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    Long-term unemployment is falling for first time during pandemic

    A store advertises a Help Wanted sign in Annapolis, Maryland, on May 12, 2021.JIM WATSON | AFP | Getty ImagesLong-term unemployment fell for the second straight month in May, an encouraging shift away from the recent near-record levels fueled by the economic carnage of the Covid pandemic.Economists classify long-term unemployment as a period of joblessness that exceeds six months.It’s an especially risky financial period for households, during which it also generally becomes more difficult to find a new job.The number of long-term unemployed fell by 431,000 in May to 3.8 million people — accounting for 40.9% of the total unemployed, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s a reduction from 43% in April and 43.4% in March.Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwardsMarch’s share had flirted with the all-time high of 45.5% in April 2010, in the aftermath of the Great Recession.”It’s an encouraging sign to see long-term unemployment falling,” said Daniel Zhao, a senior economist at Glassdoor, a job and recruiting site. “It’s always going to be a hard number to budge.”The number of workers out of work over a year also fell in May, by about 31,000 people to roughly 2.6 million. They accounted for nearly 30% of all unemployed workers. (These figures don’t include a seasonal adjustment.)More from Personal Finance:This renter was approved for $5,000 in back-rent relief. How to get helpThe best ways to tap your house for cashMore than 14% of renters still behind as eviction ban comes to an endHowever, the reduction may not be due solely to job gains — some long-term unemployed may have dropped out of the labor force, according to Nick Bunker, an economist at job site Indeed.”Was this decline for a good reason as opposed to a bad reason?” Bunker said.The data to make that assessment isn’t yet available, he said.Scarring effectsOften, those out of the workforce a long time have the toughest time getting news jobs, Zhao said. That may be due to factors like skills atrophying or lost connections with networks and employers, he said.It’s also a period during which household income may drop significantly. Their future earnings potential generally declines and the odds of losing a job (if they find one) down the road increase, according to labor economists.There remain 2.6 million more long-term unemployed workers versus pre-pandemic levels, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.”That’s generally where you see permanent economic scarring,” Zhao said of the long-term unemployed.Generally, jobless workers can only collect state unemployment benefits for up to six months. (Some states offer less, however.)Federal lawmakers have expanded the benefit period three times via pandemic-relief legislation and broadened the pool of workers eligible for unemployment compensation. The long-term unemployed now qualify for aid through Sept. 6.However, two dozen states are cutting off benefits in June or July, claiming enhanced benefits are creating labor shortages. Critics say temporary pandemic-era factors like ongoing health risks and child-care challenges are more to blame.”It’s a group of workers that are obviously having a very tough time right now, and it’s a large chunk of the unemployed,” Bunker said of the long-term jobless. “If employers are hiring folks from that pool, the possibility of other unemployed workers getting jobs is fairly strong.” More

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    United offers flight attendants, pilots extra pay for proof of Covid vaccination

