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    Jim Cramer names 7 beaten-down semiconductor stocks that look 'enticing'

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday offered investors a list of seven semiconductor chip stocks he believes could be attractive buys.
    “Growth at a reasonable price abounds in this beaten-down market, and that includes the more controversial semiconductor space,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday offered investors a list of seven semiconductor chip stocks he believes could be attractive buys.
    “I think there’s a sense that the chipmakers will get hurt as we head into a [Federal Reserve]-mandated recession,” the “Mad Money” host said, referring to the Fed’s upcoming interest rate hikes. “At these levels, I think a bunch of them have started to look pretty enticing,” he added.

    Here are his picks for the best semiconductor stocks that have reasonable valuations and earnings growth:

    Micron
    Western Digital
    Advanced Micro Devices
    Skyworks Solutions
    KLA
    Lam Research
    Applied Materials

    “Growth at a reasonable price abounds in this beaten-down market, and that includes the more controversial semiconductor space. Just be aware that these chip stocks might remain at a reasonable price for the foreseeable future because Wall Street has just got no love — until today — for this entire darn group,” he said.
    Cramer’s latest list of investable growth stocks comes after he earlier this week highlighted four financial stocks and six travel and leisure stocks buyers should have on their radars. To pick his favorite stocks in each sector, Cramer has used the same list of stocks containing companies from the S&P 500 that meet his criteria for having a reasonable valuation and earnings growth.
    Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of AMD.
    Sign up now for the CNBC Investing Club to follow Jim Cramer’s every move in the market.

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    Charts suggest the Nasdaq 100 could reach an ‘important low’ this week, Jim Cramer says

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday said the Nasdaq 100 could reach a low this week and give investors a chance to offload some poorly performing stocks, leaning on analysis from technical analyst Carolyn Boroden.
    “The charts, as interpreted by Carolyn Boroden, suggest the Nasdaq 100 could make an important low sometime this week — and maybe it’s already happened,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday said the Nasdaq 100 could reach a low this week and give investors a chance to offload some poorly performing stocks, leaning on analysis from technical analyst Carolyn Boroden.
    “The charts, as interpreted by Carolyn Boroden, suggest the Nasdaq 100 could make an important low sometime this week — and maybe it’s already happened. If that’s the case, then the recent” market storminess could be over for the time being, the “Mad Money” host said.

    “However, you might not want to get too attached to this move because Boroden says the underlying technical picture … remains ugly. Still, you could get a good chance to unload some tech here in order to raise money to buy other things that might have an easier time in the market going forward,” he added.
    The Dow Jones Industrial Average on Wednesday climbed 1.01%, while the S&P 500 rose 1.12%. The Nasdaq Composite increased 2.03%.
    Boroden uses the Fibonacci strategy to make predictions about the market. A cluster of Fibonacci timing cycles coming due around the same time means a stock or index could be poised to reverse direction, Cramer explained, adding that that’s how she knew the market would bottom in mid-March. 
    The Nasdaq 100 has been “almost straight down since that cluster of Fibonacci timing cycles she mentioned in March,” Cramer said. He added that Boroden is keeping an eye on both time and price parameters to find the next market low where investors could trade.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    “On the timing front, she says she has two periods where the Nasdaq 100 is likely to make an important low. The first period is yesterday and today,” Cramer said. “In other words, today’s rebound might have more staying power than you’d expect.”

