site I went to in Brooklyn, everyone I met was cheerful, patient, and reassuring, even the young woman who checked me in and couldn’t find me on her 3pm schedule. “Don’t worry,” she said soothingly, “you will get the vaccine.”

At the next window, a young man from Nigeria checked my ID and Medicare card and found out what had happened. Turns out I accidentally booked an appointment at 3am and didn’t know the website was open 24/7. Another “don’t worry,” and I went to see a young Florida technician who painlessly injected the Moderna vaccine into my left arm.

I then sat in a holding tent for 15 minutes to make sure I wouldn’t have any serious reactions. The next day I received a text: “Hello Jane, it’s time for your daily v-safe check-in” and a link to a CDC site that asked: How are you today? (Good, fair, bad); Did you have a fever today or did you have a fever? (Yes No); followed by symptom testing, first at the injection site for pain, redness, swelling or itching and then generally for chills, headache, joint pain, muscle or body aches, tiredness or exhaustion, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain and rash or any other symptoms that I wanted to report.

Finally, I was asked some general health effects related to my ability to work and carry out my normal daily activities and whether I needed to see a doctor. I received the same text at the same time every day for more than a week and also received a link when I wanted to submit a report to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System.

The second dose, given 34 days later, went even more smoothly. By then I had spoken to dozens of other people of different ages who had both taken recordings. Only two reported bad reactions – fever, nausea, extreme fatigue – that lasted a day or two. I was prepared for the worst, but it never happened. My arm, shoulder, and neck hurt the first night, but most of the pain was gone by the next morning. Although my son was on call if I couldn’t walk my dog, his help was not needed. I was even able to swim that afternoon.

Categories
Business

Oatly enters Starbucks cafes nationwide because it prepares for a giant yr

Starbucks will now serve Oatlys oat milk.

Starbucks

Oat milk has officially become mainstream.

Starbucks cafes across the country will stock Oatly’s dairy replacements starting Tuesday, the coffee chain said on Monday. The oat milk is added to Starbucks’ spring menu with the new Iced Brown Sugar Oatmilk Shaken Espresso.

For Oatly, coffee shops are a crucial way of presenting the characteristic product to consumers. Consumers can try oat milk – usually for a small additional fee that is common for milk alternatives – without committing to purchase an entire carton.

The approach has helped Oatly build and retain a large fan base even as new competitors such as Chobani or private label products hit the market. Last year, oat milk sales in the United States rose more than 170% in the 52 weeks ending February 13, compared to the same time a year ago, according to Nielsen data.

The coffee giant’s permanent menu addition is the latest big announcement for Oatly, which debuted in U.S. coffee shops just five years ago. The Swedish company aired its first US commercial in early February with a Super Bowl spot in which its CEO sang about oat milk. On Tuesday, Oatly announced that it had applied for an IPO in the United States in confidence

Starbucks added oat milk from Oatly competitor Elmhurst in 1925 at select upscale reserve locations. Last year a pilot project began in the Midwest to test a wider audience with Oatly’s version. The coffee chain has expanded its menu to include more plant-based alternatives in order to win new customers and to be more environmentally friendly.

Coffee shops have always played an important role in Oatly’s expansion strategy. From 2016, the coffee chain Intelligentsia of the third wave will be serving Oatly in their cafes. The company focused on convincing baristas and coffee drinkers of the creamy texture and foaming ability of oat milk before it hit grocery stores.

A shortage in 2018 led to eBay listings for Oatly boxes at sky-high prices and motivated the company to open its first U.S. facility in New Jersey the following year. Oatly has also expanded into new categories such as: B. Oat-based versions of yogurt and ice cream.

Categories
Politics

How Professional-Trump Forces Pushed a Lie About Antifa on the Capitol Riot

Ms. Ingraham, who told Fox News viewers about the “anti-fascist” uprising, later shared on Twitter that the Washington Times article she quoted had been exposed. It did not issue an on-air correction. Mr Herman, the Limbaugh innkeeper who speculated on Antifa, wrote in an email Saturday, “It was clear that a large group of Trump supporters entered the Capitol and attacked people.” But he continued to falsely claim that antifa activists planned to pose as Trump supporters.

