Monday 23 November 2020

Monday Morning Briefing: AstraZeneca said its COVID-19 vaccine could be 90% effective

What you need to know about the coronavirus today

AstraZeneca vaccine can be 90% effective
Britain’s AstraZeneca said its vaccine for the coronavirus could be around 90% effective without any serious side effects.

The vaccine developed by Oxford University was 90% effective in preventing COVID-19 when it was administered as a half dose followed by a full dose at least one month apart, according to data from the late-stage trials in Britain and Brazil.

No serious safety events related to the vaccine have been confirmed and it was well tolerated across both dosing regimens, it said.

Indonesia hits half a million cases
Indonesia hit a grim milestone in surpassing more than half a million cases of the coronavirus, as hospitals across the country’s most populated province edged closer towards capacity. Indonesia now has 502,110 infections and 16,002 deaths from COVID-19, the highest numbers in Southeast Asia, having struggled to contain the spread since its first case in March.

India plans to put off parliamentary session
India plans to put off the winter session of parliament due to the rising number of infections, a government official said on Monday, with New Delhi facing a shortage of hospital beds and doctors. While the daily rise in new cases nationally has slowed, there has been a surge of infections in the capital, which officials said was because of the sprawling city of 20 million had remained fully open, with crowds gathering for religious festivals during recent weeks.

German states favor extending lockdown
Many of Germany’s 16 federal states favor extending a partial shutdown meant to slow the spread of the pandemic and make family gatherings over Christmas possible, two state premiers said on Monday. Germany imposed a month-long “lockdown-lite” from Nov. 2. Infection numbers have plateaued since but not declined.

New Zealand PM offers help to Biden
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she offered President-elect Joe Biden assistance with tackling the rampant outbreak of COVID-19 in the United States. During the first talks between the two since Biden was elected as the next U.S. president, Ardern said she offered access to New Zealand’s most senior health officials.

From Breakingviews - Corona Capital: Cineworld, Travel bubbles, Danone.
Cineworld’s debt cliffhanger gets a sequel, and a new outbreak of COVID-19 delays quarantine-free travel between Hong Kong and Singapore. Catch up with the latest pandemic-related financial insights.

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United States

President Donald Trump’s increasingly tenuous efforts to reverse his election loss to President-elect Joe Biden could be dealt a lethal blow, as Biden turns to the task of building his cabinet. Michigan is set to certify its results Monday, and Pennsylvania is likely to move a step closer to doing so.

Trump’s campaign and his allies have suffered a string of judicial defeats in their bid to prevent states from certifying Joe Biden as the winner of the presidential election. Here is a list of litigation that could play out in the coming days.

Joe Biden’s top technology adviser helped craft California’s landmark online privacy law and recently condemned a controversial federal statute that protects internet companies from liability, indicators of how the Biden administration may come down on two key tech policy issues. Bruce Reed, a former Biden chief of staff who is expected to take a major role in the new administration, helped negotiate with the tech industry and legislators on behalf of backers of a ballot initiative that led to the 2018 California Consumer Privacy Act.

World

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega controls the media and funnels the money back to his family. How? Buying out broadcasters and punishing anyone trying to speak out.

Forces of Ethiopia’s Tigray People’s Liberation Front have destroyed an airport in the ancient town of Axum, state-affiliated media said, as advancing federal troops gave them a 72-hour ultimatum to surrender. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has told the TPLF, which had been ruling the mountainous northern zone of 5 million people, to lay down their arms by Wednesday or face a final assault on the regional capital Mekelle.

Police in Belarus detained 345 people at nationwide anti-government protests, the Interior Ministry said in a statement. Thousands took to the streets of the Belarusian capital Minsk on Sunday, with police using stun grenades to disperse the crowd.

Business

Exclusive: In latest China jab, U.S. drafts list of 89 firms with military ties

The Trump administration is close to declaring that 89 Chinese aerospace and other companies have military ties, restricting them from buying a range of U.S. goods and technology, according to a draft copy of the list seen by Reuters. The list, if published, could further escalate trade tensions with Beijing and hurt U.S. companies that sell civil aviation parts and components to China, among other industries.

5 min read

Pipe dreams leave U.S. energy firms caught in climate trap

In remote northern Michigan a propane shortage in early 2014 caused prices to nearly double, squeezing about half of the families there who rely on the fossil fuel to heat their homes. Glenda Bowler remembers her son fitting a wood stove at his restaurant as an alternative to propane, which reaches Michigan’s Upper Peninsula via a 645 mile pipeline.

7 min read

Smelling blood, Huawei’s Chinese mobile rivals look to capitalize on its U.S. woes

Chinese handset rivals of Huawei including Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo are making aggressive moves to seize market share from their giant rival, after stepped-up U.S. sanctions hobbled Huawei’s supply chains.

4 min read

Alpha Bank picks Davidson Kempner as preferred bidder for $12 billion bad loans

Greece’s Alpha Bank said that it picked U.S. investment fund Davidson Kempner as its preferred bidder to buy a $12.81 billion portfolio of non-performing loans in what will be Greece’s largest-ever sale of bad debt.

1 min read

G20 to extend debt relief to mid-2021, pushes private sector to help

Leaders of the world’s 20 biggest economies endorsed a plan to extend a freeze in official debt service payments by the poorest countries to mid-2021 and backed a common approach for dealing with their debt problems.

3 min read

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