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Trump and Wife Test Positive; Paris Faces Curbs: Virus Update

(Bloomberg) — U.S. President Donald Trump said he and First Lady Melania Trump tested positive for Covid-19 shortly after one of his closest aides, Hope Hicks, had fallen ill. U.S. futures slid while the dollar edged higher and Treasuries rose as markets took a risk-off turn.

Paris and London are both facing potential new measures to halt the spread of the virus amid rising concerns about infection rates. Germany reported its largest number of new cases since mid-April, while Ukraine and Hungary posted record numbers.

Amazon.com Inc. said close to 20,000 of its employees had Covid-19 over almost a six-month period. A $1 billion funding package to help the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention fight Covid-19 has remained mostly unspent.

Key Developments:

Global Tracker: Cases pass 34.3 million; deaths exceed 1.02 millionTrump’s age and weight make covid particularly dangerousTrump infection puts large retinue of White House aides at riskHow Russia shortened the Covid vaccine race to declare victoryEurope’s banks lead the way in global jobs cull this yearCDC money for Covid tracking, tests has been stalled for monthsEnglish soccer could be next in line for a coronavirus bailout

Subscribe to a daily update on the virus from Bloomberg’s Prognosis team here. Click CVID on the terminal for global data on coronavirus cases and deaths.

Sturgeon Tells U.K. MP Who Broke Covid Rules to Quit (5:33 p.m. HK)

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon urged one of her party’s lawmakers who broke Covid quarantine rules to resign from the U.K. Parliament, calling her actions “dangerous and indefensible.”

Scottish National Party MP Margaret Ferrier admitted breaking self-isolation rules to attend Parliament in London this week while waiting for the result of a coronavirus test, which later came back positive.

Europe’s Virus Fight Threatens to Close Down Paris Restaurants (4:17 p.m. HK)

French Health Minister Olivier Veran said he may have to declare Paris and its suburbs as high-risk areas as soon as Monday, which would trigger closing bars and restaurants.

Representatives of France’s hospitality industry are trying to thwart the move and plan to present proposals to authorities as soon as Friday. Positive tests in Paris and the number of intensive-care patients have climbed past the “maximum alert” level, Veran told reporters.

London residents are also being told to take immediate action to avoid catching and spreading coronavirus amid warnings that the U.K. capital is at a “tipping point” in its fight with the disease.

AstraZeneca Says Covid-19 Vaccine Trial Resumed in Japan (3:38 p.m. HK)

AstraZeneca’s Phase I/II clinical trial for the Covid-19 vaccine AZD122 has resumed in Japan, adding to earlier restarts around the world, the drugmaker said in a statement.

Regulators have deemed trials to be safe after a standard review process triggered a voluntary pause last month, AstraZeneca said. Tests have restarted in the the U.K., Brazil, South Africa and India.

The company is also working with the FDA to facilitate a review of information needed to make a decision regarding resumption of a U.S. trial.

Trump’s Age and Weight Make Covid Particularly Dangerous (3:33 p.m. HK)

President Donald Trump, who turned 74 in June, may face extra risk from the coronavirus due to his age and weight.

Covid sufferers between the ages of 65 and 74 are five times more likely to be hospitalized and 90 times more likely to die than patients between 18 and 29, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Obese people may also be more likely to suffer fatalities, even if the relationship isn’t well understood.

Melania Trump, who is 50, is at lower risk because the vast majority of women to have died from the disease in the U.S. were over 65. Most coronavirus cases worldwide have also only been categorized as mild.

Hungary Posts Record Infections (2:52 p.m. HK)

Hungary’s new coronavirus infections hit a record at 1,322, while 17 people died on Thursday, data by the state task force show. There is no general lockdown, with schools and kindergartens instead closing or switching to digital education on a case-by-case basis.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban has signaled he intends to avoid a a full lockdown similar to that in spring after counter-measures pushed the country’s deficit into 9.1% of GDP in the second quarter.

Germany Records Most New Cases Since April 18 (1 p.m. HK)

Germany recorded 2,626 new infections, the most since April 18, taking the nation’s total to 295,539, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The new cases are “predominantly due to transmission at family and other private events,” the RKI public health institute said. The proportion of returning travelers among new infections is declining, the institute said.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has repeatedly urged citizens to adhere to distancing and hygiene rules to prevent another surge in infections, and has vowed to do everything possible to avoid a general lockdown. At the height of the outbreak in late March and early April, Germany’s daily cases rose to almost 7,000.

Trump Test Positive for Covid-19 (12:56 a.m. HK)

U.S. President Donald Trump announced early Friday that he and First Lady Melania Trump had tested positive for Covid-19, shortly after close aide Hope Hicks had fallen ill with the coronavirus. “We will begin our quarantine and recovery process immediately. We will get through this TOGETHER!” Trump said on Twitter.

