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    Jeff Ubben speaks with Salesforce CEO as more activists target the software giant

    Signage on a Saleforce office building in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2021.
    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Jeff Ubben of Inclusive Capital had talks with Marc Benioff, the CEO of Salesforce, according to sources, CNBC’s David Faber reported Monday.
    Inclusive Capital has a stake in the CRM giant. It’s unclear what Ubben’s presence will mean for the cloud-based software company.

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    Salesforce has also attracted activist investor Elliott Management’s interest, which made a multibillion dollar investment, the Wall Street Journal reported late Sunday. In October, Starboard Value announced an undisclosed stake in Salesforce, saying the company was suffering from a valuation discount due to a “subpar mix of growth and profitability.”
    Salesforce is in the middle of restructuring amid slowing growth and recession fears. Earlier this year, the firm said it planned to cut jobs by 10%, or 700 employees, and close some offices.
    Salesforce said it expects its employee restructuring to be complete by the end of the 2024 fiscal year and real estate restructuring to finish in the 2026 fiscal year.
    The company had expanded rapidly during the pandemic and the years before as cloud adoption skyrocketed. It also completed large acquisitions such as Slack and Tableau.
    The company’s share price has climbed 17% this year but is off nearly 30% in the past year as of Monday’s close.
    Clarification: Jeff Ubben had previously disclosed his stake in Salesforce.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Wayfair, Meta, Apple, Spotify, Qualcomm and more

    The Spotify logo on a smartphone arranged in Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, on Saturday, Jan. 29, 2022.
    Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Wayfair — Shares of the furniture retailer jumped 26.8% on Monday after Wayfair received upgrades from multiple Wall Street firms, include a double upgrade to overweight from underweight at JPMorgan. The company announced on Friday that it would lay off about 10% of its global workforce as part of a cost-cutting plan. JPMorgan cited Wayfair management’s “newfound commitment to controlling expenses” in its upgrade note.

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    Apple – Apple shares rose 2.35%, as China’s reopening gave hope to investors that it would give the tech and electronics business a lift. Morgan Stanley called the stock a top pick, saying the reopening has “important implications” for demand as well as supply.
    Meta — Shares of Meta climbed 2.8% after Citi reiterated its buy rating on the social media company, saying that while there’s limited macro visibility, they believe the market is stabilizing.
    Spotify — Spotify gained 2.07% after the company sent an internal memo to staff on Monday announcing plans to lay off 6% of its global workforce, or about 600 employees. Spotify CEO Daniel Ek admitted the streaming giant was “too ambitious in investing ahead of our revenue growth.”
    Skechers — Skechers popped 4.57% after Cowen upgraded the stock to outperform from market perform. The firm said there were potential upsides that Wall Street could be overlooking.
    Salesforce — Salesforce shares advanced 3.05% following news that activist investor Elliot Management has reportedly made a multibillion-dollar investment in the company. The announcement comes a few weeks after Salesforce announced it would cut 10% of its staff and close some offices.

    Qualcomm — Shares of the semiconductor manufacturer rose 6.62% after Barclays upgraded its rating from overweight to equal weight. The firm cited Qualcomm’s exposure to data centers, personal computers, and headsets as reasons for its more optimistic rating.
    Western Digital — Shares jumped 8.66% after Bloomberg reported that merger talks between Western Digital and Kioxia are advancing. Western Digital would spin off its flash business and merge it with Kioxia in a separately traded company, the report said.
    Xylem — Shares of water technology stock Xylem sank 8.76% on news that the company is acquiring Evoqua Water Technologies in an all-stock deal valued at roughly $7.5 billion. Evoqua shares jumped more than 15% following the announcement.
    — CNBC’s Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Tanaya Macheel, Jesse Pound, Carmen Reinicke, Pia Singh, and Samantha Subin contributed reporting.

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    Egg prices rose 60% in 2022. One farm group claims it’s a ‘collusive scheme’ by suppliers

    Egg prices jumped 60% in 2022, according to the consumer price index, an inflation measure.
    One farm group claims major egg suppliers have engaged in a “collusive scheme” to gouge and fix prices to boost profits, and called on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate.
    Egg producers and food economists suggest a deadly outbreak of bird flu has compounded into a significant supply problem, at a time of peak demand and higher costs for feed and transportation.