    In this articleUALA United Airlines passenger jet lands at Newark Liberty International Airport, New Jersey, U.S. December 6, 2019.Chris Helgren | ReutersUnited Airlines is offering new incentives to flight attendants and pilots who show proof of that they have received a Covid-19 vaccination, the latest plan from a company to encourage employees to get inoculated.The carrier will give flight attendants up to three additional days off for nearly 10 hours of pay in their 2022 vacation day bank if they show they have been fully vaccinated by June 9, according to a memo from their union sent Thursday.They will receive two days valued at 6.5 hours of pay if they receive the first dose between June 10 and July 1 and the second in the manufacturers’ requirements, unless it is a single-dose shot.The programs are voluntary but the Association of Flight Attendants, their union, noted that governments could require it.”In the event a vaccination requirement was to come about, any Flight Attendant not vaccinated and/or who has not provided documentation to substantiate the vaccination to United would be ineligible to work any flight to a destination in a country where a vaccination requirement exists,” the AFA said.CNBC Health & Science Read CNBC’s latest global coverage of the Covid pandemic:CDC director ‘deeply concerned’ over rise in teens hospitalized with Covid United offers flight attendants, pilots offered extra pay for proof of Covid vaccinationMalaysia’s Covid lockdown puts ‘a lot of pressure’ on government finances, says minister   White House lays out plan to share millions of Covid doses with poorer nations Slow to start, China now vaccinating against Covid at a staggering paceUnited last week offered its pilots 13 hours of pay if they showed proof of vaccination before June 1, 12 hours before June 10 and 11 hours of pay after that through June 30, when the incentive ends.Roughly 80% of United’s approximately 12,500 pilots have been vaccinated, according to a company spokeswoman.United’s CEO, Scott Kirby, in January said he wanted to make vaccines mandatory for employees but so far the company has not made a decision. Rival Delta Air Lines last month said the vaccine would be mandatory for new employees. Both Delta and American have offered employees extra time off to get vaccinated.United last month launched a contest with free tickets as the prize for customers who upload their vaccination cards to the airline’s platform by June 22. The airline will hold drawings in June, selecting 30 winners for roundtrip tickets for two anywhere the airline flies. In July, five grand prize winners will receive one year of free travel for themselves and a companion.More than 500,000 people entered the contest, United said. More

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    Project to develop hydrogen-powered ferry moves forward after contract for design awarded

    In this article7267.T-JP7203.T-JPLINThe idea is that the hydrogen ferry would be designed to travel between Kirkwall, pictured above, and Shapinsay.Donna_Carpenter | iStock | Getty ImagesPlans to build a sea-going ferry powered using hydrogen-fuel cells advanced on Friday after it was announced that a commercial contract for the development of a concept design had been awarded.Caledonian Maritime Assets Ltd, which is owned by the Scottish government, said in a statement that the contract had been given to the London-headquartered Aqualisbraemar LOC Group.The two parties will collaborate on the concept, which CMAL said would be based around the needs of a “double-ended sea-going passenger and car ferry, with capacity for 120 passengers and 16 cars or two trucks.”The idea is that the ferry would be designed to travel between Kirkwall and Shapinsay in Orkney, an archipelago located north of mainland Scotland.It represents the latest development for the HySeas III project, which has received funding from the European Union.The goal of Hyseas III is to show that fuel cells can be integrated into a “marine hybrid electric drive system” consisting of tech such as batteries and electric propulsion.To this end, the project aims to develop, build, test and validate “a full sized drive train on land.” Alongside CMAL, other partners in the consortium include the University of St. Andrews, Orkney Island Council and Kongsberg Maritime.John Salton, fleet manager and projects director at CMAL, said the contract award constitutes “a significant step forward in establishing a new, innovative vessel concept, and marks an important shift towards entirely emissions-free marine transport.””If successful, the next step will be to take the knowledge and know-how into building a ferry,” Salton said.Other hydrogen ships have already been developed and put into use. Back in 2008, for example, a fuel cell ship capable of carrying passengers entered into service on a lake in Hamburg, Germany.In March of this year Linde, a firm specializing in engineering and industrial gases, said it had been chosen by Norwegian firm Norled to provide liquid hydrogen and associated infrastructure for a hydrogen-powered ferry. The MF Hydra, as it’s known, will be able to carry both passengers and cars.In a statement at the time Norled’s CEO, Heidi Wolden, said the firm believed hydrogen would “play a significant role in the future of zero-emission ships.”Described by the International Energy Agency as a “versatile energy carrier,” hydrogen has a diverse range of applications and can be deployed in sectors such as industry and transport.Ferries are not the only mode of transportation where hydrogen fuel cells could have a role to play.Hydrogen buses have been used in cities such as London and Aberdeen, for example, while hydrogen fuel cell airplanes have also taken flight in recent years.Major automobile manufacturers that have dipped into the hydrogen fuel cell market include Toyota and Honda, while smaller firms such as Riversimple are also working on hydrogen powered cars. More

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    Mudrick Capital no longer owns debt or equity in AMC, sources say