Of the 290 people charged with the attack, at least 27 are links to far-right groups such as the Oath Keepers or the Proud Boys. Others have ties to neo-confederate and white supremacist units or are clear supporters of the QAnon conspiracy movement. The vast majority expressed an ardent belief that Mr Trump was the rightful election winner.

On January 8, the FBI announced that there was no evidence that supporters of Antifa known to aggressively counter-protest demonstrations against white supremacists participated in the Capitol mob. And on January 13, Representative Kevin McCarthy, the leader of the minority in the Republican House, spoke at the impeachment trial of Mr. Trump, saying, “Some say the riot was caused by Antifa. There is absolutely no evidence of this, and conservatives should be the first to say so. “

But the next day, the arrest of a protester named John Sullivan sparked another surge in right-wing media over Antifa and the uprising.

Mr Sullivan called himself a Utah “activist” and CNN mistakenly featured him as a “leftist activist” when he appeared on the network on Jan. 6. (He had sold footage to CNN and other news outlets showing the shooting of Ashli ​​Babbitt, a rioter who died in the Capitol.) Conspiracy agency Gateway Pundit and Mr. Trump’s attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani arrested Mr. Sullivan, to re-accuse Antifa of posts that garnered tens of thousands of likes and shares on Facebook and Twitter.

In reality, Mr. Sullivan was an attention seeker whose policies were fungible and seemingly altered based on the protest he was attending at the time, according to activists from Seattle, Salt Lake City and Portland, Oregon who had warned him for months about the Uprising in the Capitol.

Categories
Health

Charts present how vaccines are working

Pharmacist Murtaza Abdulkarim (L) administers a dose of the AstraZeneca / Oxford Covid-19 vaccine to a patient at the Al-Abbas Islamic Center in Birmingham, West Midlands on February 4, 2021 at a temporary vaccination center manned by pharmacists and pharmacist assistants.

Oli Scarff | AFP | Getty Images

LONDON – The first real data from the UK vaccination program has given some insight into the effectiveness of vaccines against Covid-19.

Developed by Pfizer and BioNTech, the vaccine was the first vaccine to be approved and launched in the UK in December. Those over 80, health workers and nursing home staff were the first to be vaccinated. This was soon followed by the shot developed by the Briton AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford.

Here are four charts summarizing how effective these vaccines are and how they are doing their part in fighting the pandemic:

Falling deaths in those over 85

Since older people were the first to be vaccinated from December 8th, it is noticeable that deaths from Covid are falling the fastest in these age groups. The graph below shows deaths from Covid in Scotland, with a decline in the over-85 group as the vaccination program gained momentum. Click here for the full details.

An increase in antibodies

A blood test published last week by Imperial College London found that nearly 14% of the UK population now have antibodies to the coronavirus. While this does not necessarily mean immunity, the results of the people vaccinated and the level of their antibody levels were interesting. 18,000 participants in the 155,000-person study were vaccinated and the results are shown in the table below. Click here for the full details.

A separate study in England found that the highest percentage of people who tested positive for antibodies was aged 80 and over, at 41%, which, according to statisticians, “is most likely due to the high vaccination rate in this group”.

The real effectiveness of the Pfizer shot

Public Health England has done a thorough study of how effective the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine has been in protecting against symptomatic disease. The table below shows that a dose is 57% effective against symptomatic Covid-19 disease in people over 80 years of age (from 28 days after the first dose).

The effectiveness of the vaccine is calculated using a mathematical statistic called the odds ratio. Click here for full data and methods.

… and the AstraZeneca vaccine

Public Health Scotland also collected data on the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine for all ages. The graph shows that the Pfizer BioNTech and Oxford AstraZeneca vaccines reduce the risk of Covid-19 hospitalization by up to 85% and 94%, respectively, in the fourth week after receiving a first dose. Click here for the dates and the full methodology.

