Germany extends restrictions to fight stubborn virus spread #SootinClaimon.Com

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Germany extends restrictions to fight stubborn virus spread (nationthailand.com)

Germany extends restrictions to fight stubborn virus spread

InternationalDec 04. 2020Chancellor Angela MerkelChancellor Angela Merkel 

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Arne Delfs, Raymond Colitt

Chancellor Angela Merkel said Germany will extend its partial lockdown by three more weeks into next year as the country struggles to regain control of the coronavirus spread.

Bars, gyms and cinemas will remain closed until Jan. 10 and the government will reconvene with regional leaders on Jan. 4 to reassess the restrictions, Merkel said late Wednesday after talks with the premiers of Germany’s 16 states.

The country’s infection rates are still far too high and need to come down faster, Merkel said in Berlin. “We have to bemoan a very high number of deaths every day, which shows the amount of responsibility that we have.”

Germany had 23,275 new cases in the 24 hours through Thursday morning and total infections have more than doubled since the measures started, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The latest daily death toll was 482, close to a record.

Merkel’s administration last week already extended the partial shutdown until Dec. 20 while keeping schools and much of the economy open. The so-called “lockdown light” has yielded little progress in slowing the spread to levels the government has determined as manageable.

Merkel on Wednesday reiterated that the seven-day incidence per 100,000 citizens needs to come down to around 50 — and stay there — before restrictions can be loosened. It was unchanged at 134 on Thursday, according to the latest data from Germany’s RKI public health institute.

RKI President Lothar Wieler said that the infection numbers have leveled out but are not yet showing any palpable sign of declining. “Weary” health authorities are no longer able to track cases effectively and some hospitals are approaching the limit of their capacity, with operations and treatments delayed, he added.

“We are seeing more and more outbreaks in care homes,” Wieler said Thursday at a news conference, urging citizens to respect hygiene and distancing rules and protect vulnerable groups. “These restrictions will be with us for a long time, until a sufficient section of the population has been vaccinated.”

Curbs might be tightened further in January if the number of new cases doesn’t come down fast enough, according to Bavarian State Premier Markus Soeder.

“We should not shy away from acting much more consequently,” said the conservative politician, who is seen as a candidate to succeed Merkel as chancellor next year.

Merkel has said before that the country will likely prolong its partial shutdown into January unless there’s an unexpectedly rapid decline in contagion rates. By contrast, France and Britain, which imposed tougher restrictions, are now cautiously moving to loosen curbs ahead of the Christmas holidays.

The lack of progress in stemming the spread is increasing tension over how to protect the economy. Merkel said the government can’t continue to reimburse affected businesses for 75% of lost sales next year.

Eckhardt Rehberg, budget spokesman for Merkel’s parliamentary caucus, said the chancellor is right to turn the focus away from compensating businesses for lost sales and back to so-called bridge aid. Under the program, which has been extended until the end of June, companies can apply for assistance with fixed costs such as heating and rent.

Spending 15 billion euros ($18 billion) a month on sales compensation “cannot be justified either to other sectors of the economy or to the taxpayer,” Rehberg said Thursday in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio. “The state won’t be able to afford to pay for everything,” and “we still have the challenge of financing intensive-care beds for hospitals and rolling out the vaccine.”

Merkel dampened expectations that new medication can quickly put an end to the disease. She said it’s unclear if a vaccine for the virus will be available before Christmas, but added that Pfizer Inc., BioNTech SE and Moderna Inc. will deliver 7 million doses in the first quarter of 2021.

Governments across the world are hoping for a rapid rollout of such vaccines to bring an end to the pandemic. On Wednesday, Britain’s drug regulator cleared the vaccine for emergency use, ahead of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and its European Union counterpart.

Jobs report preview: U.S. hiring holds up while threats multiply #SootinClaimon.Com

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Jobs report preview: U.S. hiring holds up while threats multiply (nationthailand.com)

Jobs report preview: U.S. hiring holds up while threats multiply

InternationalDec 04. 2020Workers break up concrete while doing road work on the Google campus in Mountain View, Calif., on Oct. 21, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris.Workers break up concrete while doing road work on the Google campus in Mountain View, Calif., on Oct. 21, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris. 