    In this articleAMCClosed signs are seen on an AMC Theatre during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in New York City, April 29, 2020.Brendan McDermid | ReutersInvestment firm Mudrick Capital has exited both its debt and equity positions in AMC Entertainment, sources tell CNBC’s David Faber, as the theater chain’s stock continues to trade wildly amid a boom in speculative retail trading.AMC announced earlier this week that it had sold 8.5 million equity shares to Mudrick for $230.5 million. The hedge fund was also involved in a key $100 million debt restructuring deal with AMC in December.AMC has been one of the main meme stocks whose share price has risen dramatically following high interest from retail traders on Reddit. Even with an 18% decline on Thursday, the stock is still up 96% this week.The theater chain, who saw its business effectively shuttered during the pandemic, has taken advantage of the rising price to raise cash.The company sold another 11.5 million shares on Thursday for $587 million. CEO Adam Aron told YouTube host Trey Collins that he wants to issue an additional 25 million shares to raise cash.AMC had $5.5 billion in long-term debt and $842 million in cash through the end of March, according to FactSet. But the company said it will use the latest capital raised to pay down that hefty debt load further.The company may also use the funds to buy other theaters, AMC said.Bloomberg News first reported that Mudrick had exited its equity position in AMC.Become a smarter investor with CNBC Pro. Get stock picks, analyst calls, exclusive interviews and access to CNBC TV. Sign up to start a free trial today. More

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    A TikTok tune is becoming Sally Beauty's new anthem as it embraces vivid hair color to fuel growth