    “That said, according to Boroden, while these Fibonacci timing cycles are certainly helpful … we only get an actual reversal of the trend about 60% of the times when we see these reversal signals,” he added.
    As for pricing, Boroden said there’s the possibility that the index once again reaches its lows from March 14, according to Cramer. Yet she still believes the Nasdaq 100 is in rough shape as its price stays below the 200-day simple moving average and shorter term 50-day moving average, he added.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Boroden is also watching the five-day and 13-day exponential moving averages, Cramer said.
    “When the five-day goes above the 13-day … that’s her favorite buy trigger. When the five-day goes below the 13-day, it’s her favorite sell trigger. Right now, Boroden says we’re definitively in sell territory, not in buy territory,” he said. 
    That means that even if the Nasdaq-100 reaches a noteworthy low, investors should still be ready for the index to have another “downside failure,” Cramer said. 
    “As she sees it, we’re definitely not out of the woods yet, and she’s certainly not making an all-clear call,” he added.
    Sign up now for the CNBC Investing Club to follow Jim Cramer’s every move in the market.
    Disclaimer

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    California unveils proposal to ban new gas-fueled cars by 2035

    California’s clean-air regulators introduced a plan this week that would ramp up the sale of electric and zero-emissions vehicles while phasing out the sale of new gasoline-fueled vehicles by 2035.
    The proposal, if enacted by the California Air Resources Board, would require 35% of new passenger vehicle sales to be powered by batteries or hydrogen by 2026, and 100% of sales to be net-zero emissions less than a decade later.
    Shifting the transportation sector to cleaner energy is a key component of the state’s plan to combat climate change, as cars, trucks and other vehicles represent roughly 40% of its pollution.

    Morning traffic makes its way along a freeway in Los Angeles, California, September 19, 2019.
    Mike Blake | Reuters

    California’s clean-air regulators unveiled a plan this week that would ramp up the sale of electric and zero-emissions vehicles while phasing out the sale of new gasoline-fueled vehicles by 2035, in an aggressive effort to combat the state’s greenhouse gas pollution.
    The proposal, if enacted by the California Air Resources Board, would require 35% of new passenger vehicle sales to be powered by batteries or hydrogen by 2026, and 100% of sales to be net-zero emissions less than a decade later. The proposal also calls for zero-emissions sales to account for 68% of total sales by 2030.

    Shifting the transportation sector to cleaner energy is a key component of the state’s plan to combat climate change, as cars, trucks, and other vehicles represent roughly 40% of the its pollution.
    Electric vehicle sales in the state rose to 12.4% of total sales last year, a jump from 7.8% during 2020, according to the board.
    The board is expected to vote on the proposal in August. At least 15 states, including New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania, have adopted California’s vehicle standards on prior clean-car rules.
    The plan follows Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order in 2020 that called for phasing out new cars with internal combustion engines within 15 years by requiring that all such vehicle sales produce zero emissions by 2035.
    The rule would not ban people from owning gas vehicles or from selling them on the used market.

    More from CNBC Climate:

    “With Californians still experiencing the harmful effects of smog-forming emissions and the effects of climate change, which are expected to worsen in the coming decades, adoption of the proposed ACC II [Advanced Clean Cars II] regulation is critical and necessary,” the state plan said.
    Newsom, when signing the executive order, said the plan could curb the state’s emissions from cars by more than 35%, and that zero-emission vehicles would “almost certainly” be cheaper than gas-powered vehicles by the time the regulations start.
    “Building on 30 years of work to electrify light-duty vehicles in California, the market is clearly poised for massive transformation,” the plan said.
    California, which is grappling with worsening wildfires and drought as temperatures rise, also has a goal to transition to 100% renewable energy by 2045.
    Some environmental groups urged the board to set even tougher targets and transition faster toward electric vehicles, arguing the state should impose a rule to achieve 100% zero-emission vehicle sales by 2030, five years earlier than the current proposal.
    “Time is running out before the world as we know it disappears in the rearview mirror,” Scott Hochberg, a transportation attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute, said in a statement.
    “To protect people and the planet, California has to free our streets from tailpipe pollution as fast as possible,” Hochberg said.