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Olivia Rockeman, Henry Ren

U.S. employment gains probably slowed only modestly in November despite a record surge of coronavirus cases that still threatens to limit or even reverse hiring in coming months.

Friday’s jobs report will show nonfarm employers added 475,000 people to payrolls and the unemployment rate fell 0.1 percentage point to 6.8%, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg. While those would be the smallest improvements since the rebound began in May — and leave the economy 9.6 million jobs short of pre-pandemic levels — the labor market is in better shape than analysts expected it to be a few months ago.

Forecasters say steady hiring for holiday shipping, easing restrictions on businesses in late October and early November, and strong demand for construction work are likely to deliver a seventh-straight payroll gain. One caveat: payroll figures reflect data through mid-month, meaning jobs lost to subsequent lockdowns won’t show until December or later.

Even if the first jobs report since Joe Biden won the White House does show solid if cooling momentum, he may face a different reality upon taking office in January. In addition to raging infections, precarious businesses like restaurants face colder weather that’s discouraging outdoor dining, and the federal aid outlook remains uncertain.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell this week urged Congress to approve additional pandemic aid, warning that the economic crisis isn’t over. Policymakers will likely discuss the jobs report when they convene Dec. 15-16 and consider whether to adjust their bond-buying program to provide more stimulus.

While vaccine breakthroughs offer new promise, it may be many months before distribution is wide enough to meaningfully boost demand and affect employment, according to Jay Bryson, chief economist at Wells Fargo.

“Help is on the way, but it’s still a little bit of a race against time,” he said. “There’s going to be near-term weakness in the economy.”

On a positive note, filings for state unemployment benefits fell last week by the most in almost two months, though the figures may partly reflect volatility around the Thanksgiving holiday.

The U.S. saw 4.4 million infections in November, one-third of the nation’s outbreak total. While the surge slowed around the Thanksgiving holiday, millions of gatherings and the busiest air travel days since March may fuel infections that prompt further restrictions and curb hiring. Los Angeles County, the nation’s largest, has ordered its 10 million residents to stay home.

“The labor market has started to show signs of strain, with jobless claims moving higher and virus-related lockdown measures being reinstituted as case counts surge, but these factors will be more fully felt in the December data,” Bloomberg economists Carl Riccadonna, Yelena Shulyatyeva, Andrew Husby and Eliza Winger wrote in a report.

The headline payrolls figure should reflect a reduction of more than 90,000 temporary workers for the decennial Census, which ended counts in October. Without that drag from government, private payroll growth is forecast to be 545,000, following 906,000 in October.

Weak seasonal hiring at retailers may weigh on overall jobs. The raw November figures are typically adjusted lower to account for an influx of holiday workers. In November 2019, retailers boosted payrolls by 431,900 on an unadjusted basis; that became a decline of 13,900 after seasonal adjustments.

“Temporary employees that get hired to work in stores, whether in a mall or a strip shopping center, to a large extent, aren’t happening this year,” said David Berson, chief economist at Nationwide Insurance.

Such headwinds mean temporary labor-market damage is more likely to become permanent, especially for those longest out of work. The ranks of those jobless for at least 27 weeks more than doubled over two months to a six-year high of 3.6 million in October.

November hiring is likely to come from goods-producing sectors rather than services, according to Bloomberg economist Yelena Shulyatyeva. She projects gains in both construction and manufacturing jobs, and gains for warehousing and transportation amid soaring holiday e-commerce demand.

Other data are less upbeat.

The Institute for Supply Management manufacturing employment index in November fell for the first time in seven months.

Private indicators from Homebase, a scheduling tool for 60,000 firms, signal business openings have fallen back to around pre-summer levels. Data from time-clock software maker Ultimate Kronos Group show shift work declined 0.2% in mid-November from a month earlier, the first drop since April.