    In this articleSBHTikTok creator and musician Hannah Chelan inspired Sally Beauty’s new marketing campaign. She shared a song about colored hair that went viral on the social media platform.Sally Beauty HoldingsWhen Sally Beauty employees saw a viral video on TikTok in the spring, they realized they had found the right inspiration to fuel its business strategy.In the video, Heather Chelan sang a catchy tune that celebrated her colored hair. Its refrain was one that many have embraced: “Having colored hair doesn’t make you unprofessional.”It has become the beauty retailer’s new anthem as it launches a marketing campaign and puts hair color — especially vivid colors — front and center. During the pandemic, Sally Beauty has reached out to Gen Z consumers on TikTok and YouTube. It has watched sales of bright colors and textured hair products jump. The company is betting that people’s desire for authenticity will outlast the health crisis, even as they return to social events and office cubicles.”It really comes down to self-expression,” CEO Chris Brickman said. “The office is changing. Life is changing. Work is changing. … It was happening before and the pandemic gave it a kick in the butt.”Vivid colors are now part of his look, too. His white hair is tinged with jade and shamrock in the front. “It does add a new dynamic to the boardroom,” he said.A video spot, which debuts Friday, features Chelan and her jingle. It also includes the brightly colored locks of other people that Sally Beauty discovered through social media — including Glecy Barquirin, a pediatric nurse, and 92-year-old Helen van Winkle, whose white hair has a tint of lavender — and the company’s own CEO.Chelan said her lyrics were inspired by her own purple hair and how she got turned down from a few jobs as a restaurant server because of it. Her experimentation began with a plum-colored Afro at age 18.”Once I did that, I thought ‘I can never go back again,'” she recalled.At a launch event for the marketing campaign, Joey Jay, a drag queen and contestant on VH1’s “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” strutted through a New York City bar like it was a runway. Donning bright yellow hair, Jay said the pandemic — and the growth of remote work — makes old corporate dress codes seem stuffy.”These employee handbooks, I think we are going to start throwing these away,” he said.Sally Beauty kicked off its new marketing campaign with a launch party in New York City. It featured Joey Jay, a drag queen and contestant on the TV show, “RuPaul’s Drag Race.”Melissa RepkoRetail challengesSally Beauty has long been known for selling hair color, styling tools and other beauty products. It has two sides of the business: Sally Beauty Supply, a chain of stores that draw customers and independent stylists, and Beauty Systems Group, which caters to salon professionals. Its core business is professional hair color, along with related accessories like capes, clippers and deep conditioner. Altogether, the Denton, Texas-based company has more than 5,000 stores in 12 countries.Yet over the past several years, it has faced challenges familiar to many brick-and-mortar retailers: Falling foot traffic and a struggle to adapt to online shopping, said Linda Bolton Weiser, a senior research analyst who tracks health and beauty companies for D.A. Davidson.Same-store sales growth, a key metric the retailer uses to compare stores open for 14 months or longer, has risen and fallen instead of showing steady upward momentum — and that has spooked some investors.Sally Beauty’s stock hit an all-time high of $35.27 in 2015 but has been largely trending downward for the past five years, bottoming at $8.28 in October. But since January, its shares are up nearly 64% to $21.37 as of Thursday’s close, giving it a market cap is $2.41 billion.Weiser said she wants to see the company perform consistently. She rated it neutral, but doubled its price target from $13 to $26 after its fiscal second-quarter earnings report.In the second quarter, the retailer showed strength. Same-store sales rose by 6.5% versus the year-earlier period, as shoppers spent stimulus checks, salons increased capacity and stylists stocked up on products for returning customers.’Pandemic, what pandemic?’Hair has been one of the few bright spots in the beauty industry during the pandemic. As lipstick and other makeup sales plummeted, shoppers channeled money toward self-care items, such as hair masks, and supplies to color hair at home.Sales of hair products grew 7% in 2020 from the year prior, according to The NPD Group. That’s a big difference from the rest of the beauty industry, which saw sales drop 19% in that period. The research firm tracks sales at prestige beauty retailers, such as department stores and specialty stores like Sephora and Ulta Beauty. It does not include mass retailers or specialty shops that cater to professionals, such as Sally Beauty.Sales of hair-care products have remained strong this year — up 48% in the first quarter from a year earlier and up 70% from the first quarter of 2019, which was prior to the pandemic. They have continued to outpace sales in the total prestige beauty industry, which were up 11% in the first quarter compared with a year earlier but down 5% from the first quarter of 2019.”Hair is on fire,” said Larissa Jensen, beauty industry advisor for NPD. “Hair is