The global case tally for the coronavirus illness COVID-19 climbed to 9.5 million on Thursday, a day after the U.S. recorded its highest one-day peak since late April and cases continued to climb in Brazil, Mexico and other countries, in the latest indication that the pandemic is far from contained.
The U.S. counted 34,700 new confirmed cases on Wednesday, according to the Associated Press, the highest level since a late April peak number of 36,400. While New York and neighboring states have succeeded in flattening their infection curve, 29 states are still seeing increasing cases over the last 14 days, according to a New York Times tracker.
California, Texas and Florida are leading the pack, while Arizona, California, Mississippi, Nevada, Texas and Oklahoma have set records for number of new cases in a single day this week. Other states, including North Carolina and South Carolina, have seen their highest rate of hospitalizations.
The pandemic is still very much alive in other parts of the world too. In Brazil, Mexico, India, Iran, Colombia, Iraq, South Africa and Bangladesh, the 5-day average of new cases is still up, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.
Countries that appeared to successfully contain the spread of the virus are also seeing resurgences as they reopen and lift lockdowns. Europe saw an increase last week for the first time in months, according to World Health Organization’s Hans Kluge, regional director for Europe.
Thirty countries have seen increases in new cumulative cases over the past two weeks, Kluge told Agence France-Presse.
“ In 11 of these countries, accelerated transmission has led to very significant resurgence that if left unchecked, will push health systems to the brink once again in Europe,” Kluge said.
Germany, which was widely admired for its successful approach to the crisis and for having far fewer cases and fatalities than neighbors, suffered a setback this week, when it had to reimpose lockdowns in two districts after an outbreak at a slaughterhouse.
Read: Trump won’t abide by tri-state area’s new quarantine during weekend visit to golf club in New Jersey
Latest tallies
At least 483,311 people are confirmed to have died of COVID-19 around the world, according to the Johns Hopkins data.
At least 4.8 million people have recovered.
The U.S. leads the world with a case tally of 2.38 million and death toll of 121,996.
That’s more than double the next highest totals, Brazil’s 1.19 million cases and 53,830 deaths in Brazil. Russia is third in cases with 613,148 and 8,594 deaths, followed by India with 473,105 and 14,894 fatalities.
The U.K. has 308,337 cases and 43,165 fatalities, the highest in Europe and third highest in the world. China, where the illness was first reported late last year, has 84,673 cases and 4,640 fatalities.
What’s the latest medical news?
The race to create a COVID-19 vaccine has upended the traditional drug development process, and health officials and drug makers are trying to hasten the time it takes to find a working vaccine, in part by moving forward with manufacturing plans even before the vaccine candidates prove their safety or efficacy, as MarketWatch’s Jaimy Lee reported.
“The pandemic response is different,” said Joseph Kim, CEO of Inovio Pharmaceuticals Inc. INO,
See also:Why virus stocks are driving market volatility
Inovio said Tuesday that the Department of Defense has awarded it $ 71 million to fund development of its vaccine candidate. The company is expected to release data from a Phase 1 clinical trial in the next week.
Making this kind of change is what enables government officials like Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, to say repeatedly that it’s possible to have a viable COVID-19 vaccine within a year of the coronavirus first coming to the attention of the U.S. government. Trump administration officials have said they aim to have a vaccine by January as part of Operation Warp Speed.
See also:Researchers publish dexamethasone findings
“Although you can never guarantee at all the safety and efficacy of a vaccine until you actually test it in the field, we feel cautiously optimistic based on the concerted effort and the fact that we are taking financial risks,” Fauci testified during a Committee on Energy and Commerce hearing on Tuesday, “not risks to safety, not risk to the integrity of the science, but financial risks to be able to be ahead of the game.”
Moderna Inc. MRNA,
What’s the economy saying?
New applications for traditional jobless benefits fell slightly last week to 1.48 million, but they remain stubbornly high three months after the start of the coronavirus pandemic and signal that a fledging economic recovery is likely to be uneven, as MarketWatch’s Jeffry Bartash reported.
