UK response jolted by new research
Britain meanwhile is expected later to unveil more help for businesses after the government told people to avoid pubs, clubs, restaurants, cinemas and theaters, raising the risk of companies collapsing. Boris Johnson’s government has been jolted into tougher measures by new research painting a worst-case picture of hundreds of thousands of deaths and a health service overwhelmed with severely sick patients. Separately, London mayor Sadiq Khan said the city would begin operating a reduced service over the next few days.
Traders ‘flying blind’
Many traders working from out-of-town offices or in unfamiliar dealing rooms fear that despite the best-laid contingency plans, communication problems and technical glitches risk adding to already spiraling volatility.
One investment strategist struggling to work with two screens instead of the normal five or six described it as “flying blind”.
The spread
Cases outside China surpassed 100,000 for the first time overnight, with a majority of infected countries in Europe reporting over 100 cases each. Five countries globally reported over 1,000 new cases each: Italy, Spain, France, Germany and Iran. The earlier major outbreak in South Korea continues to ease, while China reported just 12 new cases. Europe is firmly the center of most new cases, though Africa, South America and Southeast Asia are reporting steady increases in patterns similar to Europe weeks ago.
There are now over 101,000 cases and 7,165 deaths linked to the coronavirus across 163 countries and territories. China now accounts for less than half of all cases and deaths. Around 44% of cases have reportedly recovered.
Social distancing is hard
In Paris, some cafes have taken to selling only takeaway coffee instead of seating patrons, leading to their clientele moving to the pavement, much to the despair of at least one cafe owner.
“I’d thought they’d buy their coffee and leave. But no, they linger and talk!” said Frederic Monnier of Le Cafe Tabac. Tempers have started flaring in some U.S. cities as well over people trying to go about their normal lives and those committed to complying with public health officials urging people to stay home to prevent the spread. “Flatten the curve, go home! Flatten the curve, go home!” a man in New York’s Brooklyn borough yelled out the window of a four-story apartment building, as people walked on the street below.
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