the only category [of beauty] that was like ‘Pandemic, what pandemic?'”However, for most beauty players, she said hair is just a tiny category. It drives about 7% of total sales for prestige beauty.In the quarters ahead, Sally Beauty will face easy comparisons as it laps quarters when the hair industry was largely shut down. Yet the company will have to prove it can fend off competitive threats, from online retailers like Amazon and newer rivals like Madison Reed to mass retailers, including CVS Health, Walgreens, Target and Walmart.Many of them have stepped up assortments of multicultural hair products over the past year, following George Floyd’s murder and pledges to better reflect the diversity of customers on shelves. Historically, textured and natural hair merchandise have been more plentiful at specialty beauty stores, such as Sally.Sally Beauty has leaned into vivid color as one of its sales drivers, as younger consumers embrace self-expression.Sally Beauty HoldingsShuttered salons, new opportunityAs the pandemic struck in spring 2020, some of Sally’s primary sales drivers — stores and salons —temporarily shuttered.Brickman, the retailer’s CEO, said the company leaned into growth opportunities that the pandemic created or intensified. For instance, he said, e-commerce took off as more shoppers got used to curbside pickup. As big salons struggled during the pandemic, a growing number of stylists pivoted to running independent businesses in rented salon chairs or out of homes — and turned to Sally to buy supplies. And self-expression has sparked sales as people cooped up or working from home decided to try a hair color — from a streak of blue to a full head of pink hair.Brickman said Sally Beauty’s sales of vivid colors have grown at a rate of about 20% over the past five years. That growth picked up during the pandemic, with sales of vivid colors increasing by 53% at Sally U.S. and Canada in the second quarter versus the prior year. They made up 15% of the company’s total color sales three years ago and now make up about 30%, he said.Sales in the textured hair category rose, too, as some Black customers chose to wear their hair naturally rather than straightening it. Brickman attributed the trend, in part, to more open conversations about race prompted by George Floyd’s murder. He also sees that there is a desire to break convention and throw out old rules.”There’s a massive cultural wave here that’s bigger than the pandemic,” he said, citing amateur investors betting on “meme stocks” and discussing strategy on Reddit as another manifestation of this trend.The company’s e-commerce sales grew 56% in the second quarter. Brickman said he expects online sales will represent 15% to 20% of Sally’s business in the next few years, up from about 10% now.Sally Beauty has made other changes, too. It tapped Marlo Cormier, a former Fossil Group executive, as its new chief financial officer. It launched a loyalty program for salon professionals and unveiled plans for same-day delivery in as little as two hours to customers’ door.Steph Wissink, managing director at Jefferies, said the company laid groundwork for growth, even as it was hit by the pandemic, by connecting with social media influencers, building relationships with stylists and catching on to hair color trends. “They could have easily just hunkered down and pulled their head inside the turtle shell and what they did instead, was they said ‘No. We know where we have a definitive edge and we’re just going to work hard to widen it.'”Unlike other beauty categories, Wissink said, Sally will lose out on some sales because hair is not a “catch-up category.” Customers don’t have to dye their hair multiple times to make up for lost time like refreshing cosmetic cases. And, she said she wonders if customers will keep vivid hair colors, even as they return to the corporate world.”Does she turn back up to the law office in pink hair?” she said. “Or was that just kind of a fun trend to do at home because she wasn’t meeting with clients and she wasn’t in court?”Wissink has a hold rating on the stock, but recently raised its price target to $25 from $15.Sally Beauty is featuring people with vivid hair colors in a new ad, including Brian Terada, a LGBTQ+ advocate.Sally Beauty HoldingsSally is hopeful new customers will stick around, and its marketing is a plea for broader acceptance of a range of hair colors.Brian Terada, founder of Be Free, a nonprofit that supports the LGBTQ+ community, is one of those new customers. Last August, the 30-year-old who lives in Los Angeles visited a Sally Beauty store for the first time. He decided to dye his hair pink — and that led to even more colors.”I went purple, pink, blue, red,” he said.On social media, Terada posted photos showing off his different looks. Sally Beauty discovered his profile and decided to feature him in the new ad.For Terada, the company’s message of being authentically you resonated. He said the pandemic has turned everything upside-down, emphasizing how life can change quickly and freeing people from worrying as much about what others think.”So many rules and regulations and the way things have always been have been broken down by Covid,” he said. “Society is so fragile. One of the rules was ‘fit in.’ But if the rules are gone, fitting in is gone, too.”—CNBC’s Christopher Hayes contributed to this report. More