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    Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich has $7 billion in assets frozen in Jersey in latest Ukraine fallout

    Authorities in the island country of Jersey have frozen assets valued at more than $7 billion that are suspected of being connected to Roman Abramovich.
    It was the latest financial fallout for that Russian oligarch as a result of the Ukraine war.
    States of Jersey Police also executed search warrants at locations in Jersey that are suspected to be connected to Abramovich’s business activities.
    The actions come a month after the UK announced financial sanctions against the 56-year-old Abramovich for his close relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the architect of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich looks on after their 3-1 win in the Barclays Premier League match between Chelsea and Sunderland at Stamford Bridge on December 19, 2015 in London, England.
    Clive Mason | Getty Images

    Authorities in the island country of Jersey froze assets valued at more than $7 billion that are suspected of being connected to Roman Abramovich, the latest financial fallout for that Russian oligarch as a result of the Ukraine war.
    States of Jersey Police also executed search warrants Tuesday at locations in Jersey suspected to be connected to Abramovich’s business activities, according to a statement by the Law Officer’s Department in that country.

    Jersey, part of the Channel Islands located off the coast of Normandy, France, Jersey, is a self-governing country whose head of state is Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain. The United Kingdom provides military protection to the island.
    The actions come a month after the UK announced financial sanctions against the 56-year-old Abramovich for his close relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the architect of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

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    On the heels of that unprovoked war, Abramovich announced that he would sell the renowned London soccer club Chelsea.
    The Guardian newspaper last week reported that Abramovich shifted his ownership of a superyacht, “Aquamarine,” to a company based in Jersey that is controlled by an associate of his, David Davidovich, on Feb. 24, the same day that Russia invaded Ukraine.
    It was not clear Wednesday if the 50-meter-long Aquamarine, which remains in dry dock in the Netherlands, is one of the assets frozen by Jersey authorities.

    “The Royal Court also imposed a formal freezing order on 12 April, known as a saisie judiciaire, over assets understood to be valued in excess of US$7 billion which are suspected to be connected to Mr Abramovich and which are either located in Jersey or owned by Jersey incorporated entities,” Jersey’s Law Officers’ Department said in a statement Wednesday that declined further comment.
    The Financial Times reported that Abramovich has moved a number of his investments from the British Virgin Islands to Jersey in recent years. Those include a number of helicopters, and the superyacht Sussurro, the newspaper noted.
    The Bailiwick Express’s Jersey edition reported that Abramovich was expected to move to Jersey in 2018, but that did not happen after the renewal of his UK visa was delayed on the heels of the poisoning of the former Russian military officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the English city Salisbury.
    Jersey and Guernsey, which is also relies on the U.K. for protection, ordered financial industry firms there to freeze the assets of five Russian banks and three other billionaires after Putin ordered Russian troops into eastern Ukraine in late February, the BBC reported at the time.
    Also that month, Jersey External Relations Minister Ian Gorst said the island would take “further measures” that were in line with actions by the UK.
    “Officers continue to work closely with UK counterparts, and we are ready to take further measures to ensure Jersey’s response is in line with the international community,” Gorst said at that time.

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    Rent the Runway CEO sees inflation as a competitive advantage for the company

    Rent the Runway on Wednesday reported fiscal fourth-quarter revenue ahead of analysts’ estimates along with a narrower-than-expected loss.
    According to Chief Executive Jennifer Hyman, Rent the Runway is reaping the benefits of consumers seeking value and stability during times of inflation.
    “We’re entering into one of the strongest environments for rental we’ve ever seen,” the CEO told CNBC. “The inflationary environment is basically a competitive advantage for Rent the Runway.”

    Jennifer Hyman, CEO and co-founder, Rent the Runway
    Scott Mlyn | CNBC

    Rent the Runway sees the more than 2 million weddings planned for this year, and all the parties that come with them, as being a massive boon to its business.
    Plus, according to co-founder and Chief Executive Jennifer Hyman, Rent the Runway is reaping the benefits of consumers seeking value and stability during times of inflation — with Americans seeing higher gas prices, bigger grocery bills and even more expensive price tags on their favorite clothing brands.

