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Jobless Claims Tick Up, Exhibiting a Lengthy Highway to Restoration: Stay Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Wes Frazer for The New York Times

A year after they first rocketed upward, jobless claims may finally be returning to earth.

More than 714,000 people filed for state unemployment benefits last week, the Labor Department said Thursday. That was up slightly from the week before, but still among the lowest weekly totals since the pandemic began.

In addition, 237,000 people filed for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a federal program that covers people who don’t qualify for state benefits programs. That number, too, has been falling.

Jobless claims remain high by historical standards, and are far above the norm before the pandemic, when around 200,000 people a week were filing for benefits. Applications have improved only gradually — even after the recent declines, the weekly figure is modestly below where it was last fall.

But economists are optimistic that further improvement is ahead as the vaccine rollout accelerates and more states lift restrictions on business activity. Fewer companies are laying off workers, and hiring has picked up, meaning that people who lose their jobs are more likely to find new ones quickly.

“We could actually finally see the jobless claims numbers come down because there’s enough job creation to offset the layoffs,” said Julia Pollak, a labor economist at the job site ZipRecruiter.

But Ms. Pollak cautioned that benefits applications would not return to normal overnight. Even as many companies resume normal operations, others are discovering that the pandemic has permanently disrupted their business model.

“There are still a lot of business closures and a lot of layoffs that have yet to happen,” she said. “The repercussions of this pandemic are still rippling through this economy.”

Shoppers in Berlin’s Alexanderplatz. Germany and other countries have cut their value-added taxes to encourage consumer spending.Credit…Lena Mucha for The New York Times

The European Central Bank’s chief economist argued on Thursday that fears of a big rise in inflation are overblown, a sign that the people who control interest rates in the eurozone are likely to keep them very low for some time to come.

The comments — by Philip Lane, an influential member of the central bank’s Governing Council whose job includes briefing other members on the economic outlook — are an attempt to calm bond investors who are nervous that the end of the pandemic will lead to high inflation.

Fueling their fears, inflation in the eurozone rose to an annual rate of 1.3 percent in March from 0.9 percent in February, according to official data released on Wednesday, the fastest increase in prices in more than a year.

Market-based interest rates have been rising because investors worry that President Biden’s $2 trillion stimulus program will provoke a broad increase in prices for years to come. The interest rates that prevail on bond markets ripple through the financial system and can make mortgages and other types of borrowing more expensive, creating a drag on economic growth.

Despite big monthly swings in inflation during the last year, the average had been remarkably stable at an annual rate of about 1 percent, Mr. Lane wrote in a blog post on the central bank’s website on Thursday. That is well below the European Central Bank’s target of 2 percent.

“The volatility in inflation over 2020 and 2021 can be attributed to a host of temporary factors that should not affect medium-term inflation dynamics,” Mr. Lane wrote.

That is another way of saying that the European Central Bank is not going to panic about short-lived fluctuations in inflation and put the brakes on the eurozone economy anytime soon.

On the contrary, Mr. Lane’s analysis suggests that the European Central Bank will continue trying to push inflation toward the 2 percent target. In March, the central bank said it would increase its purchases of government and corporate bonds to try to keep a lid on market-based interest rates.

Mr. Lane said it was no surprise to see “considerable volatility in inflation during the pandemic period.” He attributed the ups and downs to quirky factors that are not likely to recur.

Germany and some other countries cut their value-added taxes to encourage consumer spending, then raised them again later. The price of fuel fluctuated wildly. People spent almost nothing on travel, but increased spending on home exercise equipment or products that they needed to work from home. That affected the way inflation is calculated and made the annual rate look higher, Mr. Lane said.

“The medium-term outlook for inflation remains subdued,” he wrote, “and closing the gap to our inflation aim will set the agenda for the Governing Council in the coming years.”

Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, the Saudi oil minister, has argued that increasing oil output too fast would be risky.Credit…via Reuters

OPEC and its allies, including Russia, are meeting by videoconference Thursday to discuss whether to ease production curbs on oil as countries around the world try to expand from pandemic lockdowns.

Analysts say recent events will support the views of Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, the Saudi oil minister, who has argued for caution in increasing supply, noting the risks of swamping the market. But other outcomes are possible at the meeting of the group known as OPEC Plus, including modest increases and even cuts in oil production,

France’s reimposition of a national lockdown, announced Wednesday, underlines persistent doubts about the pace of recovery from the pandemic, as have rising case numbers in the United States.

After modest increases when the Suez Canal was recently blocked by a cargo ship, oil prices were rising again on Thursday, with Brent crude, the global benchmark, more than 1 percent higher, to more than $63 a barrel.

“All signs seemingly point to the group maintaining current production levels,” Helima Croft, head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, an investment bank, wrote in a note to clients on Wednesday.

Yet pressure may also come to increase supply. Members of the OPEC Plus group are withholding an estimated eight million barrels of a day, or about 9 percent of current global consumption. As the global economy recovers, it will become increasingly difficult for the Saudis to persuade others to restrain supplies.

By: Ella Koeze·Data delayed at least 15 minutes·Source: FactSet

Wall Street’s rally continued on Thursday as tech shares extended their gains. Shares in Europe and Asia were also higher, as traders focused on optimism about the economic recovery.

The S&P 500 rose 0.8 percent in early trading, on track for a record close, while the Nasdaq composite gained 1.8 percent.

Bond yields pulled further back from their recent 14-month high. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell to 1.69 percent.

Adding to the optimism about the economy, a measure of manufacturing activity rose to its highest since 1983, the Institute for Supply Management said.

New data released on Thursday showed a slight rise in claims for unemployment benefits, though the data from the week before showed claims at the lowest since the start of the pandemic. On Friday, the Labor Department will publish its monthly jobs report for March.