Since the start of the vaccination rollout, the UK has targeted all four key priority groups. The goal is now to vaccinate all over 50s by mid-April and all adults by the end of July, two months ahead of an earlier goal.

As of Sunday, over 20 million people had received their first vaccine dose and nearly 800,000 had received both doses, government data said.

The UK vaccination program was widely hailed as a triumph amid tragedy. The UK has the fifth highest number of infections in the world after the US, India, Brazil and Russia with over 4.1 million registered infections and 123,083 deaths. This is the fifth highest number of deaths in the world, according to Johns Hopkins University.

—CNBC’s Bryn Bache contributed to this article.

Categories
Business

China Costs Forward With a Nationwide Digital Forex

But no major power is as far as China. His early steps could signal where the rest of the world is going with digital currencies.

“This is more than just money,” said Yaya Fanusie, a staff member at the Center for Economic and Financial Power, a think tank and author of a recent paper on the Chinese currency. “It’s about developing new tools to collect data and use that data to make the Chinese economy smarter and based on real-time information.”

While the Chinese government has not said if and when it will officially roll out the eCNY nationwide, several officials have mentioned that it is ready for tourists arriving for the Beijing 2022 Olympics. Recent articles and speeches from officials at People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, underscored the project’s ambitions and desire to be the first.

“The right to issue and control digital currencies is becoming a ‘new battlefield’ of competition between sovereign states,” said a September article in China Finance, the central bank’s magazine. “China has many advantages and opportunities in issuing fiat digital currencies, so it should accelerate to take the first path.”

The People’s Bank of China did not respond to a request for comment.

The development of a national digital currency began in 2014 when the People’s Bank of China set up an in-house group to work on one soon after Bitcoin caught the country’s attention. In 2016, the central bank created a division called the Digital Currency Institute. Last year, according to research by Sino Global Capital, a financial investment firm, trials of eCNY were started in the cities of Shenzhen, Suzhou, Xiongan and Chengdu.

People invited to trial through a lottery on WeChat or other apps could click a link and receive a balance of 200 electronic yuan, which was sometimes displayed in their banking app over an image of an old-fashioned Chinese banknote with Mao Zedong’s face . To spend the money, users can use an eCNY app to scan a retailer’s QR code or create a QR code that the retailer can scan.

ECNY’s design borrows few minor technical elements from Bitcoin and does not use what is known as blockchain technology, a ledger-like system that most cryptocurrencies rely on, officials at People’s Bank of China have said.

Categories
Entertainment

14 Black Celebrities on The place They Discover Pleasure

After a year of frontline black women fighting for freedom at the same time, POPSUGAR is honoring their resilience in this month of black history with a celebration of the light they continue to find in dark times.

Black stars are constantly asked about the current state of the world and its people, but questions like “What do you enjoy?” are much rarer. So much so that many of them enjoy the variety when the question is asked. This indicates how often society prioritizes the happiness and well-being of black women (spoiler alert: very rare). This story, however, is just the opposite: a chance for black women to stand in the warmth of what fills them.

We asked some of our favorite shining stars where they are currently finding the light. From Saweetie’s love for oysters, to Angelica Ross’ deep appreciation for black drag culture, to Tiffany Haddish as Tiffany Haddish’s biggest fan, here are 14 delightful answers to a question that black women are not asked enough.

– Additional reporting from Monica Sisavat, Grayson Gilcrease, Kelsie Gibson, Chanel Vargas, Mekishana Pierre, Karenna Meredith and Lindsay Miller

Categories
Business

UK search thriller particular person contaminated with Brazil Covid variant

A worker who distributes vaccination cards as members of the public will be vaccinated at a drive-through vaccine center in Hyde near Manchester, UK on Friday January 8, 2021.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

UK health officials are keen to track down one in six people infected with a contagious variant of the coronavirus that was originally identified in Brazil.

Up to six cases of the new strain – named P.1 and classified as a “variant of concern” by global health experts – have been identified in the UK, three in Scotland and three in England.

