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    Moderna Covid vaccine can remain stable at refrigerated temperatures for 3 months, company says

    Boxes containing vials of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine are stored at the Kedren Community Health Center on January 25, 2021 in Los Angeles, California.Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty ImagesModerna’s Covid-19 vaccine can remain stable at temperatures found in refrigerators for 3 months, the company said Thursday, citing new data.The mRNA vaccine is currently approved to be stored in the refrigerator between 36 and 46 degrees Fahrenheit for up to 30 days and up to seven months in the freezer at minus 4 Fahrenheit, according to the company. But Moderna said Thursday it now has data that could support a three-month refrigerated shelf life for the vaccine.If authorized by the Food and Drug Administration, the new storage temperature could “facilitate easier distribution to doctor’s offices and other smaller settings,” the company wrote in a press release. It also said it is working on new formulations of its vaccine that could extend the shots refrigerated shelf life even further.Moderna’s Covid vaccine is one of three authorized for use in the U.S. The vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech may be stored at refrigerated temps for up to five days, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine can be stored in a regular refrigerator for up to three months.To public officials, the authorization of J&J’s shot was a blessing since it could be used in hard-to-reach places that may not have reliable refrigeration, such as tribal lands, poorer neighborhoods as well as rural and border communities.The update from Moderna comes weeks after the FDA announced that it gave the company clearance to speed up output of its Covid vaccine by letting it fill a single vial with up to 15 doses. It was previously permitted for 10 doses, enough to inoculate five people since the vaccine requires two shots given a month apart.Separately, the company announced Thursday it is increasing its minimum Covid vaccine production target for 2021 to 800 million doses, up from 700 million. More

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    China has 'no other choice' but to rely on coal power for now, official says

    A coal fired power plant in Jiayuguan, Gansu province, China, on Thursday, April 1, 2021.Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesBEIJING — China has ambitious goals for cutting its carbon emissions, but it won’t be abandoning coal power anytime soon as it keeps its eye firmly on economic targets.President Xi Jinping said in September that the country’s carbon emissions would begin to decline by 2030, and he said the country will reach carbon neutrality by 2060 — in four decades.In the meantime, policymakers are making clear that economic growth remains a top priority — and that growth depends largely on coal power. Beijing has a GDP target of 6% this year, a level which analysts say would allow authorities to tackle long-term problems such as the country’s high debt levels.Many developing countries don’t even have electricity. In this situation, if you don’t use coal, what will you use?Li GaoChina ecology ministry, on Chinese funding of coal power outside China”China’s energy structure is dominated by coal power. This is an objective reality,” said Su Wei, deputy secretary-general of the National Development and Reform Commission. CNBC translated his Mandarin-language comments, which he made late last week following Xi’s separate remarks at a U.S.-led global leaders climate summit.”Because renewable energy (sources such as) wind and solar power are intermittent and unstable, we must rely on a stable power source,” Su said. “We have no other choice. For a period of time, we may need to use coal power as a point of flexible adjustment.”He added that coal is readily available, while renewable energy needs to develop further in China.Funding coal power outside ChinaSeparately, on Tuesday, when asked by CNBC whether Beijing might follow South Korea in its pledge to stop public financing of coal-powered plants overseas, China’s ecology ministry indicated that China’s funding of coal power in the developing world will continue.”China has supported some developing countries in the construction of coal-fired plants overseas,” Li Gao, director general of the ministry’s department of climate change, told reporters in Mandarin that CNBC translated. “China provides this support according to the local situation.””Many developing countries don’t even have electricity,” he said. “In this situation, if you don’t use coal, what will you use?”According to the Boston University Global Development Policy Center, the China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China together funded $474 million worth of coal-sector projects outside China in 2020 alone. The same report indicated that China’s financing of energy projects beyond its borders has declined steadily since 2016, however.Li said that coal accounted for 56.8% of China’s domestic energy generation in 2020, down from 72.4% 15 years ago. As of last year, China was the world’s heaviest emitter of carbon dioxide, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists, a non-profit founded at MIT. The United States was second, and India was third.During last week’s climate summit, Xi called for international cooperation in reducing carbon emissions, adding that different countries should play different roles in that reduction. He did not identify any countries by name.Xi said China would “strictly control coal-fired generation projects” and limit increases in coal consumption over the next five years. He said reductions would take place in the five years following that.System ‘favors coal-fired generation’Chinese authorities have tightened restrictions on carbon emissions this year in a targeted way, such as calling for production cuts in the steel-making hub of Tangshan city.However, China is still increasing construction of coal-fired power plants. Analysis by U.S.-based Global Energy Monitor indicates that last year, China built more than triple the amount of new coal power capacity as the rest of the world combined.China is the world’s largest consumer of coal. Late last year, some parts of the country cited a shortage of coal in limiting local power usage, as demand for electricity soared. China’s electricity use rose 3.1% last year, according to official figures.The Chinese government aims to reduce the share of carbon-heavy fuel in national energy consumption to 20% by 2025, China Renaissance analysts said in a report last month. But they noted that falling renewable energy costs are not enough to incentivize a major industry shift.”We believe the current system overwhelmingly favors coal-fired generation, partly because it is more stable and faces less variability of wind and solar power,” the report said. “The uncertain market access has already slowed investment in renewables. Given the power of coal and construction interests, the needed reforms will probably take considerable political will.” More