“What we’re seeing is that downward momentum is exacerbated by the resurgence of the virus,” said Kathy Bostjancic of Oxford Economics, one of two forecasting firms to project a decline in jobs in November in Bloomberg’s survey.

U.S. jobless claims drop, offering ray of hope for labor market #SootinClaimon.Com

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U.S. jobless claims drop, offering ray of hope for labor market (nationthailand.com)

U.S. jobless claims drop, offering ray of hope for labor market

InternationalDec 04. 2020A worker installs plumbing at the HL Enterprise manufacturing facility in Elkhart, Ind., on Oct. 8, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Ty Wright.A worker installs plumbing at the HL Enterprise manufacturing facility in Elkhart, Ind., on Oct. 8, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Ty Wright. 

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Jarrell Dillard

Applications for U.S. state unemployment benefits fell by the most in almost two months, offering some hope that the gradual recovery in the job market will continue despite a spike in covid-19 infections and renewed business restrictions.

Initial jobless claims in regular state programs decreased by 75,000 to 712,000 in the week ended Nov. 28, the first drop in three weeks, Labor Department data showed Thursday. Without adjustments for seasonal fluctuations, applications dropped by about 122,000 during the period.

Continuing claims — the total pool of Americans on state unemployment benefits — declined 569,000 to 5.52 million in the week ended Nov. 21.

The main figures were below economists’ projections for 775,000 initial claims and 5.8 million continuing claims, based on the median estimates in Bloomberg surveys. One caveat: seasonal adjustments on claims data tend to be trickier around holidays, and last week included Thanksgiving, making it important to see if the trend holds.

While the latest claims figures show gradual improvement, they’re still well above pre-pandemic levels. The labor market also remains challenged by a rising number of covid-19 cases and a tightening of business restrictions in parts of the U.S. Some industries such as travel, leisure and hospitality are still depressed by the pandemic and could cut jobs more aggressively in the absence of additional fiscal relief.

All but 10 states and territories posted unadjusted declines in initial claims last week, with some of the biggest drops occurring in California, Texas, Michigan and Georgia. Illinois, Oregon and Indiana reported the largest increases in filings during the holiday week.

“The plunge in initial claims does not refute the idea that the trend is rising; we expected a sharp fall because of the difficulty of adjusting for Thanksgiving,” Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, wrote in a note. He had forecast claims of 725,000.

The government’s monthly jobs report on Friday is projected to show payrolls grew by about 475,000 in November, still solid yet the smallest gain in seven months, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists. The jobless rate is forecast to tick down to 6.8% from 6.9%.

A report on Wednesday from ADP Research Institute showed that companies in the U.S. added fewer jobs than expected in November, a sign that businesses are slowing down the rate of hiring as coronavirus cases reach new levels.

Continuing claims for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a program that provides benefits to self-employed and gig workers, decreased about 339,000 to 8.87 million in the week ended Nov. 14. This number, though, is inflated by multiple-counting and fraud, according to a government watchdog’s report this week, and the Labor Department plans to add a disclaimer.

More people have moved into extended programs like Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, but these were put in place by the Cares Act will expire by year-end and leave millions of people without government aid. The number of Americans on PEUC assistance rose slightly to 4.57 million in the week ended Nov. 14.

OPEC+ closes in on deal as talks focus on gradual taper of cuts #SootinClaimon.Com

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OPEC+ closes in on deal as talks focus on gradual taper of cuts (nationthailand.com)

OPEC+ closes in on deal as talks focus on gradual taper of cuts

InternationalDec 04. 2020A flame burns off waste gas at Saudi Aramco's Ras Tanura oil refinery and terminal in Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia, on Oct. 1, 2018. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Simon Dawson.A flame burns off waste gas at Saudi Aramco’s Ras Tanura oil refinery and terminal in Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia, on Oct. 1, 2018. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Simon Dawson. 

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Javier Blas, Salma El Wardany, Grant Smith, Dina Khrennikova

OPEC+ is closing in on a deal to gently ease output curbs after days of fractious negotiations that revealed deep cracks at the core of the cartel.