    Eggs for sale at elevated prices in New York on Jan 21, 2023.
    Fatih Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

    Egg prices soared to historically high levels in 2022 — and one group is alleging the trend is due to something more nefarious than simple economics.
    Across all egg types, consumers saw average prices jump 60% last year — among the largest percentage increases of any U.S. good or service, according to the consumer price index, an inflation measure.

    Large, Grade A eggs cost $4.25 a dozen in December, on average — a 138% increase from $1.79 a year earlier, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
    The industry narrative has largely focused on a historic outbreak of avian influenza — which has killed tens of millions of egg-laying hens — as the primary driver of those higher prices.
    More from Personal Finance:Tax season starts with boosted IRS workforce, new technologyWhat to know about filing for unemployment benefits after a layoffCommon misconceptions can keep you from a perfect credit score
    But Farm Action, a farmer-led advocacy group, claims the “real culprit” is a “collusive scheme” among major egg producers to fix and gouge prices, the group said in a letter to the Federal Trade Commission.
    Doing so has helped producers “extract egregious profits reaching as high as 40%,” according to the letter, issued Thursday, which asks FTC Chair Lina Khan to investigate for potential profiteering and “foul play.”

    An FTC spokesman declined to comment due to a general agency policy regarding letters, petitions or complaints received from third parties.

    However, food economists are skeptical an inquiry would uncover wrongdoing.
    “I don’t think we’ve seen anything that makes us think that there’s something there other than normal economics happening right now,” said Amy Smith, vice president at Advanced Economic Solutions.
    “I think it was just kind of a perfect storm of stuff that came together,” she added.

    Economics or ‘profiteering’?

    The U.S. suffered its deadliest outbreak of bird flu in history in 2022.
    “Highly pathogenic avian influenza” killed about 58 million birds across 47 states, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The prior record was set in 2015, when 50.5 million birds died.  
    The disease, which is contagious and lethal, affects many types of birds, including egg-laying hens.
    In December, the average number of “layers” was down 5% from a year earlier, at a total 374 million birds, according to USDA data published Friday. Overall production of table eggs fell by 6.6% over the same period, to 652.2 million, data showed.
    These industry figures don’t seem to square with a two- or three-digit percentage spike in egg prices last year, Farm Action claims.

    “Contrary to industry narratives, the increase in the price of eggs has not been an ‘Act of God’ — it has been simple profiteering,” the group said.
    For example, the profits of Cal-Maine Foods — the nation’s largest egg producer and an industry bellwether — “increased in lockstep with rising egg prices through every quarter of the year,” Farm Action claimed. The company reported a tenfold increase in profits over the 26-week period ended Nov. 26, for example, Farm Action said.
    While other major producers don’t report such information publicly, “Cal-Maine’s willingness to increase its prices — and profit margins — to such unprecedented levels suggests foul play,” Farm Action wrote.
    Max Bowman, Cal-Maine’s vice president and chief financial officer, denied the allegations, calling the U.S. egg market “intensely competitive and highly volatile even under normal circumstances.”

    Bird flu’s significant impact on hen supply has been the most notable driver, while egg demand has remained strong, Bowman said in a written statement.
    Expenses for feed, labor, fuel and packaging have also “risen considerably,” feeding through to higher overall production costs and, ultimately, wholesale and retail egg prices, he said. Cal-Maine also doesn’t sell eggs directly to consumers or set retail prices, Bowman added.

    A ‘compounding effect’ of bird flu on egg prices

    Charly Triballeau | Afp | Getty Images

    Cal-Maine’s statement seems to square with the general outlook of food economists reached by CNBC.
    “We’ve never seen [these prices],” said Angel Rubio, senior analyst at Urner Barry, a market research firm specializing in the wholesale food industry. “But we also haven’t seen [avian flu] outbreaks month after month after month like this.”
    In economics, markets are almost never perfectly “elastic,” Rubio said. In this case, that means there’s generally not a 1:1 relationship between egg or hen supply and egg prices.
    During the prior bird-flu outbreak in 2015, wholesale egg prices rose about 6% to 8% for every 1% decrease in the number of egg-laying hens, on average, Urner Barry found in a recent analysis.
    About 42.5 million layers (about 13%) have died since the 2022 outbreak, according to Urner Barry. Prices have increased about 15% for every 1% decrease in egg layers over that time, on average, Rubio said.