What worries officials, however, is that one of the three cases found in England has not been traced. The government issued a statement on Sunday noting that two of the cases in England came from a South Gloucestershire household and had traveled to Brazil in the past.

The cases in South Gloucestershire, southeast England, were quickly followed up by a team from Public Health England and their contacts were identified and retested, the government said. All passengers on the same flight – Swiss Air flight LX318 from Sao Paulo via Zurich to London Heathrow on February 10 – were also followed by officials.

As a precautionary measure, health officials are stepping up testing of asymptomatic cases in the South Gloucestershire area and increasing sequencing of positive samples from the area.

The mysterious case

However, further research is ongoing into a separate third case of the variant identified in England. The health authorities are calling on anyone who did not receive the result of a Covid test carried out on February 12 or 13 to report.

“The person did not fill out their test registration card, so no follow-up details are available,” the government stated.

“We therefore ask anyone who took a test on February 12th or 13th and has not yet received the result or has an incomplete test registration card to call 119 in England or 0300 303 2713 in Scotland for assistance as soon as possible receive.”

UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock will hold a meeting later Monday to inform UK lawmakers of all parties of the variant, the BBC reported.

Why are officials concerned?

Health officials are concerned because the variant first identified in Brazil is believed to be a more contagious strain of the coronavirus and could cause more severe infections. There are also concerns that it could make coronavirus vaccines less effective. However, this is not confirmed and research is being carried out to see if it is.

While scientists are doing this research, vaccine manufacturers are developing booster vaccinations for target variants.

The UK is already grappling with the spread of a far more contagious variant, which was responsible for an increase in cases over the winter. The strain has since become dominant in the country and has spread worldwide.

The latest weekly report from the World Health Organization said 101 countries have now reported cases of the variant first identified in the UK.

Regarding the strain found in Brazil, it said 29 countries have reported cases so far. This P.1 variant was first identified in four travelers from Brazil to Japan in January during a routine screening at Haneda Airport outside Tokyo.

The strain has been classified as “Concerning” because it has some crucial mutations with the variant first identified in South Africa. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the P.1 variant has a total of 17 unique mutations and was first detected in the US at the end of January.

regulate

When the first cases of this variant were discovered in the UK, people traveling from abroad had to self-isolate at home for 10 days.

However, that changed on February 15th and now travelers to the UK must be quarantined in hotels for 10 days at their own expense. In mid-January, Great Britain banned travelers from various South American countries from entering the country unless they had a right of residence.

The move was an attempt to prevent the spread of infectious variants and potentially undermine the previously successful introduction of the coronavirus vaccine in the country. The UK reached another milestone on Sunday after vaccinating 20 million people with a first dose of a Covid vaccine.

Dr. Susan Hopkins, PHE’s Strategic Response Director for Covid-19 and NHS Test and Trace Medical Advisor, said the new cases in the UK were identified thanks to the country’s advanced sequencing capabilities, “which means we are finding more variants and mutations than many other countries.” and are therefore able to act quickly. “

“The most important thing is that whatever the variant, Covid-19 spreads the same way. That means the measures taken to contain the spread won’t change,” she said, advocating good personal hygiene and leaving only the house for essential reasons.

Scotland’s Falls

The three cases identified in Scotland were found in people returning to Aberdeen from Brazil via Paris and London. These cases are not related to the three cases in England.

As required at the time, the individuals entered self-isolation upon their return to Scotland and subsequently tested positive for coronavirus. The people then self-isolate for the required 10-day period, the Scottish Government said in a statement.

Due to possible concerns about this variant, other passengers on the flight from London to Aberdeen were contacted, the Scottish government found.

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Health

Issues To Do At Dwelling

Here you will find a selection of the events of the week and information on how to set them (all times are east). Note that events can change after they are published.

Check out an episode of “Your Magic,” a new podcast by Parcast. Every Monday, Michelle Tea, a writer and host on the show, will explore mysticism and spirituality with guests including Phoebe Bridgers, Roxane Gay and Brittany Howard. Each episode includes a tarot card reading and interview, as well as a quote from a spiritual practitioner and the opportunity for listeners to have a tarot reading from Ms. Tea. This podcast is free and available on Spotify.