After direct talks, Russia and Saudi Arabia have thrashed out a plan to take to other members, according to one delegate. Others also said a deal was close, but the details remain unclear. Discussions have focused on a gradual relaxation of output cuts over several months, and according to one delegate there could be a one-month delay before the tapering starts.

The proposals, if accepted by all of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, would tweak the current agreement — struck during the depths of the pandemic in April — that allows 1.9 million barrels a day of additional crude back on the market from Jan. 1. It’s not clear yet whether the proposals would return that same volume of production over a longer period, or a different amount.

OPEC has underpinned the recovery in oil prices with its historic cuts this year and the latest round of talks is testing its unity — and credibility. Negotiations have been unusually tense amid a clash between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and the meeting on Thursday was pushed back by two days because of the deadlock.

“Ministers are inching closer to a compromise that should break the impasse,” Energy Aspects Ltd. co-founder Amrita Sen said in a note. “OPEC+ officials are debating a more limited adjustment to the current deal than the proposed three-month delay.”

Oil in London was down about 0.5% at 10:51 a.m local time, trading near $48.

Importantly, the deal is likely to keep the oil market in deficit throughout the first quarter, allowing OPEC to drain bloated inventories. If the group had gone ahead with the full 1.9 million barrels a day increase on Jan. 1, the group’s economists calculated that the market would have flipped into surplus.

A gentler tapering of the cuts could offer a potential compromise after days of talks, offering something to members that are concerned about the fragility of the market amid a second wave of the virus, and also to nations that are impatient to raise production. The Russian government, after internal talks with its own oil companies, is ready to agree to a gradual easing of supply curbs within the first quarter of 2021, said a person familiar with the discussions.

OPEC+ rescued the oil market this year from an unprecedented slump, slashing production as the pandemic crushed demand. While crude has surged in recent weeks, a new wave of virus infections is hitting the global economy.

Fractious talks earlier this week raised the specter of the deal falling apart, which would sink prices and batter an industry that spans from tiny nations like Gabon to corporate giants such as Exxon Mobil Corp.

The intensity of the fight between Saudi Arabia and the UAE took OPEC-watchers by surprise, as the pair have long been staunch allies. But Abu Dhabi has been pursuing a more independent oil policy and wants to pump more.

Over the summer, Abu Dhabi’s impatience led it to casting aside its usual obedience to cartel discipline, and pump more crude than its quota allowed. The Saudis were furious, and summoned UAE Energy Minister Suhail Al-Mazrouei to Riyadh for a public dressing down.

While the UAE subsequently atoned, people familiar with its oil policy say Abu Dhabi believes the current quota is unfair, and is keen to make the most of massive investments in production capacity. It’s also planning a new regional price benchmark based around its Murban crude variety, which needs the kind of volumes that clash with production limits.

If a deal is eventually crafted, it will be scrutinized for its ability to keep the coalition together and disciplined. Tensions are expected to reemerge next year.

Service industries in U.S. expand at a more moderate pace #SootinClaimon.Com

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Service industries in U.S. expand at a more moderate pace (nationthailand.com)

Service industries in U.S. expand at a more moderate pace

InternationalDec 04. 2020A worker sets up outdoor seating at a restaurant in Baltimore on Nov. 20, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Al Drago.A worker sets up outdoor seating at a restaurant in Baltimore on Nov. 20, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Al Drago. 

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Henry Ren

U.S. service industries expanded at a more moderate, yet healthy pace in November, tempered by softer growth in orders and business activity that remain constrained by the coronavirus.

The Institute for Supply Management’s services index fell to 55.9 during the month from 56.6 in October, according to data released on Thursday. Readings above 50 indicate expansion, and the November figure was in line with the 55.8 median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

Consecutive monthly declines in the gauge underscore the pandemic-related challenges faced by service industries that include leisure and hospitality, travel, dining and retail. While still robust, odds of an acceleration of growth at service providers are diminished by a resurgence of Covid-19 and the onset of cooler temperatures.