  • On Wednesday, President Biden laid out a $2 trillion infrastructure plan, which included money for a range of activities, including repairing roads and bridges, building affordable housing and caregiving facilities, and expanding access to broadband. It would be paid for by an increase in corporate taxes, undoing some of the cut by his predecessor, President Donald J. Trump.

  • The infrastructure plan also includes spending about $50 billion on the semiconductor industry, where a global shortage in chips has disrupted car manufacturing. Shares in Micron Technology, an Idaho-based chip maker, rose nearly 5 percent in premarket trading.

  • The plan includes $174 billion to encourage the manufacture and purchase of electric vehicles. Tesla shares rose 2.4 percent in early trading and ChargePoint Holdings, which has a large network of electric-vehicle charing stations, rose as much as 14 percent, adding to a 19 percent increase on Wednesday.

  • Most European stock indexes were higher even as more lockdowns were announced in the region. In France, restrictions have been expanded to more regions and schools will close for several weeks. In Italy, business closures will extend until the end of April. But a series of reports published on Thursday showed manufacturing activity picking up in Europe.

  • Oil prices rose ahead of a meeting between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, at which they are set to decide production quotas for May. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, climbed 2.7 percent to just above $60 a barrel.

  • QuantumScape, a California-based start-up working on a technology that could make batteries cheaper, said it had reached a technical requirement that would clear the way for a $100 million investment by Volkswagen. QuantumScape’s shares jumped 16 percent in early trading.

  • On Friday, markets will be closed in the United States, Europe and some other countries for Good Friday.

The occupancy rate in nursing homes in the fourth quarter of 2020 was down 11 percentage points from the first quarter, but there are hurdles to staying out of facilities.Credit…Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

The pandemic has intensified a spotlight on long-running questions about how communities can do a better job supporting seniors who need care but want to live outside a nursing home.

The coronavirus had taken the lives of 181,000 people in U.S. nursing homes, assisted living and other long-term care facilities through last weekend, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation — 33 percent of the national toll.

The occupancy rate in nursing homes in the fourth quarter of 2020 was 75 percent, down 11 percentage points from the first quarter, according to the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care, a research group. The shift may not be permanent, but this much is clear: As the aging of the nation accelerates, most communities need to do much more to become age-friendly, said Jennifer Molinsky, senior research associate at the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard.

“It’s about all the services that people can access, whether that’s the accessibility and affordability of housing, or transportation and supports that can be delivered in the home,” she said.

But there are hurdles for those who wish to stay out of a facility, Mark Miller reports for The New York Times:

  • A major shortage of age-friendly housing in the United States will present problems for seniors who wish to stay in their homes. By 2034, 34 percent of households will be headed by someone over 65, according to the Harvard center. Yet in 2011, just 3.5 percent of homes had single-floor living, no-step entry and extra-wide halls and doors for wheelchair access, according to Harvard’s latest estimates.

  • Medicare does not pay for most long-term care services, regardless of where they happen; reimbursement is limited to a person’s first 100 days in a skilled nursing facility. Medicaid, which covers only people with very low incomes, has long been the nation’s largest funder of long-term care. From its inception, the program was required to cover care in nursing facilities but not at home or in a community setting. “There’s a bias toward institutions,” said Judith Solomon, a senior fellow specializing in health at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Adam Bouhmad, second from right, has helped low-income families in Baltimore get affordable internet service through his Waves project.Credit…Jared Soares for The New York Times

A year after the pandemic turned the nation’s digital divide into an education emergency, President Biden is making affordable broadband a top priority, comparing it to the effort to spread electricity across the country. His $2 trillion infrastructure plan, announced on Wednesday, includes $100 billion to extend fast internet access to every home.

The money is meant to improve the economy by enabling all Americans to work, get medical care and take classes from wherever they live. Although the government has spent billions on the digital divide in the past, the efforts have failed to close it partly because people in different areas have different problems. Affordability is the main culprit in urban and suburban areas. In many rural areas, internet service isn’t available at all because of the high costs of installation.

“We’ll make sure every single American has access to high-quality, affordable, high speed internet,” Mr. Biden said in a speech on Wednesday. “And when I say affordable, I mean it. Americans pay too much for internet. We will drive down the price for families who have service now.”

Longtime advocates of universal broadband say the plan, which requires congressional approval, may finally come close to fixing the digital divide, a stubborn problem first identified and named by regulators during the Clinton administration. The plight of unconnected students during the pandemic added urgency.

“This is a vision document that says every American needs access and should have access to affordable broadband,” said Blair Levin, who directed the 2010 National Broadband Plan at the Federal Communications Commission. “And I haven’t heard that before from a White House to date.”

Some advocates for expanded broadband access cautioned that Mr. Biden’s plan might not entirely solve the divide between the digital haves and have-nots.

The plan promises to give priority to municipal and nonprofit broadband providers but would still rely on private companies to install cables and erect cell towers to far reaches of the country. One concern is that the companies won’t consider the effort worth their time, even with all the money earmarked for those projects. During the electrification boom of the 1920s, private providers were reluctant to install poles and string lines hundreds of miles into sparsely populated areas.

Taxpayers who received unemployment benefits last year — but who filed their federal tax returns before a new tax break became available — could receive an automatic refund as early as May, the Internal Revenue Service said on Wednesday.

The latest pandemic relief legislation — signed into law on March 11, in the thick of tax season — made the first $10,200 of unemployment benefits tax-free in 2020 for people with modified adjusted incomes of less than $150,000. (Married taxpayers filing jointly can exclude up to $20,400.)

But some Americans had already filed their tax returns by March and have been waiting for official agency guidance. Millions of U.S. workers filed for unemployment last year, but the I.R.S. said it was still determining how many workers affected by the tax change had already filed their tax returns.