    The pricing market is already coming down post-holiday.

    vice president at Advanced Economic Solutions

    The dynamic is largely due to a “compounding effect” of demand, Rubio said.
    For example, let’s say a big supermarket chain has a contract to buy eggs from a producer at a wholesale price of $1 per dozen. But that egg supplier then suffers a bird-flu outbreak. All supply from that source comes offline temporarily. So, the supermarket chain must then procure eggs from another supplier — raising demand for the other supplier’s eggs, which might ultimately sell eggs to the supermarket for $1.05 or more a dozen.
    Once a farm suffers a flu outbreak, it likely won’t produce eggs again for at least six months, Rubio said.
    This dynamic is happening simultaneously across multiple farms and supermarkets. Bird flu also generally dissipates in the summer, but outbreaks began anew in last autumn heading into peak demand season around the winter holidays, Rubio said.

    Good news ahead?

    Easter is usually another period of high seasonal demand for eggs.
    F.j. Jimenez | Moment | Getty Images

    Some good news for consumers may be ahead, though, economists said.
    Wholesale egg prices had declined to about $3.40 a dozen as of Friday, down from a peak $5.46 a dozen on Dec. 23, Rubio said. (Current wholesale prices are still almost triple their “normal” level, Rubio said.)
    On average, it takes about four weeks for wholesale price movements to be reflected in the retail market for consumers, Rubio said.
    “The pricing market is already coming down post-holiday,” said Smith at Advanced Economic Solutions.
    The Easter holiday is usually another period of high seasonal demand, however, meaning prices may stay elevated through March, assuming the bird-flu outbreak doesn’t worsen, economists said.

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    M&M’s pulls ‘spokescandies’ amid right-wing outrage, before Super Bowl ad starring Maya Rudolph

    Candy maker Mars said it is replacing its M&Ms “spokescandies” with actress Maya Rudolph after facing right-wing criticism.
    Rudolph will star in the candy brand’s upcoming Super Bowl commercial.
    Conservatives, including Fox News host Tucker Carlson, claimed the makeovers the mascots got last year, including new shoes and personalities, were an example of a liberal agenda gone too far.
    Mars in December said it would return to the Super Bowl ad slate with a 30-second commercial, teasing the spot with an image of its seven M&M characters silhouetted on a football field.

    Actor Maya Rudolph to replace M&Ms spokescandies.
    Source: Mars (L) | Getty Images (R)

    Candy maker Mars said Monday it is replacing its M&Ms “spokescandies” with actress Maya Rudolph after facing right-wing criticism over its mascot makeover.
    Rudolph will star in the candy brand’s Super Bowl LVII commercial, Chief Marketing Officer Gabrielle Wesley told CNBC. It will be the actor’s first appearance as the brand’s spokesperson and “Chief of Fun.”

    “The original colorful cast of M&M’S spokescandies are, at present, pursuing other personal passions,” said Wesley.
    She noted that in the coming weeks, the company will announce “what the M&M’S spokescandies are up to over the next few weeks before, during and after Super Bowl LVII,” via their website and social media channels.
    The spokescandies are a team of cartoon M&Ms mascots that have represented the brand in commercials and other marketing materials since 1960. Early last year, the candy brand updated the cartoons and its marketing, rebranding each mascot with a new backstory, clothing and personality to be more inclusive.
    The green M&M, for example, had previously drawn criticism for being marketed as too sexy, so the company switched out her knee-high heeled boots for sneakers and put more emphasis on her feminist values. “Orange” became a mascot riddled with anxiety, and the company added a new purple M&M, which was designed to represent inclusivity.
    The rebrand caught the eye of conservatives, including Fox News host Tucker Carlson, at the time of the update and again in recent weeks, with some claiming the makeovers were another example of a liberal agenda gone too far.