“Respondents’ comments are mixed about business conditions and the economy,” Anthony Nieves, chair of the ISM’s Business Survey Committee, said in a statement. “Most companies are cautious as they navigate operations amid the pandemic and the aftermath of the U.S. presidential election.”

At the same time, sectors such as information and finance have remained strong throughout the pandemic. A consumer shift to online purchases also indicates retailers and transportation companies will continue expanding during the holiday-shopping season.

Fourteen service industries reported growth in November, led by transportation and warehousing. Health care, food services, construction and retail also expanded.

The ISM’s index of new orders at service providers eased 1.6 points to 57.2. The measure of service-related business activity, which parallels the ISM’s factory production index, fell to 58 from 61.2 a month earlier.

The group’s measure of services employment increased 1.4 points to 51.5, marking the third straight month in which respondents indicated payrolls gains. The government’s monthly jobs report on Friday is projected to show employment rose 475,000 in November, indicating the economy was still adding workers but at a slower pace.

ISM’s gauge of prices paid by service providers rose to an eight-year high of 66.1, indicating accelerating costs for materials and services, partially due to shortages of personal protective equipment.

Meanwhile, a measure of inventory sentiment dropped to 49.9 from 51.1, the second-lowest in records back to 1997 and indicating more service providers see their stockpiles as being too low.

A separate ISM report Tuesday showed factory activity also cooled in November but remained robust. Difficulties of hiring workers and temporary shutdowns for sanitation will likely limit manufacturing growth potential, the ISM said.

Momentum builds for bipartisan $908 billion stimulus package as more GOP senators express support #SootinClaimon.Com

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Momentum builds for bipartisan $908 billion stimulus package as more GOP senators express support (nationthailand.com)

Momentum builds for bipartisan $908 billion stimulus package as more GOP senators express support

InternationalDec 04. 2020

By The Washington Post · Jeff Stein, Mike DeBonis, Seung Min Kim

WASHINGTON – Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi spoke Thursday amid growing momentum for a targeted coronavirus-relief deal, illustrating how Congress has snapped into action amid a surge in new cases and deaths.

They also discussed reaching a deal on a spending bill to avert a government shutdown on Dec. 11.

“We had a good conversation,” McConnell, R-Ky., said after his discussion with Pelosi. “I think we’re both interested in getting an outcome, both on the [spending bill] and on a coronavirus package.”

The talks – their first since the Nov. 3 election – came shortly after a growing number of lawmakers have rallied behind a $908 billion bipartisan spending bill that would aim to buttress parts of the economy over the next several months. While some of these lawmakers stopped short of endorsing every part of the proposal, many said the offer was solid enough that it should be used as the basis for negotiations, a sentiment that Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., expressed on Wednesday.

Sens. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa; Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa; Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.; John Cornyn, R-Texas; and Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., signaled their openness to the package, which had been unveiled by a group of moderate Republican and Democratic senators on Tuesday. The measure is more than what Senate Republicans had originally offered but less than what House Democrats had wanted, but it is designed to try and provide immediate relief to some parts of the economy as the pandemic enters a dangerous and increasingly deadly phase.

Graham said he’s “never been more hopeful that we’ll get a bill … the $908 billion bill, that’s the one I support.” He said he had talked to President Donald Trump about the measure “extensively.”

The two top congressional Democrats – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. – on Wednesday called the bipartisan offer an appropriate basis for stimulus negotiations, a significant retreat from their previous demands for a much large stimulus package. President-elect Joe Biden has also urged lawmakers to come together on an interim deal during the lame duck session of Congress.

Trump on Thursday also backed quick approval of a stimulus package. A White House spokesman clarified that Trump was speaking in support of the narrow measure introduced by McConnell, not the bipartisan stimulus plan.

“I think we are getting very close. I want it to happen,” Trump told reporters.