On Wednesday, the I.R.S. confirmed that it would automatically recalculate the correct amount of benefits subject to taxation — and any overpayment will be refunded or applied to any other outstanding taxes owed. The first refunds are expected to be issued in May and will continue into the summer.

The I.R.S. said it would begin processing the simpler returns first, or those eligible for up to $10,200 in excluded benefits, and then would turn to returns for joint filers and others with more complex returns.

There is no need for those affected to file an amended return unless the calculations make the taxpayer newly eligible for additional federal credits and deductions not already included on the original tax return, the agency said. Those taxpayers may want to review their state tax returns as well, the I.R.S. said.

People who still haven’t filed and expect to do so electronically can simply answer the questions asked by their online tax preparer, which will factor in the new tax break when they file. The agency provided an updated worksheet and additional guidance in March for taxpayers that prefer paper.

Microsoft’s HoloLens headsets, demonstrated above in 2017, will equip soldiers with night vision, thermal vision and audio communication.Credit…Elaine Thompson/Associated Press

Microsoft said Wednesday that it would begin producing more than 120,000 augmented reality headsets for Army soldiers under a contract that could be worth up to $21.9 billion.

The HoloLens headsets use a technology called the Integrated Visual Augmentation System, which will equip soldiers wearing them with night vision, thermal vision and audio communication. The devices also have sensors that help soldiers target opponents in battle.

The deal is likely to create waves inside Microsoft, where some employees have objected to working with the Pentagon. Employees at other big tech companies, like Google, have also rejected what they say is the weaponization of their technology.

But Microsoft has long courted Defense Department work, including a $10 billion contract to build a cloud-computing system. Amazon had been seen as a front-runner to win the contract, but the Defense Department chose Microsoft.

Amazon claimed that President Donald J. Trump had interfered in the process because of his feud with Jeff Bezos, Amazon’s chief executive and the owner of The Washington Post. A legal fight over the contract is still active.

Soldiers have tested the Microsoft headsets for two years, the company said. The Army said the devices would be used in combat and training.

Microsoft said its testing of the headsets had helped the Defense Department’s “efforts to modernize the U.S. military by taking advantage of advanced technology and new innovations not available to military.”

The devices will “provide the improved situational awareness, target engagement and informed decision-making necessary” to overcome current and future adversaries, the Army said in a news release.

In 2018, Microsoft won a $480 million bid to make prototypes of the headsets. The Army said Wednesday that the new contract to produce them on a larger scale was for five years, with the option to add up to five more years.

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Retirees able to hit the street ought to test their Medicare protection

aldomurillo | E + | Getty Images

Retired, Vaccinated, and Ready to Hit the Street? Don’t forget to check if your Medicare plan will travel with you.

While coverage when away from home will depend in part on where you are going, it will also depend on the specifics of your coverage. Whether the care you receive is routine or emergency can also play a role.

Around 70% of people 65 and over have now received their first Covid shot, and 43% are fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As more people get vaccinated against the virus, the people who huddled together over the past year are thinking about travel again.

Here’s what you should know about the differences in Medicare coverage outside of your home.

The essentials

Basic or original Medicare consists of Part A (health insurance) and Part B (outpatient care). Individuals who choose to keep this coverage rather than opting for a benefit plan usually combine it with a standalone prescription drug plan (Part D).

If this is your situation, coverage when traveling in the US and its territories is pretty straightforward: you can go to any doctor or hospital that accepts Medicare (most do), whether for routine care or an emergency. When you venture beyond US borders, it gets tougher.

“When you travel outside of the United States, Medicare only covers you in very limited or infrequent circumstances,” said Danielle Roberts, co-founder of insurance company Boomer Benefits.

More from the new path to retirement:
Required minimum distributions are back – and different
How marginal and effective tax rates differ
How social security services have changed during the pandemic

These exceptions include when you are on a ship in the territorial waters bordering the country – within six hours of a U.S. port – or traveling from state to state, but the nearest hospital for treatment is in a foreign country (i.e., a foreign country) H. You are in Canada while traveling to Alaska from the 48 contiguous states.

Note that in light of the ongoing pandemic, the State Department has plenty of advice to travel abroad. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention require that all passengers – including citizens – flying to (or returning) to the United States have evidence of a negative Covid test or evidence of a recent recovery from the virus provide.

However, if you are considering another country for a vacation, you can get some overseas coverage by combining basic Medicare with supplemental insurance – also known as Medigap.

If you are traveling outside of the United States, Medicare will only cover you in very limited or infrequent cases.

Danielle Roberts

Co-founder of Boomer Benefits

These policies, which are generally standardized across states but differ in cost, provide some coverage for the cost sharing associated with basic Medicare such as medical insurance. B. Copays and Co-Insurances. Some of them also have limited overseas travel coverage, said Elizabeth Gavino, founder of Lewin & Gavino and independent broker and general agent for Medicare plans.

“A member pays a deductible of $ 250 and 20% of the cost of medical treatment received, up to a lifetime maximum of $ 50,000,” said Gavino.

Note that this coverage is for emergency medical care and there may be other restrictions according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Benefit plans

For beneficiaries who receive their Medicare benefits – Parts A, B, and usually D – through a benefit plan, it is worth checking to see if you can get emergency cover abroad. And even if you didn’t leave U.S. soil, see what your plan would cover.

While benefit plans are required to cover your emergency care anywhere in the United States, you may be hooked for routine out-of-service care.

“With a traditional HMO plan, you only have emergency coverage when you travel outside of the network,” said Roberts. “With a PPO, you have both emergency coverage and off-network coverage for non-emergencies [but] will pay more for these out network services. “

There are also hybrid plans that could allow limited off-network treatment in certain circumstances, Roberts said.