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    AMC worth about half its skyrocketing stock price, says retail investor Trey Collins

    In this articleAMCA man walks past the AMC Georgetown 14 Theatres in Washington, DC on June 3, 2021.Mandel Ngan | AFP | Getty ImagesOne of AMC Entertainment’s most ardent retail investors is playing the long-game with the stock but foresees a return to Earth for the shares before the end of the year.Speaking on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Friday morning, Trey Collins, 23-year-old host of the Trey’s Trades channel on YouTube, said he believes the fundamental value of AMC stock will be $20 to $25 a share at the end of 2021.”I think most of the retail investors understand this is not the true fundamental value of AMC,” Collins said.Shares of the company hit an all-time high this week, topping out at $72.62 before retreating to around $50. In premarket trading Friday, shares were down more than 7%.”Just because the stock market tells you exactly what every single security in the market is worth at that given moment, if there is someone out there willing to buy AMC stock trading at $47 … that means it’s worth $47,” he said. “The momentum trading aspect, even if it doesn’t necessarily reflect on the current earnings or future projected earnings, doesn’t mean there isn’t money to be made.”Collins uses social media to document his investments in the stock market and has become the de facto mediator between AMC and its largest shareholder base, who call themselves apes. Collins has interviewed AMC CEO Adam Aron twice, including Thursday night, airing their conversations live on his 280,000-subscriber channel, many of whom are owners of AMC’s stock.”Adam Aron is setting the bar for CEOs reaching out to retail investors and caring about what they’re asking for, what they’re looking for, what they care about, as well as watching the long-term health of the company,” Collins said.Collins has used his platform to disseminate information about AMC’s stock in recent months and to decry short sellers who are betting against the company. Collins publicly states that he is not a financial advisor and warns his social media followers not to “blindly follow my financial decisions.”AMC’s transition from mature company to meme stock came in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, which shuttered the brand’s movie theaters and suspended income. As AMC fell behind on its rent, it scurried to raise money. With AMC on the brink of bankruptcy, short sellers swarmed in, doubting the company could weather the storm.Thanks to AMC’s own fundraising and the apes driving up the company’s stock price, Aron was able to capitalize on the interest in the stock to raise more cash.After selling hundreds of millions of shares in the last six months, AMC is asking its shareholders to issue 25 million more that it can dole out after 2021.Aron reiterated Thursday during his interview with Collins that the company is looking at several acquisition opportunities, including buying ArcLight and Pacific theater locations that were shuttered during the pandemic, and would use funds raised through stock sales to do so.He also said the cash could be used to pay down debt, reduce interest costs, or pay off millions in unpaid rent.AMC has around 18% of its float shares sold short, versus about 5% for an average U.S. stock, according to data from S3 Partners. This week’s rally pushed short-sellers’ losses to more than $5 billion on the year, S3 data showed.Shares of the company are up more than 2,300% since January. More

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    Government confident India will have over 2 billion vaccine doses by December, minister says

    The Indian government is confident that the country will be able to meet an ambitious target of having more than 2 billion coronavirus vaccine doses by the end of the year, Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.Last month, Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said in a statement that India will have 516 million vaccine doses by July, including shots already administered, and that the number will rise to 2.16 billion doses between August and December.”We have paid the two existing domestic manufacturers, Serum Institute (of India) and Bharat Biotech, advance money to produce vaccines for the whole of May, June, and July. We are only past May,” Puri told CNBC’s Tanvir Gill in an interview. He explained that the government is also in advanced stages of talks with other vaccine manufacturers.The government is “absolutely confident of being able to meet this target by December,” Puri added.In its forecast, the Indian government expects about 750 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine that is being locally produced by the Serum Institute of India and is known as Covishield. Another 550 million doses of Covaxin, which is developed and produced by Indian company Bharat Biotech, are also expected.A medic holds Covid-19 vaccine Covaxin vials during the countrywide inoculation drive, in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021.Vishal Bhatnagar | NurPhoto | Getty ImagesBoth vaccines are being currently used in India’s inoculation campaign where more than 222 million doses have been administered as of Thursday — but a majority of them are first of the two doses required for immunity.Russia’s Sputnik vaccine — the third shot to get approved — will contribute about 156 million to the predicted tally. Reuters reported that six Indian companies have already signed deals to produce around 1 billion doses of the vaccine annually and that Serum Institute is also seeking approval to make it.The government also expects:300 million doses of a vaccine candidate developed by local manufacturer Biological-E50 million doses from Zydus Cadila’s DNA-based candidate60 million doses from Pune-based Gennova Biopharmaceuticals’ mRNA-based candidate100 million doses of a nasal vaccine candidate from Bharat Biotech that is undergoing clinical trial200 million doses of Novavax’s Covid-19 vaccine — Serum Institute signed a deal with the U.S. biotech firm to produce the vaccine locallyIn addition, India has also authorized foreign-made vaccines that have been granted emergency approval by the U.S., U.K., European Union, Japan and World Health Organization-listed agencies.Vaccines, the way forwardExperts agree that vaccination is the way forward for India — both to bring the economy out of the Covid crisis and to mitigate the effects of a third wave. But vaccine hesitancy, in part due to misinformation being spread about the shots, has been an issue both in India and globally.Vaccines are also in short supply and that has slowed down domestic inoculation efforts and forced India to halt exports to other countries.For his part, Puri said that proper dissemination of information and education around vaccination is needed and that the government is doing its part.India is battling a devastating second wave of outbreak that started in February and accelerated in April and early May, which overwhelmed the country’s health-care infrastructure. The sector has struggled with shortages of beds, oxygen and medication as many doctors and other health-care workers succumbed to Covid-19.A doctor walks past the banner announcing a Covid-19 vaccination drive in Hyderabad, India on May 28, 2021.Noah Seelam | AFP | Getty ImagesSome of that pressure eased once the central government and states stepped up their efforts to manage the outbreak while international aid poured in, providing some of the much-needed medical supplies.Daily reported cases in India have declined from a peak of more than 414,000 in early May. So far, the South Asian nation reported more than 28.5 million cases and over 340,000 deaths.Puri said the government has now mapped out ways to deal with challenges like oxygen shortages, where hard-hit areas ran out of stock and logistical difficulties made it harder for new supplies to reach them.Initially, the government diverted oxygen meant for industrial use to medical facilities. Last month, it stepped up efforts to streamline the supply by allocating funds to install 500 medical oxygen plants across India within three months.”If a third wave comes, and when it comes, depending on the requirements, our capacity to again repurpose and again to convert back to dealing with it, I think that infrastructure capacity is there,” Puri said. More