On Thursday, Ernst and Cornyn expressed measured support for the developing talks. Ernst, a member of the Senate Republican leadership team, did not dismiss the viability of the $908 billion framework despite expressing concerns about some of its policy provisions. Cornyn also said senior Democrats’ embrace of the bipartisan plan “represents progress.”

“I think it’s moving in the right direction,” Cornyn said, adding he remained concerned about the structure of state and local funding.

Grassley, the chair of the Senate finance committee, also signaled he’d be willing to accept the bipartisan framework if the details are right. “It’s a little high for me but more important for me are the things that are in it. And if everything in it has bipartisan support … the figure might not be the biggest thing,” he said.

Cramer, an ally of the president’s, also sounded a positive note about the push: “I like the effort. It strikes the right balance of compromise, and it’s a number that’s doable.”

Although there has been a sudden burst of bipartisan momentum for the package since Tuesday, it remains an incomplete legislative proposal that has not been drafted as a formal piece of legislation yet. Still, the rapid mobilization of support shows how lawmakers from both parties are trying to come up with a compromise quickly after months of inaction.

Coronavirus cases are surging across the U.S. and concerns have intensified about the potential economic fall-out. Congress also faces a series of rapidly approaching economic deadlines, with aid programs for jobless Americans and renters set to expire before the end of the year.

With talks between congressional leaders stalled for months, a bipartisan group led by Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., unveiled the compromise measure on Tuesday aimed to restart negotiations. The plan would devote close to $300 billion in another round of small business aid; $160 billion for state and local governments; fund federal unemployment benefits at $300 per week; and devote tens of billions of dollars to other priorities, such as childcare, hunger, and vaccine distribution.

It also includes a temporary liability shield to insulate firms and other entities from coronavirus-related lawsuits, a measure Democrats strongly oppose, although lawmakers were still hashing out details of that policy and others. The bipartisan proposal would not, however, include a new round of stimulus checks.

In a floor speech on Thursday morning, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., did not reveal his position on the bipartisan framework, but called for lawmakers to swiftly approve additional economic aid. McConnell on Wednesday circulated a separate plan that broke sharply with key Democratic priorities and proposed no additional spending on supplemental federal unemployment benefits.

“Compromise is within reach. We know where we agree. We can do this,” McConnell said.

Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin discussed approving the government spending package and a coronavirus stimulus bill “as soon as possible,” a Pelosi spokesman said on twitter.

Pelosi expressed optimism a spending deal could be reached by Dec. 11: “We’ll have an agreement. I don’t know when.”

McConnell has not said whether he would put the Manchin-led plan up for a vote, but faces pressure from conservatives in his rank to pull the legislation to the right. Conservative Senators have already objected to the plan’s proposal for state and local aid, although the framework calls for far less than Democrats have sought.

Sens. Mark Warner, D-Va.; Susan Collins, R-Maine; Mitt Romney, R-Utah; and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, are among the leaders behind the bipartisan effort. Not all lawmakers are moving in support of the measure, though.

“I’m very disappointed that a proposal from some of my colleagues today apparently includes provisions that spends hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer money to bail out wasteful states,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., one of the conservatives, said in a statement about the bipartisan proposal.

Ernst told reporter she would be willing to accept some form of aid for state and local governments, albeit with guardrails to ensure funding is target for covid-related needs. She also expressed concern about language in the measure related to insulating firms and other entities from covid-related lawsuits.

“We’ve got a long ways to go, but I would like to see something by the end of the year,” Ernst said.

In a floor speech on Thursday, Schumer reiterated that he believes an agreement centered around it could be in reach.

“We are already much closer to an agreement because of the bipartisan talks these eight senators have done,” Schumer said. “And we can build off their momentum. What’s the alternative?”

More than 200,000 Americans tested positive for the coronavirus on Wednesday, the most of any day since the pandemic began. And close to 3,000 Americans died from the virus on Wednesday, a level that is not expected to abate in the coming weeks.