When At any time

Where thisisyourmagic.com/latest-episodes

Take a bag of popcorn and Check out one (or more!) Of the 78 films screened at the Athena Film Festival 2021. The annual festival, a collaboration between women and Hollywood, an organization dedicated to gender diversity and inclusion in the film industry, Barnard College’s Athena Center for Leadership explores and celebrates the authority of women in film. This year’s lineup includes “Test Patterns” which, in her New York Times review, compel film critic Devika Girish to “question our assumptions about what rape and victim look like – on screen and in life.” Films are premiered throughout the month. Tickets are $ 12 per movie, and viewers have 48 hours to finish a movie.

When Anytime until March 31st

Where watch.athenafilmfestival.com

Learn the science behind pendulums and create your own (if you wish) during this kid-friendly demonstration. This event is hosted by an expert from the Houston Children’s Museum and sponsored by chemical and fuel company Flint Hills Resources. She shows the audience how to make a pendulum out of household items. Museum educator Andrea Hernandez also answers questions to the audience by email. This event is free; No registration is required. (A recording of the event will be available on the museum’s YouTube channel.)

When 2:45 p.m.

Where www.facebook.com/cmhouston

Join the Nobel Prize Winner Kazuo Ishiguro in conversation with writer and critic Alex Clark. At this global live streaming event, Mr. Ishiguro will discuss his new novel, Clare and the Sun, his first since winning a Nobel Prize, and answer questions from the audience. Tickets for this event, presented by The Guardian Live, start at $ 10.

When 14 o’clock

Where theguardian.com/guardianlive

Relax with an evening yoga class With Eric Mosley, the founder of Black Mat Yoga. Looking to expand the world of yoga and wellbeing, Mr. Mosley will be teaching a 45 minute flow class that is suitable for both beginners and experienced yogis. After the class, students are encouraged to have a drink of their choice for a virtual toast and talk about their yoga practice or whatever is on their mind. The class is $ 10 and registration closes at 5:00 p.m. Attendance is limited to 50, but Mr. Mosley teaches the same class every Wednesday.

When 6 p.m.

Where blackmat.yoga/schedule

Spend the evening, “What becomes of love?” a new piece by the choreographer Sonya Tayeh. The performance with dancers from the American Ballet Theater and original music by Rhye, a project by singer Mike Milosh, was created while Ms. Tayeh and the dancers were in a “ballet bubble” in New York State. In collaboration between the American Ballet Theater and the music venue National Sawdust, the show will be followed by a conversation with the artists. This event is free.

When 6 p.m.

Where live.nationalsawdust.org

Learn a cabbage recipe and prepare your garden for spring a cooking and gardening course from the United States Botanic Garden. Every week, sisters Danielle Cook, a nutritionist and cooking teacher, and Adrienne Cook, a gardening and cooking author, share a recipe followed by gardening tips. This week Danielle will be demonstrating a meal of cabbage and Adrienne will share ideas for preparing a home garden for spring. This event is free.

When 12 o’clock

Where usbg.gov/cooking

electricity “F * ck7thGrade” a theatrical performance of rock ‘n’ roll from the Singer-songwriter Jill Sobule. Directed by Lisa Peterson and with a book by Liza Birkenmeier, this autobiographical show explores her teenage years with and about Ms. Sobule. Tickets to this pre-recorded event, for viewers 15 years and older and presented by the City Theater in Pittsburgh, are priced at $ 15.

When At any time

Where citytheatrecompany.org/play/fck7thgrade

Put your editing skills to the test with the National Museum for Women in Wikipedia Wikipedia Art and Feminism virtual edit-a-thon. This event, which is also presented by Wikimedia DC, focuses on enriching and improving Wikipedia entries by well-known artists and art-related figures, with a special focus on artists with color and women of African descent whose works are in the museum’s collection are located. People of all gender identities are invited to participate in this free event. Registration is required. Participation is limited to 80.