The 74-year-old president’s test result will sharpen intense public attention on his handling of the pandemic as he campaigns for re-election against Democrat Joe Biden, who leads in national polls. Trump is the highest-profile case of the virus, which infected other world leaders, including U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, both of whom recovered.

It wasn’t immediately clear how Trump contracted the virus, which has killed more than 200,000 Americans, but Hicks became ill after flying with the president aboard Air Force One to the presidential debate in Cleveland on Tuesday and to a campaign rally in Minnesota on Wednesday.

U.K. Lawmaker Faces Calls to Quit After Breaking Covid Rules (12 noon HK)

U.K. lawmaker Margaret Ferrier faces calls to quit after admitting she broke self-isolation rules to attend Parliament in London this week while waiting for the result of a coronavirus test, which later came back positive.

“It’s utterly inexcusable,” said David Linden, an MP for the Scottish National Party, said on BBC “Question Time.” “I don’t think her position is tenable and she should resign.” Ferrier also breached regulations by taking the train home to Scotland after testing positive. Her conduct was criticized by Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, who said “the rules apply to everyone.”

Ferrier, SNP MP for Rutherglen and Hamilton West near Glasgow, apologized “unreservedly” for her actions in a statement.

Australia Allows Quarantine-Free Travel From New Zealand (11:47 a.m. HK)

New Zealanders will be allowed to visit Australia’s New South Wales state and Northern Territory from Oct. 16 without having to undergo quarantine, Australian Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack said.

The move is part of efforts by both nations to create a “trans-Tasman bubble” to stimulate tourism and help their economies recover from the pandemic. That work has been hampered by a resurgence of the virus in Australia’s Victoria state. New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said that if her countryfolk do travel to Australia, they will still have to quarantine on their return home.

India Adds More Than 80,000 cases as Death Toll Nears 100,000 (11:42 a.m. HK)

India’s coronavirus epidemic continued to surge, with the South Asian nation adding more than 80,000 cases, pushing its tally close to 6.4 million confirmed infections, according to data from the Ministry of Health. Its death toll — at more than 99,700 on Friday — is expected to cross the 100,000 mark on Saturday, a milestone so far reached only by the U.S. and Brazil.

Japan Jobless Rate Hits 3-Year High (7:42 a.m. HK)

Japan’s unemployment rate rose to a three-year high in August as the coronavirus continued to weigh on the economy’s recovery. The rate rose to 3% from 2.9% in July, the internal affairs ministry reported. Japan has suffered fewer job losses than other major economies during the crisis thanks to legal precedents for full-time workers and big cash buffers on corporate balance sheets, along with cheap loans and wage support from the government to keep workers on the payroll.

Philippine Airlines May Cut More Than a Third of Workforce: Inquirer (7:28 a.m. HK)

Philippine Airlines plans to reduce its workforce by as much as 35%, affecting more than 2,700 employees, in a process that could take until early December, the Philippine Daily Inquirer reported.

Hawaii CEO Charged With $12.8 Million Covid-Relief Fraud (7:18 a.m. HK)

An engineering and design firm CEO has been charged in Hawaii with a scheme to fraudulently obtain more than $12.8 million in loans from the Paycheck Protection Program purportedly for relief due to the Covid-19 pandemic, according to federal court documents. Martin Kao, CEO of Navatek LLC, now known as Martin Defense Group, was charged with two counts of bank fraud and five counts of money laundering. Prosecutors say Kao falsified information on the loans and transferred more than $2 million to his personal accounts.

New York Downgraded as Moody’s Warns of Long Recovery (7:01 a.m. HK)

New York City and state had their credit ratings lowered for the first time in about three decades by Moody’s Investors Service, which said the impact from the coronavirus on the most populous U.S. city is among the most severe in the nation. Moody’s dropped both by one notch to Aa2, and warned of a long return to normal from the pandemic. New York reported the most coronavirus cases since May, even as the U.S. pace of infections remained steady. Cases are rising in New York City as schools reopen.

Earlier, New York state reported more than 1,300 new cases of coronavirus, the most since May, before New York City began allowing businesses to gradually reopen. The main hot-spot increases have been in Brooklyn and Rockland County, Governor Andrew Cuomo told reporters.

Almost 20,000 Amazon Workers Had Covid (6 a.m. HK)

Amazon.com Inc. said almost 20,000 U.S. employees have tested positive for Covid-19 during a time period of a little over six months, a disclosure that follows criticism from some lawmakers and employees that the world’s largest online retailer was too secretive about outbreaks within its ranks.

The retailer said in a blog post Thursday that 19,816 workers tested positive for the respiratory disease, or were presumed positive, out of 1,372,000 U.S. front-line employees who worked for the company from March 1 to Sept. 19, an infection rate of 1.44%. The company said that if its employees contracted the virus at a rate equal to that of the general population, it would have had 33,952 cases.

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