It is possible for your benefit plan to deregister you if you are outside of the service area for a period of time – usually six months. In this situation, you would switch to Medicare.

Some beneficiaries, regardless of their specific coverage, take out travel health insurance for trips overseas, Gavino said.

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Truth, or Company Fiction? – The New York Instances

The April Fool’s Day false news announcement is one of America’s most popular occasions for shameless publicity stunts. But if $ 69 million worth of Stonks, Dogecoin, and JPG files are real things worthy of serious business coverage, the risk of jokes being taken seriously could hardly be higher. Some say this is a good reason to skip them, not to mention the gravity a pandemic has thrown over things.

With that in mind, can you see the prank among these recent announcements? (Scroll down for the answer.)

A: To celebrate National Burrito Day today, Chipotle is giving away $ 100,000 worth of Bitcoin.

B: Volkwagen’s US business changes its name to “Voltwagen” to underline the company’s foray into electric vehicles.

C: Robinhood doesn’t do a confetti animation when app users complete a stock trade to reduce the “distraction”.

D: Krispy Kreme gives anyone who shows evidence of Covid-19 vaccination a free donut per day for the rest of the year.

E: Goldman Sachs managers are giving junior bankers gift baskets of fruit and snacks in response to complaints of burnout.

Corporate groups challenge President Biden’s proposed corporate tax hikes. The Business Roundtable and the US Chamber of Commerce praised Mr Biden’s plan to spend trillions on infrastructure, among others. But they rejected his idea of ​​paying for it through tax hikes, saying it would jeopardize economic recovery.

The recent setbacks in fighting the pandemic. Johnson & Johnson said it would delay future deliveries of its vaccine after a mix-up at a manufacturing facility. A senior EU official said the bloc would allow “zero” shipments of AstraZeneca’s vaccine to the UK until the drugmaker honors its commitments to Brussels. And France announced a third nationwide lockdown as its cases surge and vaccination efforts lag.

A tough day for an IPO. With Deliveroo having “the worst IPO in London history,” other bids also struggled. In the US, SoftBank-backed real estate agent Compass was on the lower end of a reduced range, while budget airline Frontier sold on the lower end of expectations. And in Canada, space tech company MDA’s price was below its reach.

Microsoft wins a major contract to manufacture augmented reality headsets for the US Army. The tech giant will receive up to $ 22 billion to equip soldiers with sensors based on its HoloLens technology. It’s another big defense deal for Microsoft that Amazon beat Amazon to provide a $ 10 billion cloud computing system for the Pentagon.

A day after 72 black executives signed a letter urging companies to fight more restrictive electoral laws, executives began to speak more directly about laws restricting access to ballot papers. However, their testimony came too late to sway a sweeping law passed in Georgia last week that added new postal voting requirements, dropboxing restrictions, and other restrictions that are having an over-the-top impact on black voters.

In business today

Updated

March 31, 2021, 6:27 p.m. ET

Delta and Coca-Cola reversed course. Ed Bastian, Delta CEO, told employees, “I need to make it clear that the final invoice is unacceptable and does not match Delta’s values.” James Quincey, CEO of Coca-Cola, said he wanted to be “crystal clear” that “The Coca-Cola Company does not support this legislation because it is harder for people to vote, not easier.”

  • The statements by Atlanta-based companies angered local politicians, including Governor Brian Kemp. In the past, corporate booths on controversial issues have led to political retaliation: In 2018, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle passed a tax break proposal on a bill that would benefit Delta after the airline ended a promotional discount for NRA members. The State House passed a similar measure yesterday, but the Senate did not take it until the Houses were adjourned for the year.

  • Retaliatory measures also go in the other direction: In an interview with ESPN, President Biden said he would “strongly support” the move of the all-star game of Major League Baseball out of Atlanta in July.

“It is unfortunate that the sense of urgency came after the laws were passed and incorporated into the law.” said Darren Walker, the president of the Ford Foundation who is a board member at Pepsi, Ralph Lauren and Square.

Other Georgia-based companies remained cautious. A UPS spokesman said the company was “ready to continue to help ensure that every Georgian voter can vote”. A Home Depot spokesman reiterated the company’s stance that “all elections should be accessible, fair and safe”. A spokesman for Inspire Brands, the owner of Dunkin ‘Donuts and Arby’s, said it “values ​​inclusivity” and that “every American should have equal access to voting rights.”

– Judge Samuel Alito, who rated the “stark picture” college athletes painted in an antitrust case against the NCAA that the Supreme Court heard yesterday.

RedBird Capital Partners confirmed its agreement to purchase a stake in Red Sox parent Fenway Sports Group, a transaction valued at $ 7.35 billion. DealBook spoke to RedBirds founder Gerry Cardinale and Fenway’s chair Tom Werner about what’s next.

Buy and build. RedBird Plans to Add More Teams: Mr. Cardinale noted that his company has no teams in the NBA, NHL, or MLS. For its part, Fenway plans to open up new opportunities in the areas of ticketing, sponsorship and media. (As part of the RedBird deal, NBA star LeBron James bought a stake in Fenway.) In the media, Fenway controls NESN, and RedBird has a stake in the YES network. “You should expect that we will continue to seek innovation in this area,” said Cardinale, who helped build the YES network.

  • A deepening of relationships with online gambling is also on the table. “We have an excellent relationship with DraftKings,” said Werner, “and we have had several discussions with them about partnerships.”

The deal was better suited to the private market than a SPAC. Executives said after talks to bring Fenway to the public through a blank check company failed. “In the middle of Covid, with a mandate to redraw the next wave of growth for Fenway Sports Group, it would probably be better to do so privately and then give us the option,” Cardinale told Public. He also called the current SPAC market “very frothy”.

