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    AMC to raise $500 million in bond sale as it seeks to refinance debt

    AMC Entertainment plans to sell $500 million in bonds in a bid to pay down maturing debt and related fees.
    These senior secured notes carry an interest rate of 10.5%.
    Refinancing to push debt maturities out can help AMC save cash and pay down interest on other notes that are due sooner.

    An AMC theatre is pictured in Times Square in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, June 2, 2021.
    Carlo Allegri | Reuters

    Movie theater chain AMC Entertainment plans to sell $500 million in bonds in a bid to pay down maturing debt and related fees, the company said Tuesday.
    Issuing these senior secured notes, which carry an interest rate of 10.5%, is the next step in CEO Adam Aron’s bid to improve AMC’s financial position.

    While the domestic box office has begun to recover, ticket sales remain muted compared to prepandemic levels. Refinancing to push debt maturities out can help AMC save cash and pay down interest on other notes that are due sooner.
    This fits the narrative that Aron has been communicating to investors in 2022. At the beginning of the year he said his goal was to “refinance some of our debt to reduce our interest expense, push out some debt maturities by several years and loosen covenants.”
    After narrowly avoiding bankruptcy last year, AMC rode the meme stock wave and revitalized its business. Now it must deal with more than $5 billion in debt that it accumulated prior to the pandemic through theater upgrades and acquisitions.
    Shares of the company slipped 5% on the news, last trading around $16. AMC’s stock is down more than 40% since January.

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    Dr. Scott Gottlieb says it’s time to consider dumping school Covid mask mandates

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should adjust its Covid masking guidance for schools, Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC on Wednesday.
    “We’re going to probably have to tolerate, and probably should, a higher level of baseline spread,” the former Food and Drug Administration chief said.
    The proliferation of the omicron variant in the U.S., on top of most school-age kids being eligible for vaccination, has created high immunity protection, Gottlieb added.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should adjust its Covid masking guidance to account for high immunity protection in America, specifically when it comes to schools, Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC on Wednesday.
    “We have a much more contagious variant that is probably going to continue to circulate and you have a population that has much more immunity,” the former Food and Drug Administration chief said in a “Squawk Box” interview, referring to the proliferation of the omicron variant in the U.S., on top of most school-age kids being eligible for vaccination.

    “We’re going to probably have to tolerate, and probably should, a higher level of baseline spread at the point at which we consider withdrawing some of this mitigation,” said Gottlieb, a current board member at Covid vaccine maker Pfizer, which has recently requested that the FDA clear two-dose vaccinations for children 6 months to 5 years old.
    Gottlieb said the U.S. shouldn’t wait until what the CDC considers low prevalence in a community — less than 10 cases per 100,000 people per day — to end masking students, teachers, staff and school visitors.
    “If we hold out, again, if we wait for 10 cases per 100,000 per day in most communities, we’re probably going to be waiting until the summer; we’re going to lose the opportunity this spring to try to return some sense of normalcy in the schools,” he added, arguing a more appropriate threshold could be 20 cases per 100,000 people per day.
    Gottlieb said the CDC’s guidance is “a pretty high threshold in the age of omicron,” adding that agency testing conducted right before the omicron wave showed that 90% of Americans have antibodies against Covid either through a vaccine or infection, or both.
    The CDC was not immediately available to respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

    Teachers have been vocal about the risks they face when coming into schools as cases fluctuate. The concerns were personified in the standoff between Chicago Public Schools and the teachers union early last month.

    CNBC Health & Science

    When asked about educators’ opposition to getting rid of masking, Gottlieb said Wednesday that a combination of lower cases and a vaccinated workforce will help protect teachers. “As prevalence comes down, the risk comes down substantially, and what we’ve seen is that the vaccines are still very protective against symptomatic disease and severe outcomes in the setting of omicron.”
    Disclosure: Scott Gottlieb is a CNBC contributor and is a member of the boards of Pfizer, genetic testing start-up Tempus, health-care tech company Aetion and biotech company Illumina. He also serves as co-chair of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings’ and Royal Caribbean’s “Healthy Sail Panel.”