    To be sure, Rent the Runway is also planning price increases for its membership plans that will take effect in early May, to combat its own higher expenses.
    “We’re entering into one of the strongest environments for rental we’ve ever seen,” Hyman said in a Zoom interview. “The inflationary environment is basically a competitive advantage for Rent the Runway.”
    On Wednesday, the fashion rental platform reported fiscal fourth-quarter revenue ahead of analysts’ estimates along with a narrower-than-expected loss, as the company won over consumers looking to refresh their wardrobes to adapt to hybrid work schedules and prepare for spring and summer social events.
    Shares fell nearly 4% after previously rising about 10% in after-hours trading. The stock has fallen about 31% year to date, bringing Rent the Runway’s valuation to $360 million.
    Hyman said Rent the Runway’s business correlates closely with how much consumers are spending on experiences, rather than things. So as people are traveling more, taking Uber rides around town and booking reservations at restaurants, Rent the Runway sees an uptick in users, she said.

    Rent the Runway members pay monthly fees ranging from $94 to $235, to receive between four and 16 different items of designer clothing or accessories. Users can tack on additional items to their plans for an extra charge. They can also make one-time rentals for periods of four to eight days. And Rent the Runway gives customers the option to buy items on its website at a discount to full sticker price.
    The retailer reported a net loss for the three-month period ended Jan. 31 of $39.3 million, or 62 cents a share, compared with a loss of $38.8 million, or 70 cents per share, a year earlier. That came in narrower than analysts’ estimates for a per-share loss of 70 cents, according to a Refinitiv poll.
    Revenue grew about 91% to $64.1 million from $33.5 million a year earlier, topping estimates for $63.2 million.
    The company’s fourth-quarter gross margin of 36.7% also came in way ahead of expectations for 27.3%, based on a separate survey by StreetAccount.
    Rent the Runway ended the fourth quarter with 115,240 active subscribers, up 110% from year-ago levels. It counted 159,544 total subscribers, including those who have their accounts on pause.
    “Fifty percent of our traffic comes to Rent the Runway because [those people] have an upcoming event, or they have an upcoming occasion,” said Hyman. She added the company views this moment in time, coming out of the pandemic, as an “extremely unique window” to acquire new customers and keep them in the business longer term.
    To cater to people searching for wedding dresses, for example, Rent the Runway has launched its own wedding concierge service. In its recent marketing, the company is positioning itself as a “value oriented way to get dressed for multiple events,” Hyman said.
    For the first quarter of fiscal 2022, Rent the Runway expects sales to be between $63.5 million and $64.5 million, with active subscribers totaling 130,000 to 132,000. Analysts were looking for revenue of $64.3 million, according to Refinitiv.
    For the year, the company projects revenue to be in a range of $295 million to $305 million, compared with sales of $203.3 million in fiscal 2021. Analysts had forecast revenue to be $305 million.
    Hyman emphasized that, in addition to winning new customers, the company is prioritizing reaching profitability, though the exact timing on that mark remains unclear.
    “Profitability is our number one goal,” she said. “And it’s my number one priority as the CEO.”
    Find the full financial press release from Rent the Runway here.

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    Uninsured face surprise medical bills for Covid testing, hospital treatment after U.S. Congress fails to fund pandemic aid program

    The federal government has stopped covering the cost of Covid testing, treatment and vaccination for the uninsured due to insufficient funds.
    The $10 billion Senate Covid funding deal does not include money for the uninsured.
    Quest Diagnostics, Labcorp and Curative are now charging the uninsured more than $100 for Covid tests in some instances. Walgreens and CVS still offer free services.
    Some hospitals may also start charging uninsured people who need treatment for Covid.
    The uninsured could also face reduced access to vaccination if pharmacies start pulling out of the federal program due to administrative costs.

    Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra testifies before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing to discuss reopening schools during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., September 30, 2021.
    Shawn Thew | Pool | Reuters

    People who don’t have health insurance are now being charged $100 or more for Covid testing by some labs and may face bills for hospital treatment, and free vaccines may not be as easy for everyone to get since emergency federal aid for some pandemic programs has run out and hasn’t been renewed by Congress.
    Senators reached a $10 billion bipartisan Covid funding deal last week. However, the package does not include the White House’s $1.5 billion request for a program that covers testing and treatment for the uninsured as well as some vaccine costs that is administered by the Health and Human Services Department, according to summaries of the deal released by the offices of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah.

    Funding for the uninsured was dropped by Senate and House negotiators after Republicans opposed the money needed to extend the program, a senior Democratic aide in the U.S. House told CNBC. Emails to House and Senate GOP leaders weren’t immediately returned.
    The current Senate package would fund additional supplies of vaccines, monoclonal antibody treatments, antiviral pills as well as research for the next generation of shots. Congress left Washington last Thursday for a two-week recess without passing the deal, so it’s not clear when a vote might be held. Republicans blocked the bill from advancing over the Biden administration’s decision to end a CDC policy that deported migrants crossing U.S. land borders as a pandemic emergency measure.
    The $10 billion Senate deal is less than half the $22.5 billion originally requested by President Joe Biden, and it still needs to clear each chamber before it can be sent to Biden for his approval. It’s not clear how the deal would fare in the House if the Senate does manage to pass it, or if there’s any flexibility for some of the $10 billion to be shifted to help the uninsured.
    Meanwhile, the Health Resources and Services Administration, which runs the uninsured program for HHS, stopped accepting claims to test and treat uninsured Covid patients on March 22 due to insufficient funds. While the U.S. is providing Covid shots for free, the agency stopped covering the costs to administer the vaccines for uninsured people as of April 5, shortly after the FDA cleared second booster shots for people 50 and over.
    “All those doctors, hospitals, pharmacists, nursing homes, community health centers that were relying on the provider relief fund that Congress enacted to help reimburse them for some of the Covid related costs — those have now been stopped,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said last week. “The claims no longer are being accepted as of this week for even vaccines.”

    Several major testing companies are now charging the uninsured. Quest Diagnostics told CNBC uninsured people now have to pay at least $100 for a PCR test, which is the most accurate one. Labcorp told CNBC the company is charging $119 for its at-home or in-person PCR testing for people who aren’t covered by insurance. Curative, which runs thousands of testing sites across 34 states, said it can no longer provide free Covid testing to the uninsured in areas of the country where state or local governments aren’t picking up the tab. The company said it is piloting a program where the uninsured can pay $99 to $135 cash for tests, depending on the type of product at select sites.
    “We are deeply concerned about this recent development regarding federal funding and the impact it will have on uninsured patients. We ask that funding be re-instituted to ensure that uninsured patients have access to no out-of-pocket testing,” a spokesperson for Curative said.
    CVS and Walgreens are still providing testing, antiviral pills and vaccines to the uninsured for free, the companies told CNBC. CVS spokesman Mike DeAngelis said the company is confident the White House and Congress will find a solution giving the uninsured free access to Covid services. Walgreens spokeswoman Alex Brown said the company is waiting further guidance from the White House once a Covid funding deal is actually passed.

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    Read CNBC’s latest global coverage of the Covid pandemic:

    Without additional federal money, people in the U.S. will face a dramatic reduction in access to testing, particularly the uninsured, that will likely result in Covid outbreaks that were preventable, according to Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association.
    “You’re going to have people just as we had in the first part of the pandemic having to hunt for testing,” Benjamin said. “It’s a disaster waiting to happen, and it just prolongs this outbreak longer than it needs to.”
    Uninsured people who become hospitalized with Covid could also face bills for their treatment now that the federal government is no longer reimbursing hospitals, according to Molly Smith with the American Hospital Association. Smith said treating someone with Covid can cost anywhere from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars if the patient ends up on a mechanical ventilator.
    Some hospitals have financial assistance plans for the uninsured, Smith said. However, there is growing concern that some patients simply won’t go the hospital when they need treatment for Covid because they’re worried about how much it will now cost.
    “We know that people’s fear about the cost of care is a significant barrier that already exists,” said Smith, the AHA’s vice president for policy. “Our biggest fear is people just avoiding avoiding care at all.”
    The uninsured could also face reduced access to vaccines. Health-care providers sign agreements with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in which they are required to offer vaccines to patients free of charge regardless of their insurance status. The federal government has been covering the costs for the shots as well as the administrative expenses incurred by the companies like CVS and Walgreens that administer the shots. Without the $1.5 billion, companies will be on the hook to cover those extra fees on their own.
    The CDC has told pharmacies they are still required to offer the shots at no cost if they participate in the federal vaccination program. However, the agreements are voluntary, which means pharmacies can pull out of the program at any time, and the CDC can also kick out providers who don’t follow the rules.
    That means pharmacies could leave of the federal vaccination program if they are unable to shoulder the administrative costs. Pharmacies have administered about 42% of Covid vaccinations in the U.S., according to data from the CDC.
    More than two dozen pharmacy associations wrote House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., late last month calling for Congress to take immediate action to fully fund the uninsured program. They warned that failure to fund the program would jeopardize equitable access to vaccines for people who do not have health insurance.
    Smaller independent pharmacies now face a particularly difficult choice since they are already operating with razor thin margins, according Ronna Hauser, senior vice president of policy at the National Community Pharmacists Association.
    “For the vast majority of our members providing uncompensated care at this point in the pandemic is a very difficult decision to make financially and we won’t be able to do it to much extent unfortunately,” Hauser said.
    There were 28 million uninsured people in the U.S. in 2020, according to the most current data available from the Census Bureau. The current number of uninsured is likely lower due to a record 14.2 million people signing up for health insurance through the Affordable Care Act as of January this year, about 2 million more people than the previous record of 12.6 million set in 2016.
    The uninsured are often people of color and lower-income workers who have jobs that put them at higher risk of infection because they are work in industries such as retail, restaurant and grocery stores where they interact with the public and can’t stay at home, according to Jennifer Tolbert, an expert on the uninsured at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
    While Covid cases are low right now in the U.S. compared to the peak of the winter omicron wave, barriers to testing will leave these communities more vulnerable again if another wave hits the U.S., Tolbert said. Curative said its real-time data points to another potential surge on the horizon.
    “If you think about this from a public health perspective, it is just more about preparing should another surge happen so that you’re not caught off guard before you can put all of the pieces back in place to ensure that people can access the test and the treatment,” Tolbert said.
    The uninsured program, established at the start the pandemic under the Trump administration, has paid out about $20 billion in claims since 2020, according to HRSA. Tolbert said about 60% of that money went toward testing, 31% for Covid treatments, and 9% for the administrative costs of vaccinations.
    The HRSA said people without health coverage should check their eligibility for Medicaid and for plans available through the ACA at healthcare.gov. The uninsured can also order free at-home tests from the government at covidtest.gov, though households are limited to two sets of four tests.
    The uninsured can also continue to receive Covid services for free at federally-backed community health centers across the country, which can be located through the HHS website.
    “The truth is that unfortunately the uninsured are the last to be thought about and the first to get the negative outcomes when we decide to pull back,” Benjamin said.

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    Delta ends $200 monthly health insurance surcharge on unvaccinated employees after Covid cases drop

    Delta Air Lines this month ended its $200 monthly surcharge on unvaccinated employees’ company health insurance.
    Delta announced the policy last August to take effect November 2021.
    At the time, CEO Ed Bastian said the average hospital stay for an employee with Covid-19 cost Delta $50,000.