Founded in 2008, WeWork rose spectacularly, hitting a valuation of $ 47 billion, and known to crash ahead of a planned IPO in 2019. (It was announced last week that it would go public by partnering with a blank check company valued at roughly $ 8 billion.) A new documentary, “WeWork: Or the Make and Break of a $ 47 billion unicorn, “seeks to learn from the ups and downs. It’s streaming on Hulu starting tomorrow.

Jed Rothstein, the director, told DealBook that he believes what is most compelling about WeWork isn’t what went wrong, but how it initially managed to turn strangers into some sort of tribe. “We still need that,” he said.

“WeWork’s core idea met a real need for community.” Mr. Rothstein said. “The gaps that people were trying to fill just got more real.” After a year of social distancing, he likes the idea of ​​curated common spaces that WeWork offered. Speaking to early WeWorkers who bought the Vision and later felt cheated, he was amazed at how much the company gave to its followers, especially the feeling of being part of something bigger. This is worth recognition in a world where people are increasingly remote in their careers and work for many different companies, Rothstein said.

WeWork co-founders Adam Neumann and Miguel McKelvey both shared childhood experiences. Mr. Rothstein said he thought they sincerely wanted to repeat the good in group life and inspired people who had not seen this before. But Mr. Neumann also focused on what he didn’t like – and shared it equally – and emphasized the “Eat what you kill” mentality. Ultimately, his hunger turned the community dream into a nightmare for many.

  • After speaking to people who followed the original vision, the director changed his perspective. “The people in the film experienced real growth and fulfillment mixed with their anger,” he said. “I realized that the story is much more nuanced.”

deals

  • The media conglomerate Endeavor went public for the second time and raised $ 1.8 billion to gain full control of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. It also added Elon Musk to its board of directors. (WSJ, CNBC)

  • Vice Media is reportedly in talks to go public through the merger with a SPAC. And the SEC issued two notices for companies looking to go public through SPAC. (The information, SEC)

  • Junior bankers aren’t the only ones feeling burned out. Young lawyers too. (Business insider)

Politics and politics

  • New York was the 15th state to legalize recreational marijuana. (NYT)

  • Efforts by aides to Governor Andrew Cuomo to hide the Covid-19 death toll in New York state coincided with his efforts to win a multi-million dollar book deal. (NYT)

  • Accidental disclosure by the IRS resulted in a $ 1 billion tax dispute with Bristol Myers Squibb. (NYT)

technology

The best of the rest

  • The German advertising agency doubles the referral bonus for black applicants. (Insider)

  • Amazon wants most of its employees to be back in its offices, while the Carlyle Group and IBM prefer hybrid work models. (Insider, Bloomberg)

  • Paul Simon is the newest musician to sell his entire back catalog: Sony Music Publishing will purchase the collection, including classics like Bridge Over Troubled Water, for an undisclosed amount. (NYT)

Do you feel burned out? As more and more employees are thinking about returning to the office, our colleague Sarah Lyall writes about anxiety and exhaustion in late pandemics. Tell her how you are.

Answer to the April Fool’s joke quiz: B. If you are fooled by the Volkswagen prank, you are in good company. Volkswagen reportedly told journalists that drafting the announcement was no ploy. It later just called the stunt “a bit of fun”.

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Europe’s altering guidelines prompts confusion

LONDON – There are signs that the different – and changing – rules of use in Europe regarding the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University are creating further confusion and suspicion among citizens.

Not only have EU citizens faced a barrage of negative sentiment towards the vaccine, even from top officials themselves, but they have seen the shot suspended by more than a dozen European countries after concerns about a small number of blood reports clots became loud.

The European Medicines Agency and World Health Organization, after safety reviews of the data, recommended continued use of the shot, saying its benefits outweighed the possible risks. But those fears have not gone away and there is now confusion about which age group should and can take the vaccine.

On Tuesday, Germany stopped using the AstraZeneca shot on all citizens under 60, citing renewed concerns after a small number of reports of rare but serious blood clots. Earlier this week, some hospitals in Berlin initially stopped vaccinating women under the age of 55 with AstraZeneca’s shot.

Germany initially only allowed the vaccine to be used under 65 years of age due to insufficient data to show that it was safe and effective for the elderly, despite reversing that decision in early March.

Meanwhile, Spain decided on Wednesday to extend the use of the vaccine to key workers over 65 years of age. The vaccine was previously limited to the 55 to 65 age group, but is now made available to priority groups in this age group such as health workers, police officers and teachers.

In France, the AstraZeneca vaccine was initially not approved even for people over 65 years of age. French President Emmanuel Macron has now been criticized by many French commentators for his chair epidemiology, falsely saying that the vaccine is “virtually ineffective” for those over 65.

France later reversed that stance when more clinical trial data emerged, saying the vaccine would be approved for people with comorbidities, including those between the ages of 65 and 74.

Confused? You’re not alone. Comments on Twitter indicate that people on both sides are confused about the official stance on the vaccine.

A Twitter user based in Germany noted that “you can’t blame people for confusion” after listing the twists and turns that characterized AstraZeneca’s vaccine timeline.

Another user, Aetera, based in Germany, noted that “everyone here is confused whether it is good or bad” while another UK Twitter user, Mike Carrivick, said the reverse of the rules of use around the vaccine was going on the “irony of irony”, but one with potentially serious consequences. He remarked, “No wonder so many are confused and lives in danger.”

London-based Kristen Covo was another Twitter user who expressed confusion over AstraZeneca’s safety data after being suspended in a handful of European countries and resuming use following recommendations from the EMA and WHO.

Regarding the question of giving the second dose of vaccine to younger people who have already received a first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine, the German vaccine committee announced that it would issue guidelines on the matter by the end of April.

The ambivalent and changing attitudes of European countries towards the vaccine were made all the more confusing by an accompanying narrative (and major argument) about the delivery of the shot.