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    The SPAC market starts 2022 with abysmal losses, abandoned deals

    A trader is comforted by a coworker as they work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on March 1, 2018 in New York City.
    Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / Getty Images

    (Click here to subscribe to the new Delivering Alpha newsletter.)
    The oversaturated SPAC market is continuing to get crushed in the new year as speculative stocks with little earnings fall further out of favor in the face of rising rates, while a growing number of deals were abandoned in the tough environment.

    Companies that went public via blank-check deals have been among those worst affected by January’s tech-driven sell-off. Meanwhile, faced with unfavorable market conditions, many sponsors have been forced to scrap their proposed deals, sometimes even before the SPACs got listed.
    “The SPAC bubble is bursting,” said Chris Senyek, senior equity research analyst at Wolfe Research. “SPAC shares are extremely volatile due to their speculative nature.”
    The proprietary CNBC SPAC Post Deal Index, which is comprised of SPACs that have completed their mergers and taken their target companies public, tumbled 23% in January, even more abysmal than the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite’s 9% loss when it suffered the worst month since March 2020.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Some of the biggest losers last month included clean energy player Heliogen, self-driving related companies Aurora Innovation and Embark and 3D technology company Matterport, which all tumbled more than 50% in a single month.
    SPACs stand for special purpose acquisition companies, which raise capital in an initial public offering and use the cash to merge with a private company and take it public, usually within two years.

    The market enjoyed a record year with more than $160 billion raised on U.S. exchanges in 2021, nearly double the prior year’s level, according to data from SPAC Research. Investors once piled into shares of these empty corporate shells hoping they would hit a home run.
    After a year of issuance explosion, there are now almost 600 SPACs searching for an acquisition target, according to SPAC Research. As the market gets increasingly competitive, some announced deals failed to make it to fruition.
    The planned merger of Fertitta Entertainment and the blank-check firm Fast Acquisition Corp was called off at the end of last year. Recent deals that have been abandoned also included online grill retailer BBQGuys, fintech firm Acorns and cloud software platform ServiceMax. 
    Meanwhile, there has been a growing number of SPAC listing withdrawals, meaning the sponsors decided to pull the plug on their listing after filing the initial S-1. There were nearly 20 such cases in the month of January, a jump from only single digits in the prior two quarters, according to SPAC Research.
    — CNBC’s Gina Francolla contributed reporting.Disclosure: NBCUniversal and Comcast Ventures are investors in Acorns, and CNBC has a content partnership with it. More

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    Lux Capital's Josh Wolfe on why the buy-the-dip mantra will no longer work

    (Click here to subscribe to the new Delivering Alpha newsletter.)
    Lux Capital invests in emerging science and technology companies, making long-term bets on contrarians in the space. Over two decades, the firm has grown to manage $4 billion in assets. 

    Josh Wolfe is the futurist fund manager leading the charge at Lux Capital. He has an acute read on scientific innovation and technological breakthroughs to which investors should be paying close attention. Wolfe sat down with CNBC’s Delivering Alpha newsletter to discuss his investing outlook, along with where he sees the most promising opportunities right now.
    (The below has been edited for length and clarity. See above for full video.)
    Leslie Picker: I just wanted to start first with your broader read on the markets right now. Do you think that especially in some of the key pockets of tech, and growth, is this just some air coming out of the tires a bit or a full revaluation of the sector?
    Josh Wolfe: I think in some sectors, it’s a mix. I think you’ve got a flat tire in some sectors. We’re looking at probably, in my estimation, a greater than 60% chance that we are in March of 2000 for a broad segment of the market that has been very overvalued. And that means that we’re probably going to, for an 18 month period till, say October 2001, where you saw about an 80% decline in some of the most popular names. And that 80% decline happened by 50 basis points, 1% drops over a long period of time, which was a measure of people’s belief, clinging, that this was going to continue. You’ve had five, six years where buy the dip has been the mantra and it has worked. And I think it’s no longer going to work and you’re going to see revaluation across specifically some segments of the market, but largely across high-growth tech and speculation and the stuff that we specialize in.
    Picker: What are you telling your portfolio companies to do in light of this?