    A Delta Airlines passenger jet approaches to land at LAX during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Los Angeles, California, U.S., April 7, 2021.
    Mike Blake | Reuters

    Delta Air Lines this month ended its $200 monthly surcharge on unvaccinated employees’ company health insurance, ending a pandemic policy designed to encourage staff to get inoculated against Covid-19.
    CEO Ed Bastian announced the policy shift on a Wednesday call discussing the airline’s first-quarter results and outlook.

    “We’ve dropped as of this month the additional insurance surcharge given the fact that we really do believe that the pandemic has moved to a seasonal virus,” Bastian said. “Any employees that haven’t been vaccinated will not be paying extra insurance costs going forward.”
    Delta announced the policy last August to take effect November 2021. At the time, Bastian said the average hospital stay for an employee with Covid-19 cost Delta $50,000.
    More than 95% of Delta’s 75,000-plus employees have been vaccinated, according to the company. It also began requiring all new hires to show proof of vaccination.
    United Airlines had the strictest vaccination policy of any U.S. airline, requiring staff to be vaccinated or face termination without an exemption for religious or medical reasons. Employees with an accommodation would be moved off customer service-facing roles, United said.
    More than 96% of that airline’s roughly 67,000 U.S. employees were vaccinated.
    Last month, United said it would allow unvaccinated workers who received an exemption to return to their regular jobs, citing a drop in Covid cases.

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    WHO says Covid still a global public health emergency even as deaths fall to lowest level in two years

    The World Health Organization said Covid-19 remains a global public health emergency even as Covid deaths have fallen to the lowest level since March 2020.
    WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the international community needs to keep up the fight against Covid by ensuring equal access to vaccines and mediating measures.
    “It’s always easier to declare a pandemic than undeclare one,” said Dr. Didier Houssin, chairman of the WHO committee that makes recommendations on health emergencies.

    Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), speaks during a news conference in Geneva, Switzerland, December 20, 2021.
    Denis Balibouse | Reuters

    The World Health Organization on Wednesday said Covid-19 remains a global public health emergency despite the fact that deaths from the virus have fallen to their lowest level since the early days of the pandemic.
    The world recorded more than 22,000 deaths from Covid during the week ended April 10, the lowest level since March 30, 2020, according to WHO data. The organization first declared Covid a global health emergency on Jan. 30, 2020, just over a month after the virus emerged in Wuhan, China.

    WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said declining Covid deaths is good news, but some countries are still experiencing a spike in cases. Tedros said a WHO committee this week unanimously agreed that Covid remains a public health emergency.
    “Far from being the time to drop our guard, this is the moment to work even harder to save lives,” Tedros said during a press briefing in Geneva. “Specifically, this means investing so that Covid-19 tools are equitably distributed, and we simultaneously strengthen health systems.”
    The WHO has called for world leaders to ensure all nations vaccinate 70% of their populations against Covid by the middle of the year. However, 75 countries have vaccinated less than 40% of their populations and 21 nations have vaccinated less than 10% of their people as of March, according to the group.

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    Every region is reporting declining cases and deaths, according to the WHO’s latest epidemiological update. The world recorded 7.3 million new infections for the week ended April 10, a 24% decrease from the previous week and the lowest level since late December when the highly contagious omicron variant was sweeping the world.
    However, the even more contagious omicron BA.2 subvariant has fueled renewed outbreaks in Europe and China, and increasingly, in the U.S. While Europe has largely emerged from its BA.2 wave, China is fighting its worst outbreak since 2020. China has placed most of Shanghai, involving about 25 million people, under lockdown.

    The U.S. reported more than 30,000 new infections on Monday, a 20% increase over the previous week, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. However, infections and hospitalizations are still more than 90% below the peak of the winter omicron wave in the U.S.
    “It’s always easier to declare a pandemic than undeclare one,” said Dr. Didier Houssin, chairman of the WHO’s international health regulations emergency committee. The committee makes recommendations about whether the transmission of a virus constitutes a global emergency.
    Houssin said the committee is working on criteria, including epidemiological data and the level of international assistance to contain the virus, to determine when the WHO can declare that the global health emergency is over.

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