The EU has repeatedly accused the drug maker of failing to meet its delivery schedule, while various EU officials and heads of state and government have cast doubts about the vaccine’s effectiveness, which in turn has made many EU citizens skeptical about vaccines.

A Brussels-based BBC reporter noted that it had been dubbed the “Aldi vaccine” after the cheap grocery store because people viewed the shot as a budget option. There have been other reports from people requesting Pfizer BioNTech or Moderna shots instead of the AstraZeneca vaccine.

As an English Twitter user named gazztrade asked on Wednesday, does the EU want “the AstraZeneca vaccine or not”?

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Jill Biden, in California, Lends Assist to Farmworkers In search of Vaccinations

During her presentation, Dr. Biden announced that the president endorsed the Farm Workers Modernization Act, a law that would give temporary legal status to seasonal workers, many of whom are undocumented, and offer a 10-year path to citizenship.

“As president, Joe fights for people who often go invisible,” said Dr. Biden. “And this is exactly the kind of immigration policy he develops – one that treats children and families with dignity and creates fair routes to citizenship, including for important workers.”

Thousands of Central Valley farm workers are slated to receive the coronavirus vaccine at Forty Acres for six weekends in March and April. California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, and partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom joined the local first lady on Wednesday. Later, Dr. Biden vaccination cards and “I got my Covid-19 vaccination buttons” to workers waiting to be vaccinated.

That year, California embarked on a breakthrough effort to provide farm workers with vaccines, many of whom are undocumented and whose working conditions have made them particularly vulnerable to the virus in confined spaces. Purdue University researchers estimate that around 500,000 farm workers tested positive for the virus and at least 9,000 have died from it. Coronavirus has killed more than 551,000 people in the United States, according to a New York Times count.

During President Biden’s first two months in office, union leaders hailed his government as one of the most work-friendly in modern history. One of his first acts was to move a bust of Mr. Chavez to the Oval Office, a decision that Dr. Biden applauded at the event on Wednesday. During her speech, the First Lady also repeated the motto of the agricultural workers’ union “Sí, se puede” or “Yes, we can” several times.

“César dared to believe that our country could change – that we could change it,” she said. “Now it’s up to us to keep that promise.”

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Covid worsened the gender hole, it can take 135 years to shut

The World Economic Forum predicts it will now take 135.6 years to reach gender equality – as the pandemic moves the world back a generation and delays parity by about 36 years.

Saadia Zahidi, executive director of the World Economic Forum, told CNBC, “100 years to global gender equality wasn’t good enough – and now (it’s) 136 years worldwide.”

“The pandemic has had a massive impact and essentially reversed much of the progress made in the past,” she told CNBC’s Capital Connection on Wednesday.

If companies want the… creativity and innovation that will bring them out of the crisis, they need diversity and must see this as a business investment.

Saadia Zahidi

Managing Director, World Economic Forum

One reason the gender gap has widened is that the sectors heavily employed by Covid-19 are mostly affected by women.

“Whether it’s travel and tourism that is closed around the world, or the consumer and retail sectors that are affected in so many countries, these are great employers for women,” Zahidi said.

A mother and daughter watch as speakers speak to the crowd at a demonstration against mandatory Covid-19 vaccines in Sydney, Australia.

Don Arnold | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Another factor is that many women took on additional duties during the home lockdown when schools were closed.

“It then meant a kind of double layer for women,” she said.

The WEF said data from market research firm Ipsos suggest that this “double shift” between paid and unpaid work has contributed to increased stress, anxiety about job security and difficulties in maintaining work-life balance.

Role of Governments and Businesses

Zahidi said governments have a “crucial role” to play in closing the gender gap.

For example, she said the authorities could invest in infrastructure to care for children and the elderly, which would be helpful given that women in “traditional” homes have such responsibilities.

Employers can also help women experience higher relative job losses and lower recruitment rates in industries that are recovering, she added.

“If companies want the … creativity and innovation that can get them out of the crisis, they need diversity, so they have to see it as a business investment,” Zahidi said.

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Funding Agency’s Collapse Put Unseen Dangers on Full Show

After the implosion of a little-known investment firm that last week weighed billions in losses on banks around the world, a big question is being asked all over Wall Street: How did they let this happen?

The answer could be because Archegos Capital Management, with the full support of at least half a dozen banks, placed bets on stocks without actually owning them.

Archegos used esoteric financial instruments called swaps, which get their name from the way they exchange one stream of income for another. In this case, Wall Street banks bought certain stocks Archegos wanted to bet on and Archegos paid the banks a fee. Then the banks paid Archegos the stock returns.

These swaps increased the fund’s purchasing power, but also created a two-pronged problem. Archegos has been able to build a lot more leverage on the stock prices of a few companies, including ViacomCBS and Discovery, than it could afford on its own. And since there are few regulations governing this type of business, there have been no disclosure requirements.

When those bets got sour last week after the stocks of some of the companies in question fell, it sparked a miniature crisis: the banks that made Archegos amass such large holdings angrily sold the stocks to protect their own balance sheets and the tide of cheap ones Shares pushed share prices even further down. And Archegos himself imploded.

The blind-side hit shuddered the financial system, stuck banks at losses that some analysts say could hit $ 10 billion. And for a time Wall Street feared that problems might cascade.

“The disclosure system doesn’t cover any of this,” said Dennis Kelleher, executive director of Better Markets, a monitoring group on Wall Street. “These derivatives are designed for synthetic exposures that de facto hide ownership.”

If banks add up their losses and shareholders are wise about the impact on their portfolios, the tactics used by Archegos will attract the attention of regulators and renew calls for further regulation of swaps and similar financial products called derivatives.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said it was monitoring the situation, and Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, said the Archegos collapse was “all set for a dangerous situation.”