    Wolfe: Three words: husband your cash. Hold on to the cash that you’ve raised. We’ve had companies that have gone public through SPACs, we’ve had companies that have done direct listings, companies that have gone public through traditional IPOs – the amount of cash that was delivered to balance sheets of Lux portfolio companies, and many companies around the world, is unprecedented. You’ve got hundreds of millions of dollars for companies that are burning, maybe $10 million a quarter, something like that. So you’ve got maybe a decade of cash. What you do with that cash now is the most important capital allocation decision that a management team and a board can make. And in our judgment, the most important thing you can do is husband that cash. Investing now, if we’re going into any kind of recessionary times, is going to be like spitting against the wind, where that cash is going to be ill served going after growth. Instead, make sure you have a fortress balance sheet, look at your weaker competitors, consolidate customers, technologies, positions, I think you’re going to see a huge M&A boom over the next year.
    Picker: One of the big aspects of valuation growth in Silicon Valley has just been the amount of capital that’s been circulating over the last, five, six, seven years. Do you see that slowing down anytime soon, given what we’re seeing in the public markets? And will that impact the valuations that companies are able to get as well as the capital that they’re able to get moving forward?
    Wolfe: And emphatic yes, yes and yes. Now the way that I think about this, there’s going to be some segments of the market, again, that are flush with cash. A lot of funds have been raised. We closed a billion and a half just six months ago, with a lot of dry powder to deploy. Now the speed with which we’re doing that is going to be much slower than it was say, a year ago or two years ago…So I think that the next year you’re going to see LP indigestion, GPs slowing their pace, companies in the private markets seeing valuations come down, akin to what you are seeing predictably in the public markets.
    Picker: Because typically, there is a lag. Only recently have we started seeing reports come out that companies are willing to take lower valuations as a result of what’s going on right now. But at least over the last few years, and especially during – surprisingly – during COVID, many private companies still were able to maintain pretty decent valuations and a lot of them were able to double or triple their valuation. So you think this time is actually different and we will see sort of that 2002 period where startups really have to kind of bootstrap it for a while.
    Wolfe: In the private markets, the latest valuation is set by the marginal price setter. And in many cases, historically, that might have been SoftBank. That might be some of the large crossover hedge funds that are doing private deals. And they were basically saying relatively indiscriminately, “We’re gonna’ buy the winner in the company. Does it really matter what price we pay? No, particularly if we have great terms.” … If you’re senior preferred in the capital structure of these companies, you’re in a great position. So I do think that you’re going to see a situation where private companies are going to go through a discriminating narrowing, meaning the crossover hedge funds, the late-stage growth investors and even the early stage investors are going to be way more discriminating. And [it’s] going to be dominated by, I’ll give you an acronym, instead of FOMO, Fear Of Missing Out, It’s what I call SOBS, the shame of being suckered. People do not want to be suckered in this current moment.
    Picker: I do like that acronym. I wonder if it will ultimately take hold, because I think a lot of investors have been waiting, especially those that have been in Silicon Valley for a while, I’ve heard the term tourist investors for some of the public-private investors that do both sides, crossover investors, that they don’t expect them to be around for a while. Do you agree with that? Do you think that ultimately we do see people kind of just exit this part of the market entirely?
    Wolfe: I think it’s true of every industry through time, right? You see a huge number of entrants then a precipitous pruning as the numbers decline over time. What the wise person does in the beginning, the fool does in the end. This happens within sectors, it happens within investment sub sectors. So you saw this, you know, 2002 to 2007, with the rise of activist hedge funds or active long short hedge funds, then there was a pruning post-crisis…There will be survivors. There will be great investors that come out of this market, there will be great new firms that form, and there will be a significant culling of the herd. I would predict that between 50% and 75% of the active investors in private markets today will disappear within the next few years.