    “In the last year, we’ve made some changes to our beloved spokescandies. We weren’t sure if anyone would even notice. And we definitely didn’t think it would break the internet,” M&Ms said in a statement Monday on Twitter. “Now we get it — even a candy’s shoes can be polarizing … Therefore, we have decided to take an indefinite pause on the spokescandies.”
    The company announced Rudolph would take the place of the iconic mascots just ahead of the key Super Bowl advertising event.
    “I am a lifelong lover of the candy, and I feel like it’s such an honor to be asked to be part of such a legendary brand’s campaign,” Rudolph said in an interview Monday with NBC’s TODAY.
    Representatives for Rudolph did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
    Mars in December announced it would make its return to the Super Bowl advertising slate with a 30-second spot during the game Feb. 12. The company teased the commercial with an image of its seven M&M characters, silhouetted on a football field.
    “The latest campaign extends our purposeful work over the last year but is rooted in a new creative territory, and we can’t wait for our fans to see what’s about to unfold,” Wesley said in a statement at the time.
    Correction: A photo caption in this story has been updated to correct the spelling of Maya Rudolph’s name.

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    Hate fast fashion? You can compost this new streetwear clothing line

    Clean Start

    Fast fashion is big business, but it is also a big polluter, responsible for about 10% of global carbon emissions. Roughly 70% of the $3 trillion fashion industry is comprised of articles made from synthetics or petrochemicals.
    While some companies are claiming sustainable clothing lines, there is a very wide variance in what that means. For some the carbon reduction is in the manufacturing, while for others it is in the clothing itself.

    The market for plant-based clothing is growing fast, shown by companies like Activ activewear, Kent underwear and startup Unless, which bills itself as “the first streetwear brand to create products that will harmlessly decompose at the end of life.” Unlike today’s mostly petroleum-based clothing, you can compost these clothes. They’re all made from 100% plant-based nutrients like recycled cotton, hemp, plant-based leather and coconut fiber, according to the company. 
     “We started the company because we’re a bunch of fashion executives that got tired of the make, take, and throw away culture of fashion,” said Eric Liedtke, CEO of Unless. “The planned obsolescence of fashion is basically based on a petrochemical or petroleum-based feedstock, which means it’s cheap. But what you don’t know about that is it creates synthetics which are forever materials that never go away.”
    Liedtke came from Adidas, so it’s no surprise that Unless includes footwear along with apparel and accessories.
    “Our product starts with the end in mind. That becomes a very easy story to tell the consumers, because the clearest thing is what happens when I’m done using it? it harmlessly goes away and becomes plant and worm food. And that to me is just as important as the quality of the product you make. It’s the product times the story,” said Liedtke.
    Unless has just one pop-up retail store in its home town of Portland, Ore., in addition to online sales. Liedtke hopes the company will grow along with the fast-rising consumer demand for greener products, and plans to collaborate with other brands as more companies look to combat fashion waste. Unless recently launched a collaboration with Mammut, a 160-year-old Swiss climbing company.

     “We did that around International Mountain Day, and I’m happy to say the product sold out in 48 hours,” said Liedtke.
    Those collaborations could also help the company moderate its relatively high prices: A “Biodegradable Hoodie” lists for $119 on the company’s website, for instance. Some shoppers say it’s worth it for the cause.
     “I would pay more for sustainable clothing I think it is, partly, just like it’s my contribution to helping the planet, and I think we should all contribute the way we can,” said Dru Ueltschi, who was shopping in the pop-up store.
     Unless is backed by Connect Ventures, an investment partnership between Creative Artists Agency and NEA (New Enterprise Associates), and has raised $7.5 million to date.

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    Can China fix its property crisis?