“We need transparency and strong scrutiny to ensure that the next explosion in hedge funds does not affect the economy,” she said in a statement sent via email.

Recognition…Emile Wamsteker / Bloomberg News

Archegos was actually a family office set up by Bill Hwang, who previously ran a hedge fund that was involved in an insider trading case under his leadership. However, some Wall Street analysts calculated leverage – essentially trading borrowed money to increase their purchasing power – that was potentially eight times their own capital.

In this case, the leverage was shown in the form of swap contracts. In return for a fee, the bank undertakes to pay the investor what the investor would have received through the actual possession of a share over a certain period of time. When the price of a stock rises, the bank pays the investor. If it falls, the investor pays the bank.

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Updated

March 31, 2021, 6:27 p.m. ET

Archegos focused its bets on the share prices of a relatively small number of companies. These included ViacomCBS, the parent company of the country’s most watched network; the media company Discovery; and a handful of Chinese technology companies. The banks that bought swaps alone held millions of shares in ViacomCBS.

Typically, large institutional investors are required by the SEC to publicly disclose their holdings at the end of each quarter. This means that investors, lenders, and regulators know when a single company has a large stake in a company.

However, the SEC disclosure rules typically do not apply to swaps, so Archegos did not have to report its large holdings. And none of the banks – at least seven known to have had ties with Archegos – saw the full picture of the risk the fund was taking, analysts say.

The use of equity-related derivatives has increased significantly in recent years. The number of equity derivatives outstanding – including swaps and a related instrument known as a forward – for US-listed stocks more than doubled from $ 50 billion at the end of 2015 to more than $ 110 billion in the first half of 2020, according to current news Data available, according to the Bank for International Settlements, an international consortium of central banks.

The use of swaps and other types of leverage can exceed profits when investments pay off. But when such bets go wrong, it can quickly wipe an investor out.

That happened last week. Several stocks that Mr. Hwang’s company had bet on began to fall, and banks demanded that he put up additional money or other assets. Known as “margin,” this is a cushion of cash that is designed to ensure that the bank does not lose money if stocks fall. When he was unable to do so, the banks tossed millions of stocks they had bought.

The impact on stock prices has been profound, with ViacomCBS down 51 percent and Discovery down 46 percent last week. The shareholders of these companies saw the value of their holdings decline. Those two stocks alone were wiped out with shareholder value of more than $ 45 billion. And banks lost money on stocks that had fallen in value. Kian Abouhossein, an analyst with JP Morgan, estimated that banks lost $ 5 billion to $ 10 billion in their dealings with Mr. Hwang.

Credit Suisse may have lost $ 3 to 4 billion, Abouhossein estimated. Japanese bank Nomura Securities has stated that it is exposed to losses of up to $ 2 billion. Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs have announced that they expect minimal losses – meaning it won’t seriously affect their financial results – but for such large companies that could still mean millions of dollars. Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Holdings Company, a unit of the Japanese financial conglomerate, reported a potential loss of around $ 270 million.

Analysts say the damage has been relatively minor, and while the losses have been large for some players, they are not large enough to pose a threat to the wider financial system.

But the episode will most likely revive a push to expand derivatives regulation that has been linked to many significant financial blows. During the 2008 crisis, insurance giant AIG nearly collapsed under the weight of the unregulated swap contracts it entered into.

The cascade of problems that began with Archegos was just the latest example of the ability of derivatives to increase invisible risk.

“During the 2008 financial crisis, one of the biggest problems was that many banks didn’t know who owed what to whom,” said Tyler Gellasch, a former SEC attorney who heads the Healthy Markets Association, a group advocating market reform. “And it seems this happened again.”

Matthew Goldstein contributed to the coverage.

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Papua New Guinea coronavirus circumstances spike, well being system on the brink

Australian officials carry boxes of about 8,000 starting doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine after arriving aboard a Royal Australian Air Force plane at Port Moresby International Airport on March 23, 2021, following the fragile healthcare system.

Andrew Kutan | AFP | Getty Images

The coronavirus crisis in Papua New Guinea continues to escalate as the Indo-Pacific nation seriously waits for vaccines to arrive.

In just one week – between March 22-28 – 1,786 new cases of Covid-19 and 13 deaths were reported, according to the latest report from the World Health Organization and National Ministry of Health from PNG.

The weekly joint report said the island nation reported a total of 5,349 cases and 49 deaths on March 28, 12:00 p.m. local time. It was the eighth week in a row of gains.

Papua New Guinea is a heavily forested nation of fewer than 9 million people, located about 160 km north of Australia at its closest point.

Prime Minister James Marape admitted last week that there is “rampant community broadcast”.

Health system as a “risk of collapse”

The situation on the ground in PNG is said to be dire, and international organizations such as Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) have warned of an impending collapse of the country’s overstretched health system.

“The health care system in PNG is threatened with collapse as the health facilities that manage COVID-19 are almost at full capacity and almost too congested to provide regular basic care,” said Doctors Without Borders.

The Pacific island nation has only about 500 doctors, fewer than 4,000 nurses, and fewer than 3,000 community health workers. This emerges from data shared by the Prime Minister during an address to Parliament last year. There are only about 5,000 beds in hospitals, he added.

Doctors Without Borders, who provide medical humanitarian aid in troubled countries, said more and more health care workers in PNG have tested positive for Covid-19 and have been forced to quarantine at home. The health facilities handling the outbreak are almost at full capacity, resulting in longer waiting times.

According to Kate Schuetze, a Pacific researcher at Amnesty International, PNG also has relatively poor health indicators.

Additional personal protective equipment, testing capacity and staff must be quickly considered to support the already strained healthcare system.