    Picker: Are you putting capital to work right now? Are you kind of hunkered down to see how this all shakes out? Or are you really just looking to sit this out for the long term?
    Wolfe: Well, for our existing companies, we’ve got fortress balance sheets and we’re telling them, “Consolidate your position, do it as quietly as you can, do it as loudly as you can, but just do it.” For new investments, we’re becoming more discriminating on price. We’re not participating in any auctions. We’re not doing deals that are closing because of this FOMO in a day or two, because you got 40 competing term sheets. We’re playing the long game. Now the beautiful thing about the long game is you can invest in deep science and deep technology in these cutting edge areas where there are few investors and few companies. We’re not investing in areas where there’s 500 or even 50 competitors. In many cases, we’re investing in a sector where there might be only one, two, or three companies. You capitalize that company, you bet on the right management team and you can withstand whatever’s happening in the macro for five, six, seven years and make sure these companies are well capitalized. At the end of the day, we’re not buying indexes. We’re not passive investors, we’re active investors, we’re sitting on boards. We’re helping grow these companies from inception, providing them talent and competitive intelligence and future financing, risk reduction.
    I always say that it’s sort of like in our business, trying to pick the best meal on a menu after you’ve selected the best menu in the best restaurant in the best city in the best state in the best country and you’re about to eat a morsel of that delicious bite that you’ve selected, and all of a sudden Godzilla comes and steps on the on the restaurant. Ignorance of the macro is no virtue. You have to pay attention to what is going on in the context of capital markets, inflows, price setting where money is flowing, what the Fed is doing. A lot of people are not focused on that kind of stuff. We historically always pair a little bit of macro understanding and the global situation into our micro investments and security selection on the entrepreneurs we’re betting and the companies that we’re building.
    Picker: Do you see any specific opportunities right now that you’re excited about?
    Wolfe: You know, there are two big themes that we’re really capitalizing on. And we broadly say we’re prepared to pounce. So one of them is in hard power and one of them is in soft power. Both of these relate to geopolitical instability. In the geopolitical stage, you’ve got a revanchist Russia, you’ve got a rising China, you have a cold war really between these two powers, a bifurcation of financial systems, surveillance systems, internet technology. And so on the hard power side, every facet of aerospace and defense is something that we think the U.S. and its allies needs cutting edge technology. You’ve had 20 years of Zeitgeist where people have really been loath in this military industrial complex to want to provide cutting edge technology to the women and men that are on the frontlines of war, whether that’s Special Operations, Air Force, Space, Force, Army, etc. And so we are very focused on providing technology through many of our investments, to the defense industry. 
    And I think you’re going to see a resurgence and reemergence of some of the next gen primes and people that are going to compete with Lockheed and Raytheon and General Atomics, et al. in air, space, land and sea – autonomous systems, artificial intelligence, machine learning, cutting edge tools and technologies that are very expensive, very risky and in many cases, people have been loath to only focus on a government customer like the Department of Defense or the Pentagon, or allies. We’re entirely comfortable doing it and we think it’s geopolitically important…You’ve got north of 14 sovereigns that are now racing to get to space…and so there’s a lot of competition to launch things into space, have satellites, antennas, communication, lots of technologies that were invested in across [those] platforms from literally launch all the way up through space. 
    On the soft power piece….we’re convinced, and people have not really picked up on the steam yet, but what we call the tech of science, there’s going to be a huge boom and demand globally, but particularly for the U.S. pharma companies, biotech companies, academics, U.S. government labs, for the technologies that improve science and give us a competitive advantage to win on the global stage, what is really prestige, globally. More