    To judge by the high-rises dotted along the shore in Haiyang, a small coastal city, Country Garden’s prospects are pretty meagre. The firm, China’s biggest developer by sales, has sold few beachside flats. A handful of towers appear only partly built. A faux-German village with pointed roofs accommodates shops and restaurants, and adds a bit of flair. But it, too, is nearly empty. The company’s failure to sell homes was made clear when its profits for the first half of 2022 nearly evaporated altogether.Country Garden is not the only Chinese developer to have faced difficulties. The volume of floor space sold across the country fell by 24% in 2022, the biggest slump since data became available in 1992; property investment was down 10% year on year, the first drop on record. Cross-border defaults are also proving difficult. Evergrande, the world’s most indebted developer, which collapsed in 2021, has still not produced a restructuring plan originally due in July. The firm’s auditor, PwC, resigned on January 16th. This reduction in activity has been catastrophic for China’s economy, which derives around a fifth of its growth from the sector. The country’s officials are currently redesigning policy on a vast scale. The government has abandoned its “zero-covid” approach to the pandemic, while simultaneously signalling an end to a crackdown on technology firms. Policymakers are also trying to rescue the property sector. After two years of forcing developers to deleverage—which has pushed dozens to default on debts—regulators are now abandoning many of these measures in the hope of reviving sentiment. This has prompted a measure of optimism. Despite the bleak view in Haiyang, Country Garden’s share price has trebled since October.The exact contents of the government’s reforms remain murky. On January 13th officials produced a draft 21-point plan which stated that the aim was to provide liquidity to “good-quality” developers. The task now is to differentiate between these companies and bad ones: no clear definition has been given of what constitutes good quality. The plan will also push policy banks to grant loans for stalled projects and state-owned asset managers to provide credit for mergers and acquisitions. Commercial banks, which had pulled back from property, have been told to start lending to reliable developers once again. Meanwhile, state media report that the “three-red-lines” policy, which capped debt, will be relaxed for 30 unnamed firms. Companies began rapidly raising new debt in December—a sign that policy easing kicked off well before the government announced the new measures. Local authorities have been lowering mortgage rates, and many are now at record lows. The state’s bail-out funds are targeting unfinished construction. About 60% of homes sold between 2013 and 2020 are thought not to have been delivered to buyers, many of whom have nevertheless started to make payments. Without funding construction projects have stalled and cannot be finished. Fear of unfinished homes has reduced demand.The state also wants to avoid more messy defaults. Country Garden made a last-minute payment to bondholders on January 17th. This was made possible by support from local governments, something few companies aside from those as big and important as Country Garden have at the moment. According to Refinitiv, a data firm, some 950bn yuan ($140bn) in offshore dollar debts alone will mature this year, up from 810bn yuan last year. The plan is showing some early results. Home completions rose by 6% year on year in December, after diving 18% the month before. This is a closely watched measure: unfinished homes prompted homebuyers to boycott their mortgage payments last year, as part of a wave of protests. The reforms have been aided by the lifting of covid-19 restrictions. A few weeks before the policy changes, moving about in Chinese cities (say, to view a property) carried the threat of quarantine. Preliminary data from Beike Research Institute, a consultancy, suggest that sales of second-hand homes in 50 big Chinese cities may have risen by more than a fifth in the first ten days of the year, compared with the same period a month earlier.Kaisa, a developer that defaulted in 2021, has been avoiding restructuring talks with investors and looks far from an agreement with creditors. Yet despite its troubles, demand for the company’s homes seems to be growing. Analysts from CreditSights, a research firm, recently visited a project in Shanghai and found agents were no longer offering discounts. The absence of price cuts suggests demand is picking up for properties in good locations.A few foreign investors have been encouraged by the state’s plan. Firms have almost entirely been shut out of the offshore bond market, where many global asset managers and hedge funds are trying to recoup losses following missed payments. The funds raised by developers fell by a quarter last year compared with the year before. But on January 12th Dalian Wanda Commercial Management priced a $400m junk bond, the first in more than a year and a sign that some well-known developer-linked groups may slowly return to the offshore dollar-bond market in the coming year. Fidelity and BlackRock, two American asset managers, bought into the offering, according to Reorg, a research house.The effort could lead to housing-market stabilisation and a slight rebound in sales in the second quarter of the year, according to analysts at Morgan Stanley, a bank—roughly what the government has in mind. But officials must tread a fine line. Too much funding would revive old problems of oversupply, and do so at a time when China’s population is beginning to fall. Vacancy rates hit 7% in China’s biggest cities last year and 12% in second-tier cities, much higher than the global average, reckons JPMorgan, another bank. About 70% of homes sold since 2018 have been bought by people who already own at least one. Speculation has made Chinese homes the most expensive in the world on a price-to-income basis. Hong Hao of grow Investment, an asset-management firm, says the “three-red-lines” policy at least obliged developers to slow down the rate at which they took on debt. The campaign brought on huge problems for the Chinese economy, but without it “the situation would be much worse”, he adds. If the government ends up pouring too much money into the bail-out it could lead to another wave of excess, and more empty seaside projects. ■ More

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    Tax season starts with boosted IRS workforce, new technology as agency begins to deploy $80 billion in funding

    Tax season kicked off for individual filers on Monday with a bigger IRS customer service team and enhanced technology, according to Treasury officials.
    The IRS has hired 5,000 new customer service staff, aiming to “significantly increase” the number of answered calls.
    The agency also plans to improve customer service through technology, including the ability for filers to respond to certain IRS notices online and for the IRS to scan paper returns. 

    kate_sept2004 | E+ | Getty Images

    Tax season kicked off for individual filers Monday with a bigger IRS customer service team and enhanced technology as the agency begins to deploy its nearly $80 billion in funding. 
    Over the past several months, the IRS has hired 5,000 new customer service staff, aiming to “significantly increase” the number of answered calls, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo told reporters Friday.