Ghulam Nabi

Interim Head of Mission for Papua New Guinea at MSF

“We already have a bad health system and then you also have a high level of comorbidities, which will also affect the Covid-19 crisis,” Schütze told CNBC on Wednesday. “So you have malaria in the country, you have multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, as well as a number of other diseases that could increase the effects of Covid-19.”

Large numbers of people also live in rural or remote communities where it is difficult to get the same health care as in urban centers like Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea, she added.

Stressed health system

According to the joint report by the WHO and the Ministry of Health, only 7,061 Covid tests were performed between March 22 and 28 – this means that 25.29% of these tests were positive.

Large-scale testing remains low in most of the country, and there is a shortage of test kits as well as logistical difficulties, the report said. This suggests that the actual number of infections across the country may be significantly higher than officially reported.

As the isolation wards in hospitals filled up, PNG turned a sports complex into a temporary field hospital for Covid-19 patients.

MSF said Friday that it is helping local health services by providing staff and cartridges to analyze samples from polymerase chain reaction tests, which are often used to detect the coronavirus. According to Doctors Without Borders, almost 40% of people tested in any of the health facilities have Covid-19. The organization expects more cases in the coming weeks.

MSF also said it only has enough trial cartridges to last up to two weeks.

“Additional personal protective equipment, testing capacity and human resources must be seen as swift to support the already strained healthcare system,” Ghulam Nabi, MSF interim head of mission for Papua New Guinea, said in a statement.

He added that MSF urges organizations in the region to act quickly and mobilize to increase their support for the Pacific nation.

Access to vaccines and tackle misinformation

PNG launched its vaccination campaign this week with the 8,000 doses of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 shots donated by Australia.

Of the country Prime Minister Marape reportedly received his first dose on Tuesday.

Growing vaccine nationalism around the world is making it difficult for small developing countries like PNG to gain access to shots to vaccinate their populations.

Many of them rely on a global vaccination initiative called Covax, which aims to ensure an equitable distribution of shots in less affluent countries. It is jointly managed by the WHO, Gavi – the Vaccine Alliance and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations.

According to Amnesty Schuetze, one of the challenges with the Covax facility is that not enough countries are donating enough money, resources or vaccines to ensure fairer distribution.

PNG is slated to receive around 588,000 doses of vaccine from Covax by June.

For its part, Australia has reportedly asked the European Union to distribute 1 million doses of AstraZeneca’s vaccine to PNG. It was in the beginning contracted to go to Australia. Reuters reported last week that the EU has not yet responded to this request.

Canberra has also reportedly asked the US, Japan and India – the other members of the informal Quad Alliance – to help PNG.

Meanwhile, vaccine skepticism and the spread of misinformation complicate matters in the island nation. Opposition leader Belden Namah reportedly urged the government to suspend the launch of the AstraZeneca vaccine as it would expose citizens to potentially serious harm.

The PNG government needs to do more to educate and educate the public about vaccines and health treatments for Covid-19, Amnestys Schuetze said.

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I.R.S. will start issuing tax refunds in Could for unemployment tax break.

Taxpayers who received unemployment benefits last year but filed their tax returns before a new tax break became available could receive an automatic refund as early as May, the Internal Revenue Service said on Wednesday.

The latest coronavirus relief legislation, signed on March 11 in the middle of the tax season, made the first $ 10,200 of unemployment benefits tax-free in 2020 for people with modified adjusted income less than $ 150,000. (Married taxpayers filing together can exclude up to $ 20,400.)

However, some Americans had filed their tax returns back in March and waited for official guidance from the agency. Millions of U.S. workers registered unemployment last year, but the IRS said it is still determining how many workers affected by the tax change had already filed their tax returns.

On Wednesday, the IRS confirmed it would automatically recalculate the correct amount of taxable benefits – and any overpayment will be refunded or applied to any other outstanding taxes. The first refunds are expected to be made in May and will continue into the summer.

The IRS said it would start processing the simpler returns first, or those eligible for excluded benefits up to $ 10,200, and then move on to returns for joint claimants and others with more complex returns.

It is not necessary for those affected to file an amended tax return unless the calculations make the taxpayer eligible for additional federal credits and deductions that are not already included in the original tax return, the agency said. These taxpayers may also want to review their state tax returns, the IRS said.

People who have not yet submitted and expect to do so electronically can simply answer the questions from their online tax advisor, which will take the new tax break into account when submitting. The agency provided an updated worksheet and additional guidance in March for taxpayers who prefer paper.

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Ford slashes automobile manufacturing at six vegetation in North America as a consequence of chip scarcity

Ford Motor is significantly reducing production at six plants in North America due to the ongoing global shortage of semiconductor chips, including facilities that make highly profitable pick-ups.

Measures vary by plant, but range from overtime cancellations to facilities closed for up to three weeks from April to June. Or a combination of both.

The affected plants are located in Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, and Ontario, Canada. They manufacture a wide range of products – from F-150 pickups and vans to Ford Explorer SUVs and Ford Escape Crossovers.

Production of the F-150 in Dearborn, Michigan, will cease in the weeks of April 5th through April 12th, the company said. Ford is also canceling overtime at the factory in the weeks of April 26, May 10, May 31, and June 21. Another facility in Missouri that will manufacture the full-size F-150 will be shut down for a week starting Monday. Overtime at the plant will be suspended for eight weeks through most of June.

Semiconductors are key components that are used, among other things, in the infotainment, power steering and braking systems of new vehicles. With several plants closed due to Covid last year, suppliers turned semiconductors from automakers to other industries, creating a shortage after consumer demand fell more than expected.

Ford previously expected the shortage could cut its profits by $ 1 billion to $ 2.5 billion in 2021. Without releasing any new guidance, the company said it would “provide an update on the financial implications of semiconductor shortages” when it reports its first quarter earnings on April 28th.

This is a developing story. Check back soon for more updates.