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    While Valentine’s Day is getting more expensive, going into debt isn't sexy

    On Valentine’s Day, being in love will cost you but not overspending is sexier than ever.
    As Americans recover from Covid’s financial strain, more people want a romantic partner who is responsible with money, one report found.

    Even cupid is coming out of quarantine.
    Valentine’s Day spending is expected to reach $23.9 billion in 2022, the second-highest year on record, according to the National Retail Federation.

    On average, Americans will spend $175.41 on candy, cards, flowers and other romantic gifts, up from $164.76 in 2021.
    Those in a relationship will shell out even more — averaging $208 for their significant other, according to a separate LendingTree survey of nearly 2,100 adults.
    More from Personal Finance:Inflation at its worst: Some ticket prices are up as much as 100%10 things that will be more expensive in 2022How much to tip in a post-pandemic world
    “Inflation is generally making everything more expensive, so I’m not surprised that spending is expected to be higher than previous years,” said Matt Schulz, LendingTree’s credit card expert.
    A dozen roses, for example, which can cost around $100 on Valentine’s Day could be even more expensive now, particularly if they are imported. The same goes for a heart-shaped box of chocolates and, of course, jewelry.

    Couples are also more likely to opt for an evening out this year, compared to last year, when Covid-related restrictions made it harder to eat in a restaurant or see a show, Schulz added.  
    And potential partners may be ready to meet in-person after two years of swiping left or right.

    Still, traditional gender roles remain even as technology continues to disrupt dating. Men are likely to spend significantly more than women on the Feb. 14 holiday, averaging $235 versus just $119.
    Last year, almost 35% of men spent upwards of $500, compared to only 24% of women, according to another spending survey by banking app Monifi.

    Monifi’s financial expert Leigh Singleton recommends setting aside a separate account for such holidays, rather than lumping all long-term savings goals together.
    “That gives you a much better picture of what you can spend,” Singleton said.
    Already, when it comes to spending, most people are being careful with their discretionary purchases and less inclined to rely on plastic — 17% fewer Americans think a Valentine’s Day gift is worth going into credit card debt this year compared to last year, WalletHub found. 

    People want to date people who are financially responsible.

    Jill Gonzalez
    WalletHub analyst

    In fact, financial stability may be the sexiest gift of all.
    “People want to date people who are financially responsible, especially as the Covid-19 pandemic continues to put stress on many Americans’ wallets,” said WalletHub analyst Jill Gonzalez.
    Almost a third of people say that money matters more to them in a relationship now than it did before, WalletHub found.
    “Some of the biggest turnoffs when it comes to romantic partners are irresponsible spending and bad credit,” Gonzalez said.
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    Danish energy fund to lead massive green hydrogen project in Spain, powered by wind and solar

    Sustainable Energy

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    Firms will work together on Catalina Phase I, which will be made up of 1.7 gigawatts of wind and solar in Aragon, north east Spain, and a 500 megawatt electrolyzer.
    Project Catalina will eventually look to develop a total of 5 GW of combined wind and solar, producing green hydrogen using a 2 GW electrolyzer.
    Hydrogen has a diverse range of applications and can be deployed in a wide range of industries.

    Wind turbines photographed in Aragon, Spain.
    Pepe Romeo / 500px | 500px | Getty Images

    Plans for a huge project aiming to produce green hydrogen and ammonia have been announced, with those behind it hoping construction of the first phase will begin in late 2023.
    On Tuesday, Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners announced details of a partnership with Spanish companies Naturgy, Enagás and Fertiberia. Vestas, the Danish wind turbine manufacturer, is also involved.

    The firms will work together on Catalina Phase I, which will be made up of 1.7 gigawatts of wind and solar in Aragon, northeast Spain, and a 500-megawatt electrolyzer able to generate more than 40,000 tons of green hydrogen annually.
    A pipeline will link Aragon with Valencia in the east of Spain, sending the hydrogen to a green ammonia facility. CIP said this ammonia would then be “upgraded” into fertilizer.
    Project Catalina will eventually look to develop a total of 5 GW of combined wind and solar, producing green hydrogen using a 2 GW electrolyzer.
    The scale of the overall development is considerable. “Once fully implemented, Catalina will produce enough green hydrogen to supply 30% of Spain’s current hydrogen demand,” CIP said.
    Details relating to the financing of the initiative have not been revealed. CIP did say, however, that Project Catalina would make what it called a “significant contribution” to Spain’s Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan, or PERTE, on renewable energy, renewable hydrogen and storage.