    IRS service was flagged as one of the agency’s “most serious problems” in the National Taxpayer Advocate’s 2022 annual report, with only 13% of callers reaching live assistance during the 2022 filing season.
    More from Personal Finance:Roth conversion taxes may be trickier than you expectIRS to start 2023 season stronger, taxpayer advocate saysHow higher Social Security cost-of-living adjustments may affect your taxes
    The IRS will bolster in-person support at Taxpayer Assistance Centers across the country, putting the agency on track to “triple the number of Americans served,” Adeyemo said.
    The agency also plans to improve customer service through technology, including the ability for filers to respond to certain IRS notices online and for the IRS to scan paper returns. 
    “These improvements showcase how we are modernizing both technology and customer service to bring the IRS into the 21st century and how the IRS plans to deploy [Inflation Reduction Act] resources in the years to come,” Adeyemo said.

    Enacted in August, the Inflation Reduction Act allocated $79.6 billion to the IRS over the next 10 years, and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen outlined priorities soon after — such as clearing the tax return backlog, improving customer service, overhauling technology and hiring workers.
    The IRS aims to deliver a plan for the nearly $80 billion in funding to Yellen in February, according to a Treasury official. 
    Meanwhile, House Republicans in January voted to slash the newly enacted IRS funding after months of scrutiny of the agency’s plans. However, the measure doesn’t have the support to pass in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

    ‘Light at the end of the tunnel’ for the IRS

    The 2023 tax filing season kicks off after a challenging period for the IRS. Despite promises to clear the backlog, as of Dec. 23 there were still 1.91 million unprocessed individual returns received in 2022, according to the agency.
    However, the IRS may be primed for a better 2023 filing season after making “considerable progress” in reducing the pileup, National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins said in her annual report.
    “We have begun to see the light at the end of the tunnel,” she wrote. “I am just not sure how much further we have to travel before we see sunlight.”

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    FDA says Covid vaccines will probably get an annual update but most people will likely need only one shot

    The FDA published a road map for the future of Covid-19 vaccination in the U.S.
    The agency said the shots will probably get an annual update, but most people will likely need only one shot moving forward.
    The FDA’s panel of advisors meets Thursday to discuss the proposed framework.

    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    The Food and Drug Administration has laid out a road map for what Covid-19 vaccination may look like moving forward.
    In a briefing document published Monday, the FDA said the vaccines will probably need an annual update as the virus continues to evolve. The agency would select the Covid strain for the vaccine in the spring so the updated shots could roll out every September in time for a fall vaccination campaign.

    Most people would receive one shot to restore their protection against the virus moving forward, according to the briefing document. This would apply to people who have been exposed to the virus’s spike protein at least twice, either through vaccination or infection.
    But older adults and people with compromised immune systems may need two doses, according to the proposed vaccination schedule. Young children who have received only one shot previously would also get two doses.
    The FDA released the road map ahead of a meeting of the agency’s independent vaccine experts scheduled for Thursday. The expert panel will vote on whether to make all Covid vaccines in the U.S. bivalent shots, meaning they protect against both the omicron BA.5 subvariant as well as the original strain of Covid discovered in Wuhan, China, in late 2019.
    Currently, only Moderna’s and Pfizer’s booster doses target the omicron variant. If adopted, the primary series would also contain the omicron strain.
    The proposed system for updating Covid vaccines resembles how the FDA selects flu shots every year. The agency said it could update and rollout the Covid vaccines without clinical data, which is also the case with the annual process to change the flu shot.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday is also expected to provide more information about an investigation into what it has described as a “very unlikely” risk of stroke in seniors who received Pfizer’s omicron booster.
    The CDC received preliminary safety concern data from its Vaccine Safety Datalink late last year. A subsequent review for four other major databases did not identify an increased risk for stroke, but the CDC investigation is ongoing.

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