Initial jobless claims, a rough gauge of layoffs, dipped in the seven days ended June 20 from 1.54 million in the prior week, the Labor Department said Thursday. The figures are seasonally adjusted.
While it marked the 12th straight decline, new claims are still extremely high and raise questions about whether a small rebound in the economy, after a prolonged coronavirus-tied shutdown, is about to hit a wall.
Economists polled by MarketWatch had forecast a seasonally adjusted 1.38 million new claims. These figures reflect applications filed the normal way through state unemployment offices.
See also: U.S. entered recession in February after end of longest expansion in history, NBER finds
If people who applied for benefits through a temporary federal program are included, new claims totaled an unadjusted 2.19 million last week. That was down slightly from a revised 2.2 million.
“The concern is what the July and later months could show, given still high initial claims and rising Covid-19 case counts in many states” wrote economists Andrew Grantham and Katherine Judge of CIBC Capital Markets.
See:MarketWatch’s Coronavirus Recovery Tracker
The Commerce Department released its final estimate for first-quarter GDP and stuck with a 5% pace of contraction as previously estimated. Federal Reserve officials and private-sector economists have forecast an unprecedented contraction in GDP in the April-June quarter. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch expect a decline at a 29.5% annual rate. The data will be released on July 30.
A separate report found the U.S. trade deficit in goods widened 5.1% in May as exports fell sharply. The gap in goods widened to $ 74.3 billion in May from a revised $ 70.7 billion in the prior month. That is a much wider than the $ 66.5 billion estimate of economists polled by MarketWatch.
Exports of goods dropped $ 5.5 billion to $ 90.1 in May. Imports fell $ 1.9 billion to $ 164.4 billion.
The report also showed a 1.2% decline in wholesale inventories in May, and advanced retail inventories were down 6.1%. Excluding autos, retail inventories were down 1.5%.
What are companies saying?
Macy’s Inc. M,
There was better news from Olive Garden parent Darden Restaurants Inc. DRI,
“As our industry continues to rebuild, there is significant opportunity to increase market share,” said Gene Lee, Darden’s chief executive, in a statement.
Spice and condiment maker McCormick & Co. Inc. MKC,
Here are the latest things companies have said about COVID-19:
• Ally Financial Inc. ALLY,
• Apple Inc. AAPL,
• CEC Entertainment Inc., the parent of Chuck E. Cheese and Peter Piper Pizza, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, weighed down by restaurant closures during the pandemic. The company will use the time to continue talks with its financial stakeholders, including landlords, to “achieve a comprehensive balance sheet restructuring that supports its reopening and longer-term strategic plans.” As of June 24, 266 company-operated restaurant and arcade venues had reopened for business. The company is expecting to keep these venues open through Chapter 11 and to offer dine-in, delivery and take-out services. The company’s non-U.S. franchise partners and corporate entities are not included in the process.
• Chico’s FAS Inc. CHS,
• KB Home KBH,
• Macy’s is cutting 3,900 workers across corporate and management roles, as well as store staff, supply chain employees and the customer service network due to the impact of COVID-19. The restructuring is a cost-cutting effort as the department store retailer recovers from the pandemic. “While the reopening of our stores is going well, we do anticipate a gradual recovery of business, and we are taking action to align our cost base with our anticipated lower sales,” said CEO Jeff Gennette. “Our lower cost base combined with the approximately $ 4.5 billion in new financing will also make us a more stable, flexible company.” Macy’s expects to save $ 365 million in fiscal 2020, and $ 630 million on an annualized basis. Restructuring costs are expected to be $ 180 million. Macy’s had 123,000 workers as of February 1; many were furloughed at the end of March. Most of the remaining furloughed staff will return to work on July 5.
• MGM Resorts International MGM,
• Rite Aid Corp. RAD,
• The Walt Disney Co. DIS,