Dollar bears vindicated by landmark week as spiral accelerates #SootinClaimon.Com

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Dollar bears vindicated by landmark week as spiral accelerates (nationthailand.com)

Dollar bears vindicated by landmark week as spiral accelerates

InternationalDec 04. 2020A collection of $1 bills are displayed in an arranged photograph on Aug. 5, 2019. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Chris Ratcliffe.A collection of $1 bills are displayed in an arranged photograph on Aug. 5, 2019. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Chris Ratcliffe. 

By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Susanne Barton, Ruth Carson, Hooyeon Kim

It’s turning into a week of vindication for proponents of a weaker dollar as the case they’ve been making for years may be gaining steam.

The greenback is spiraling lower, probing levels last seen in April 2018, judging by a Bloomberg index. The tumble is part of a broader move across financial markets to price in brighter growth prospects for 2021 and the potential for superior investment opportunities outside the U.S., in large part as hopes for a coronavirus vaccine build.

Dollar bears are feeling encouraged by the breadth of the currency’s declines this week: The euro, the Australian and Canadian dollars and the Korean won have all touched their highest levels in more than two years, while the Swiss franc is at its strongest since 2015. The pound is at the highest in roughly a year, even amid the uncertainty surrounding Brexit.

“We are seeing money being put back to work after the defensive positions held in the dollar,” said Chris Turner, a currency strategist at ING Groep NV. “Vaccine news is adding weight to the view of a synchronized global upturn in 2021; the dollar can fall another 5-10% next year.”

More weakness in the greenback may come as asset managers build record short bets. The Congress’s renewed focus on fiscal stimulus in recent days delivered the latest blow to the dollar. In another sign of how investors are increasingly bullish on the outlook for economic growth and vaccine development, U.S. stocks are at record highs and commodities are rising.

It all adds credence to those on Wall Street who are warning that the greenback will undergo a bearish cycle with the Federal Reserve keeping rates low for years.

The dollar has dropped about 13% since peaking in March. It’s down 8% against the Swiss franc and roughly 4% versus the yen in 2020, two other traditional haven currencies, underlining the impact of the Fed’s unprecedented stimulus.

Here are key levels breached this week:

– Sterling touched $1.3489, pushing beyond a high touched in early September to reach the strongest since December 2019.

– The euro has broken through the psychological level of $1.20. It touched $1.2173 on Thursday, its strongest since April 2018

– The Canadian dollar strengthened to C$1.2885, the strongest since October 2018

– The Australian dollar rose to 74.47 U.S. cents, its highest level in more than two years

– The Swiss franc soared to its highest since January 2015

– The risk-sensitive Korean won strengthened to 1096.13 against the dollar, its strongest since June 2018, after breaking the key 1,100 level

Credit Suisse forecasts that the euro may rise to $1.25 by the end of 2021, while Goldman Sachs Asset Management favors shorting the dollar against the yuan and sees further gains in the euro and yen. Morgan Stanley and Citigroup Inc. have also forecast a weaker greenback.

“Risk-on sentiment seemed to catch another leg higher this week — we think this should accelerate the dollar’s tilt lower in the near term,” said Terence Wu, foreign-exchange strategist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. “This round of dollar weakness is still more focused in the G-10 space,” although “we expect USD-Asia downside to open up in time.”

Entry from Tachilek made easier to stop people from sneaking back in #SootinClaimon.Com

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Entry from Tachilek made easier to stop people from sneaking back in (nationthailand.com)

Entry from Tachilek made easier to stop people from sneaking back in

NationalDec 04. 2020

By The Nation

Chiang Rai provincial authorities are cooperating with their counterparts in Myanmar to help Thais return home via legal channels in a bid to curb the spread of Covid-19.

This move comes after 10 Thai women working in Myanmar’s Tachilek district sneaked into the country and put hundreds of people at risk in several provinces. There have been several new Covid-19 cases in Tachilek.

As of Thursday, 17 of the 67 Thais who had registered with the Border Consortium have returned to Thailand.

Chiang Rai Immigration Superintendent Pol Colonel Nuttawut Saengduean said another 42 Thai nationals had registered with the Foreign Ministry to return via the Mae Sai checkpoint.

