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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sense who wrote (174582)7/10/2021 9:44:28 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217720
 
HK's approach is not tenable in the longer term even as it has lasted awhile, much longer than I first thought, but

now that I re-think, I can see why 'they' might not want to panic us, and yet must fight to the last dime, for breakout in high density HK would be problematic if CoVid turns out to actually be more debilitating than what we are told

news.rthk.hk

Wong Tai Sin block under Covid-19 lockdownHealth officials put a residential block in Wong Tai Sin under overnight lockdown on Saturday, after they found an untraceable preliminary positive Covid-19 case that involves a mutant strain.

Authorities said the case involves a 50-year-old man whose infection was identified through mandatory testing at Hong Kong International Airport, after an airline ground crew member was infected two weeks ago.

The new patient is a porter at the airport who mainly performed duties at the apron, and he last went to work on Saturday.

He received the first dose of the BioNtech vaccine on July 1 and has been asymptomatic, but was found to carry the L452R mutant strain.

Officials said the latest patient doesn't know the previously infected airport worker.

The building where the man lives at 1-3 Kam Fung Street was cordoned off at 7:30 pm, and residents were required to undergo compulsory testing before midnight.

"The risk of infection in the relevant area is assessed to be likely higher, so the government decided to make a 'restriction-testing declaration' for the relevant area after the test result was found positive," a government spokesman said.

Officials said they aim to finish their operation by around 7 am.

The airport and places the man visited will be included in a compulsory testing notice.

Earlier, the Centre for Health Protection reported an imported Covid case, a 16-year-old boy who had flown in from the UK.

He was in quarantine at a Hung Hom hotel, when he tested positive for the virus.

He did not have any symptoms.



To: sense who wrote (174582)7/11/2021 9:08:08 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
sense

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217720
 
At onset of the Asian Financial Crisis gold first crashed and then ramped, supposedly and sounds right, that folks needed to sell gold, and then needed to buy gold, with a tiny time-lag

By below article, at least in some localities, folks need to offload gold

Given such, it stands to reason that when events go depression, gold would first tank, and then ramp. The issue then is not tank vs ramp, but the time-lag between tank / ramp

bloomberg.com

Indians Offload Gold Heirlooms as Virus Deepens Financial Pain
Swansy Afonso
12 July 2021, 08:00 GMT+8
Paul Fernandes, a 50-year-old waiter in India, last year took out a loan using his gold as collateral to pay for his children’s education after losing his job on a cruise liner. This year, he is selling his gold jewelry to meet expenses, after failed attempts at starting a home business and finding another job.

“A gold loan is after all a debt that I am taking on,” he said from his hometown in the coastal state of Goa. “Selling my jewelry means I am not obligated to pay someone back along with an additional interest on that.”

With the pandemic pushing millions into poverty or bankruptcy, many Indians are now turning to their last resort: selling their gold jewelry to make ends meet. In rural India, the biggest bullion buyer, a brutal new wave of the virus has had a catastrophic impact on the economy and incomes. With fewer banks around, people in rural areas rely on gold in times of need as it can be easily liquidated.



A gold brokers shop at the Zaveri Bazaar in Mumbai in Novermber 2020.

Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

The likelihood of financial distress caused by the second wave is much higher and it could lead to more outright sales of gold, unlike in 2020, when consumers chose to take out loans against their stash of the metal, according to Chirag Sheth, a consultant at London-based Metals Focus Ltd.

Gross scrap supplies, which include old gold melted to make new designs, may exceed 215 tons and surge to the highest in nine years if a new wave emerges, he said. For a nation that imports almost all its gold mainly from Switzerland, higher local supply will also limit overseas inflows.

“You already had a financial problem last year and you got out of that problem through gold loans. Now again, you are having financial problems this year with a potentially third wave on the way, which can again mean lockdowns and job losses,” said Sheth. “We can expect distress sales in a big way in August and September when the third wave could actually set in.”

Many Indians who had clawed their way out of poverty face grim job prospects as lockdowns crippled the economy. More than 200 million have gone back to earning less than minimum wage, or $5, a day.

India Supercharged Its Economy 30 Years Ago. Covid Unraveled It

Signs of Distress
In an initial sign of stress among consumers, Manappuram Finance Ltd., one of the nation’s biggest gold loan providers, auctioned 4.04 billion rupees ($54 million) of gold in the three months through March from loans that turned sour following a sharp drop in prices.

That compares with just 80 million rupees auctioned in the prior nine-month period. The jewelry was sold as Manappuram’s borrowers -- typically daily wage earners, small time entrepreneurs, and farmers -- couldn’t afford to repay the money.



In southern India, the country’s biggest per capita consumer, about 25% more of old gold than usual has been sold to jewelers, according to James Jose, managing director of Kochi-based refiner CGR Metalloys Pvt.

“After the lockdown, the shops are open and you can see very good footfalls in the shops for two reasons: one is purchases in relation to the wedding season and some amount of liquidation for cash,” Jose said by phone.

Indians have been cutting down on their gold purchases in the past couple of years as a weak economy and the virus outbreak trims their spending power. In 2020, gold sales fell to the lowest in more than two decades, according to the World Gold Council.

Still, demand may rebound this year, rising as much as 40% from a year ago, driven by a fall in prices and about 50 tons of latent wedding purchases being pushed to this year from 2020, according to Metals Focus’ Sheth.

“The third wave remains the biggest risk to our estimate,” he said.

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To: sense who wrote (174582)7/11/2021 9:40:00 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217720
 
The latest seems to suggest vaccine not really useful against the virus, or not as useful as against earlier editions

If so, and if 'they' continue to insist that mRNA is the way to go even as it has shown to be at best effective against specific strains but weak against all other strains, then I wonder whether the earlier strains would make a comeback as the earlier does of vaccine loses effectiveness and later vaccines target only later strains, per whack a mole

Should such a scenario develop to envelop, we best deliberate whether it is best to catch some version of CoVid and count on then-natural immunity, or to take a jab of weakened / inactive virus for same but artificially-stimulated immunity, unless of course 'they' tee-up yet another geewhizbang newfangled vaccine for mass human trial per woodchuck season's Groundhog Day.

Pfizer, fully invested in its oil, would likely intone a jab a day would keep Covid away.

Nothing is priced-in except perfection.

edition.cnn.com

What the Delta variant's trajectory in Israel and the UK could mean for the US

(CNN) — All eyes are on the Delta variant that is now dominant in the United States as new Covid-19 cases rise week-to-week and the variant -- first identified in India and also known as B.1.617.2 -- accounts for a growing share.

But trends from Israel and the United Kingdom -- where the variant became dominant a few weeks sooner than in the US -- present hope for a less deadly and severe surge than others that have come before. And experts say that vaccination progress will be the most critical factor in preventing the worst outcomes.

In Israel, average daily cases are twice what they were in mid-April when the first cases of Delta were identified in the country. At that time, there were an average of five deaths each day in Israel. But despite the rise of the Delta variant -- which now accounts for more than 90% of new cases in the country -- average daily deaths have stayed consistently below that. In fact, Israel has had an average of less than two Covid-19 deaths per day since the last week of May, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

... etc etc