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    AMC leads meme stocks lower Friday to close out a wild week

    The AMC Empire 25 near Times Square is open as New York City’s cinemas reopen for the first time in a year following the coronavirus shutdown, on March 5, 2021.Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty ImagesIt’s been quite the week for AMC Entertainment and other meme stocks as frenzied trading inspired by Reddit’s chatrooms swept through Wall Street yet again.Judging from their premarket action, these speculative stocks are set for modest losses for Friday but still will be wrapping up the wild week with massive gains.AMC shares fell more than 7% in premarket trading Friday after dropping 18% in the previous session. The stock is still up nearly 100% on the week. Bed Bath & Beyond and BlackBerry both dipped about 1% to 2% in early trading after rallying 14% and 58% for the week, respectively. The original meme stock star GameStop slid 2% in premarket after gaining 16% this week. Trading has been relatively quiet for GameStop as of late as AMC captured most of the attention.Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwardsAMC is wasting no time in taking advantage of its massive rally and raising new capital. CEO Adam Aron asked shareholders in a YouTube live chat Thursday night to allow his company to issue up to 25 million more shares. This came after AMC sold 20 million shares in two separate deals over this past week, generating around $800 million in cash.The first transaction involved Mudrick Capital, which paid more than $230 million for 8.5 million shares. Then, AMC revealed Thursday that it had sold an additional 11.5 million shares for $587 million.Trading volume in AMC and other meme stocks exploded this week as retail traders on the infamous WallStreetBets forum continued to encourage each other to pile in. AMC and Blackberry both traded over 500 million shares on Thursday, becoming the two most active stocks on the Nasdaq.The frantic trading frustrated many Wall Street analysts who predict stock prices based on companies’ fundamentals. Bank of America analyst Curtis Nagle threw in the towel on Beth Bath & Beyond on Friday, moving the stock to a “no rating.””BBBY’s share price increase corresponds to big moves over the past week with ‘meme stocks’ such as GME, AMC and BB,” Nagle said in a note to clients. “As a result, we move to No Rating as we believe shares of BBBY are no longer trading on fundamentals. Investors should no longer rely upon our previous investment opinion or price objective.”Bank of America also terminated coverage of GameStop, citing a reallocation of resources.Short-covering could be at play again for these speculative names favored by Reddit traders. AMC has around 18% of its float shares sold short, versus about 5% for an average U.S. stock, according to data from S3 Partners. This week’s rally pushed short-sellers’ losses to more than $5 billion on the year, S3 data showed.Enjoyed this article?For exclusive stock picks, investment ideas and CNBC global livestreamSign up for CNBC ProStart your free trial now More