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    S&P, Nasdaq 100 futures are higher after Apple & Facebook beat estimates

    U.S. stock index futures were higher in overnight trading on Wednesday, after the major averages posted losses for the day.Futures contracts tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 36 points. S&P 500 futures advanced 0.37%, while Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.7%.Apple and Facebook’s strong quarterly results boosted futures. Apple said that sales jumped 54% during the quarter, with each product category seeing double-digit growth. The company also said it would increase its dividend by 7%, and authorized $90 billion in share buybacks. Facebook’s revenue jumped 48%, driven by higher-priced ads.The major averages closed in the red during normal trading. The Dow slid 165 points for a loss of 0.48%. The S&P 500 hit a record high but couldn’t hold onto those gains and closed 0.08% lower. The Nasdaq Composite declined 0.28%.The Federal Reserve said Wednesday that it would hold interest rates near zero. The S&P slid from its high after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said during a press conference following the Federal Open Market Committee’s decision that there are some signs of froth in the market.”Rates remain unchanged for now and, despite improving economic data, taper talk remained off the table at today’s Federal Reserve meeting,” said Bethany Payne, portfolio manager at Janus Henderson.”As vaccination rates accelerate, employment strengthens, and expansive fiscal policy adds further support to household and business incomes, investors are now looking for signs of whether the central bank safety net could be withdrawn sooner than expected,” she added.Thursday is the busiest day of the earnings season, with roughly 11% of the S&P 500 slated to provide quarterly updates. Caterpillar, McDonald’s, Comcast and Merck are among the names on deck before the market opens. Amazon, Gilead Sciences, Twitter, U.S. Steel and Western Digital will post quarterly results after the market closes.As of Wednesday morning 86% of the S&P 500 components that have reported topped earnings estimates, with earnings coming in 22.7% above expectations, according to data from Refinitiv. For revenue, 77% of companies have exceeded expectations.Economic data released Thursday will give investors an update on the progress of the economic recovery. Initial jobless claims numbers will be released, with economists surveyed by Dow Jones expecting a print of 528,000. Pending home sales figures will also be released.”The primary market trend remains positive,” said Keith Lerner, chief market strategist at Truist. “But we expect a choppier environment as tensions are set to persist between better economic growth and earnings prospects versus the potential for higher taxes and rising interest rates as the economy normalizes,” he added.Thursday marks President Joe Biden’s 100th day in office. On Wednesday evening, he will call on Congress for an additional $1.8 trillion in new spending and tax credits aimed at children, students and families, according to senior administration officials.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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    Why are American workers becoming harder to find?

    THE PANDEMIC has led to all sorts of weird economic outcomes. The latest oddity is the growing chorus of complaints in America about a shortage of labour, even though 8m fewer people are in work today than before covid-19 struck. In early April Bloombergreported that Delta Air Lines had cancelled 100 flights for lack of staff. People are so hard to find that one café in Florida has turned to robots to greet customers and deliver food. A branch of McDonald’s is paying potential burger-flippers $50 just to turn up for a job interview.Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More

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    Will Joe Biden’s proposed taxes on capital make America an outlier?