    In Dec. 2021, the Spanish government said PERTE would mobilize resources amounting to 16.37 billion euros, around $18.54 billion. According to authorities there, the private sector will supply 9.45 billion euros, with 6.92 billion euros coming from Spain’s Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan.

    Read more about clean energy from CNBC Pro

    Hydrogen has a diverse range of applications and can be deployed in a wide range of industries. It can be produced in a number of ways. One method includes using electrolysis, with an electric current splitting water into oxygen and hydrogen.
    If the electricity used in this process comes from a renewable source such as wind or solar then some call it green or renewable hydrogen.
    Over the past few years, a number of firms have undertaken projects related to green hydrogen. Just last week, energy major Shell said a 20 megawatt hydrogen electrolyzer described as “one of the world’s largest” had begun operations.
    In Dec. 2021, Iberdrola and H2 Green Steel said they would partner and develop a 2.3 billion euro project centered around a green hydrogen facility with an electrolysis capacity of 1 gigawatt.
    While there is excitement in some quarters about green hydrogen’s potential, the vast majority of hydrogen generation is currently based on fossil fuels.
    In recent times, some business leaders have spoken of the issues they felt were facing the emerging green hydrogen sector. Last October, for example, the CEO of Siemens Energy told CNBC there was “no commercial case” for it at this moment in time.
    And in July 2021, a briefing from the World Energy Council said low-carbon hydrogen was not currently “cost-competitive with other energy supplies in most applications and locations.” It added that the situation was unlikely to change unless there was “significant support to bridge the price gap.”
    The analysis — which was put together in collaboration with PwC and the U.S. Electric Power Research Institute — raised the question of where funding for such support would come from, but also pointed to the increasing profile of the sector and the positive effect this could have.
    For its part, the European Commission has laid out plans to install 40 GW of renewable hydrogen electrolyzer capacity in the European Union by the year 2030. More

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    Covid will always be an epidemic virus — not an endemic one, scientist warns

    Last week, the WHO warned that the next Covid variant will be even more contagious than omicron.
    According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an epidemic occurs when the number of cases of a disease increases, often suddenly, above what is usually expected.
    The WHO declares a disease a pandemic when its growth is exponential and it is spreading globally.

    Children are seen outside a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) testing site in Brooklyn, New York, January 12, 2022.
    Brendan McDermid | Reuters

    Covid-19 will never become an endemic illness and will always behave like an epidemic virus, an expert in biosecurity has warned.
    Raina MacIntyre, a professor of global biosecurity at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, told CNBC that although endemic disease can occur in very large numbers, the number of cases does not change rapidly as seen with the coronavirus.

    “If case numbers do change [with an endemic disease], it is slowly, typically over years,” she said via email. “Epidemic diseases, on the other hand, rise rapidly over periods of days to weeks.”
    Scientists use a mathematical equation, the so-called R naught (or R0), to assess how quickly a disease is spreading. The R0 indicates how many people will catch a disease from an infected person, with experts at Imperial College London estimating omicron’s could be higher than 3.  
    If a disease’s R0 is greater than 1, growth is exponential, meaning the virus is becoming more prevalent and the conditions for an epidemic are present, MacIntyre said.
    “The public health goal is to keep the effective R — which is R0 modified by interventions such as vaccines, masks or other mitigations — below 1,” she told CNBC. “But if the R0 is higher than 1, we typically see recurrent epidemic waves for respiratory transmitted epidemic infections.”
    MacIntyre noted that this is the pattern that was seen with smallpox for centuries and is still seen with measles and influenza. It’s also the pattern unfolding with Covid, she added, for which we have seen four major waves in the past two years. 

    “Covid will not magically turn into a malaria-like endemic infection where levels stay constant for long periods,” she contended. “It will keep causing epidemic waves, driven by waning vaccine immunity, new variants that escape vaccine protection, unvaccinated pockets, births and migration.”