He said returnees will be allowed to enter the country every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and are required to be tested for the virus and spend 14 days in isolation at places designated by the authorities.

“They will be sent to Chiang Rai Prachanukroh Hospital immediately if they test positive,” he said.

New local Covid-19 case found in Chiang Rai #SootinClaimon.Com

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New local Covid-19 case found in Chiang Rai (nationthailand.com)

New local Covid-19 case found in Chiang Rai

NationalDec 04. 2020

By The Nation

The Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration on Friday reported 13 new cases in state quarantine facility and one local transmission case over a 24-hour period.

Eight of those in quarantine facilities were Thai women, one Thai male and four foreigners.

A Thai woman, 45, returned from Ukraine and tested positive on December 1 after staying in a state quarantine hotel in Samut Prakarn province for one day.

A Thai woman, 33, returned from the Netherlands and tested positive on December 1 after stay in a state quarantine hotel for three days in Bangkok.

A Thai masseuse, 33, returned from Norway and tested positive on December after staying in a state quarantine facility for three days in Chonburi.

A Nepali man, 46, tested positive on December 1 after saying in an alternative state quarantine hotel for five days in Bangkok

A Czech man, 71, tested positive on December after staying in an alternative state quarantine hotel for 12 days in Samut Prakan.

A German woman, 68 and a Thai woman, 41, travelled from Germany and tested positive during December 26-28 in an alternative state quarantine hotel in Samut Prakan and a state quarantine facility in Chonburi after staying in for four days and five days respectively.

Three people flew in from the United States — an American man, 31, and a Thai female engineer, 30, tested positive in an alternative state quarantine in Bangkok, while a Thai male student, 32, tested positive in a state quarantine hotel in Chonburi during December 1-2 after staying in for 12 days, five days, and arrival day respectively.

Three Thai women, aged 23, 24 and 25, who worked in an entertainment venue in Myanmar returned legally to Thailand on December 2 and were taken to Chiangrai Prachanukroh Hospital.

Meanwhile, a male waiter, 28, at 8088 cafe restaurant in Chiang Rai, was confirmed as a local transmission case and was taken to Chiangrai Prachanukroh Hospital. His health history reveals the source of infection was likely a friend, a 28-year-old Phayao resident, who had worked at the 1G1 entertainment venue in Myanmar’s Tachilek district in early November and had allegedly illegally entered the country on November 27. He had contact with her from November 28-30; they had meals and she shared his room. He also went to the Farm Festival at Singha Park in Chiang Rai with three other friends. His symptoms started developing on December 2 which was the same day he went for a test and was found to be positive for Covid-19.

Meanwhile, seven patients have recovered and been discharged.

The total number of confirmed cases in Thailand increased to 4,053 (1,081 in state quarantine), 154 are in hospital, 3,839 have recovered and 60 have died

According to Worldometer, as of 10am on Friday, the total number of confirmed cases since the outbreak has reached 65.53 million (up by 687,631), 45.4 million have recovered, while 18.65 million are active cases (106,570 in severe condition) and 1.51 million have died (up by 12,679).

Thailand ranks 151st for most cases in the world, while the US has the most number with 14.53 million, followed by India 9.57 million, Brazil 6.49 million, Russia 2.38 million and France 2.26 million.

Phitsanulok gang war leaves five youngsters badly injured #SootinClaimon.Com

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Phitsanulok gang war leaves five youngsters badly injured (nationthailand.com)

Phitsanulok gang war leaves five youngsters badly injured

NationalDec 04. 2020

By The Nation

A clash between two gangs in Phitsanulok’s Wang Thong district in the wee hours of Friday resulted in five young people getting seriously injured.

Police showed up to find the five victims in a critical condition with several gunshot wounds.

Initial investigation revealed that they were heading to a fair in the district when members of a rival gang showed up and began attacking them with guns and ping pong bombs.

The attackers apparently thought their territory was being encroached upon.

Police have launched an investigation and a manhunt for the offenders.