    IF PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN succeeds in raising America’s top rate of federal capital-gains and dividend tax to 39.6%, as he pledged to Congress on April 28th, it would be twice the average top rate in Europe. But it would apply only to the highest-earning 0.3% of taxpayers: those earning more than $1m. The fact that countries cast their nets differently makes comparing taxes on capital, which include levies on companies and property as well as on capital gains and dividends, tricky. The OECD, a club of mostly rich countries, does not publicly track members’ capital-gains-tax rates because exemptions and carve-outs make them so hard to compare.Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More

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    What history tells you about post-pandemic booms

    THE CHOLERA pandemic of the early 1830s hit France hard. It wiped out nearly 3% of Parisians in a month, and hospitals were overwhelmed by patients whose ailments doctors could not explain. The end of the plague prompted an economic revival, with France following Britain into an industrial revolution. But as anyone who has read “Les Misérables” knows, the pandemic also contributed to another sort of revolution. The city’s poor, hit hardest by the disease, fulminated against the rich, who had fled to their country homes to avoid contagion. France saw political instability for years afterwards.Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More

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    Cramer bemoans lack of earnings momentum in stocks: 'It's starting to bother me'

    In this articleBACCJPMAMDCNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday gave his prognosis on the market as many stocks failed to gain trading traction after positive quarterly reports.”Most stocks simply aren’t getting much pin action now for what they do, in part because, well, the market’s had a miraculous run,” the “Mad Money” host said. “That makes everything seem like a yawner, and it’s starting to bother me.”Cramer pointed to the lack of momentum in trades in chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices, bank and consumer product stocks after posting their respective numbers.AMD shares declined 1.40% to $84.02 Wednesday, a day after the company reported a quarter that Cramer described as “breathtaking.” Since revealing first-quarter earnings two weeks ago, JPMorgan shares have slid 1.2%, while names like Citigroup and Bank of America have gained little to none since their reports.Meanwhile, Apple and Facebook shares popped about 4% and 6%, respectively, in post-market trading Wednesday after reporting strong results from the first three months of the year.”Unless your company’s a huge beneficiary from the great reopening, nobody cares,” Cramer said. “Even then, you’ve gotta deliver a massive upside surprise — not just a regular upside surprise — to get this market’s attention.”Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns shares of Apple and Advanced Micro Devices.Questions for Cramer? Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBCWant to take a deep dive into Cramer’s world? Hit him up! Mad Money Twitter – Jim Cramer Twitter – Facebook – InstagramQuestions, comments, suggestions for the “Mad Money” website? [email protected] More

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    ‘Long Covid’ isn’t well understood but these are possible symptoms, top CDC doctor says

    VioletaStoimenova | E+ | Getty ImagesAmericans shouldn’t hesitate to seek medical care if they believe they are suffering from lingering and debilitating symptoms due to Covid-19, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention official advised Wednesday.So-called long Covid is still not well understood by health experts, Dr. John Brooks, chief medical officer for the CDC’s Covid-19 response, told a House committee. A primary care physician can help determine whether one is suffering from long Covid or an unrelated illness, he said.”If you’re having symptoms you haven’t had before, something new following Covid [such as] chest pain, difficulty breathing, you can’t get your thinking clearly, you’re just not getting better the way you thought you should, have a low threshold to seek care,” Brooks said during a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.Generally, people worry about going to the hospital and wasting a physician’s time on something that may not be too serious, especially during the pandemic, Brooks said. In cases of potential long Covid, which researchers are still trying to understand, people shouldn’t do that, he said.”That may be alright for the short term until we can really discriminate more clearly what defines this. We’re in the stage of learning,” he said.Symptoms of long Covid, which researchers are now calling Post-Acute Sequelae of Covid-19, or PASC, can develop well after the initial infection, and severity can range from mild to incapacitating, according to public health officials and health experts.Researchers at the University of Washington published data in February that found a third of patients reported ongoing symptoms, including fatigue, shortness of breath and sleep disorders, that persisted for as long as nine months.Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, told the House committee Wednesday that people who have been hospitalized with the virus appear to have a higher chance of developing long Covid. But people who were not hospitalized can also end up with persistent symptoms, he said.Older Americans, women and people who are obese also appear to have a higher risk of developing long Covid, Collins told the committee, adding the U.S. agency is working quickly to identify potential other risk factors.The NIH launched an initiative in February to study long Covid and identify the causes and potential treatments.Some people who have suffered from long Covid say they are finding relief after getting vaccinated, puzzling health experts.Sheri Paulson, a 53-year-old North Dakota resident who had trouble getting out of bed months after her Covid-19 diagnosis, told CNBC in March she began to feel better five days after she got her first Pfizer shot in FebruaryCollins said Wednesday that the agency has heard anecdotal reports of people feeling better after getting vaccinated. But he added large studies are still needed to determine whether the shots are actually improving symptoms and how. More