    “This is why we need an ongoing ‘vaccine-plus’ and ventilation strategy, to keep R below 1 so we can live with the virus without major disruptions to society,” MacIntyre said, adding a warning that “there will be more variants coming.”
    Last week, the World Health Organization warned that the next Covid variant will be even more contagious than omicron.
    Global Biosecurity, the Twitter account representing a collective of UNSW research departments covering epidemics, pandemics and epidemiology, argued last year that Covid will continue to “display the waxing and waning pattern of epidemic diseases.”
    “[Covid] will never be endemic,” the organization said. “It is an epidemic disease and always will be. This means it will find unvaccinated or under-vaccinated people and spread rapidly in those groups.”

    Pandemic, epidemic or endemic?

    According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an epidemic occurs when the number of cases of a disease increases, often suddenly, above what is usually expected.
    The WHO declares a disease a pandemic when its growth is exponential and it is spreading globally.
    “While an epidemic is large, it is also generally contained or expected in its spread, while a pandemic is international and out of control,” experts from Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health explained in a blog post last year. “The difference between an epidemic and a pandemic isn’t in the severity of the disease, but the degree to which it has spread.”
    Endemic disease is defined as “the constant presence or usual prevalence of a disease or infectious agent in a population within a geographic area” by the U.S. CDC.

    CNBC Health & Science

    For Covid to become endemic, enough people need to have immune protection from it for it to become endemic, according to the American Lung Association, highlighting the importance vaccination will play in the virus’s transition away from pandemic status.
    WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said last week that there was a chance that Covid could be ended as a global health emergency this year if the right course of action — which includes addressing vaccine and health-care inequity — is taken.
    His comments came a week after another senior WHO official warned that “we won’t ever end the virus” and that “endemic does not mean ‘good,’ it just means ‘here forever.'”

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    SpaceX rolls outs 'premium' Starlink satellite internet tier at $500 per month

    The new SpaceX product comes at five times the cost of standard service: Starlink Premium requires a $500 fully refundable deposit, a $2,500 fee for the antenna and router, and service is $500 per month.
    According to the Starlink website, the first premium deliveries will begin in the second quarter.

    SpaceX has quietly rolled out a new, more powerful “premium” tier of its Starlink satellite internet service that’s targeted at businesses and enterprise customers.
    The new product, which was added to the company’s website Tuesday night, comes at five times the cost of the consumer-focused standard service: Starlink Premium requires a $500 fully refundable deposit, a $2,500 fee for the antenna and router, and service is $500 per month.

    The standard Starlink service, which launched in October 2020, has a $99 fully refundable deposit, a $499 hardware fee, and service is $99 per month.
    But Elon Musk’s company touts improved hardware, faster service speeds and priority support for its premium customers.
    “Starlink Premium has more than double the antenna capability of Starlink, delivering faster internet speeds and higher throughput for the highest demand users, including businesses,” the SpaceX website said.
    According to the Starlink website, the first premium deliveries will begin in the second quarter.

    Another key difference for Starlink Premium is its “unlimited service locations” flexibility. Unlike the standard product, which only guarantees service at a specific service address, SpaceX advertises Starlink Premium as capable of connecting from anywhere.

    “Order as many Starlinks as needed and manage all of your service locations, no matter how remote, from a single account,” SpaceX said.
    For service, the company said Starlink Premium users can expect download speeds of 150 megabits per second to 500 megabits per second, with latency between 20 milliseconds to 40 milliseconds. That represents an improvement in the top part of the download range, as the standard service advertises speeds between 100 megabits per second to 200 megabits per second, as well as a tighter latency range.
    Additionally, SpaceX said the Premium satellite antenna “is designed for improved performance in extreme weather conditions,” although the website offered no specifics. The standard Starlink product features a “Snow Melt functionality,” which heats itself to remove snow or ice.
    SpaceX continues to advertise Starlink service with unlimited service usage, saying that “at this time there are no data caps.”
    The company’s standard product has more than 145,000 users in 25 countries around the world as of January, with nearly 1,900 satellites in orbit.

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