Jumat, 26 November 2021

Glove makers and Medtecs International surge on possible new virus variant - The Edge Singapore

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  1. Glove makers and Medtecs International surge on possible new virus variant  The Edge Singapore
  2. New virus variant boosts sagging glove maker stocks in South-east Asia  The Business Times
  3. Investors lose nerve over Covid fears, glove stocks see renewed interest  The Star Online
  4. Glove makers bounce back after new Covid-19 variant emerges  Free Malaysia Today
  5. Bursa Health Care Index only gainer as Covid-19 variant fears boost glove counters  The Edge Markets MY
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-11-26 06:33:37Z
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Cops tell titillating Thai street vendor to cover up, internet creeps over her pics - AsiaOne

You won't see snacks the same way again — or specifically, the person selling them — unless you have been snacking with your eyes.

A street vendor in Chiang Mai, Thailand has stirred the internet's imagination this week with her creative way of attracting customers.

Wearing nothing underneath her cardigan — with a pin barely keeping it together— the 23-year-old has been selling Thai pancakes, a popular street snack, or better known to locals as khanom Tokyo.

And it appears that her sweet treats have brought all the men to her stall.

According to a Thai publication, many stopped and stared, and a passing motorcyclist even crashed his bike.

On Thursday (Nov 23), local police told the street vendor, whose name is Aranya Apaiso or Olive, that she was dressed too sexily. They also warned her about maintaining social distance with her customers, Coconuts Bangkok reported.

She was ordered to wear a bra by a local official.  

In a post by a Thai Facebook page, with over 13,000 comments and 17,000 shares, you can see her at work preparing the snacks.

The young woman used to sell clothes online but decided to start selling snacks due to the pandemic, Thai media reported.

READ ALSO: 'Dressing sexy and respect are 2 separate things': Female beer stall operator angry after men uploaded footage of her 'zao geng'

zakaria@asiaone.com

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2021-11-26 10:08:00Z
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Kamis, 25 November 2021

Asia stocks tumble, havens rally on worry over new Covid-19 variant; STI down 1% - The Straits Times

TOKYO (BLOOMBERG) - Investors fled stocks and flocked to havens in global markets on Friday (Nov 26) amid growing concern over a coronavirus variant first discovered in South Africa.

United States treasuries and the Japanese yen gained while South Africa's rand fell to its lowest in a year against the US dollar amid fears the variant may spread internationally, thwarting the recovery in the world's economy.

Asian stocks and US equity futures fell amid the risk-off tone, with thin liquidity likely a factor given American markets were shut for Thanksgiving on Thursday.

A gauge of Asia-Pacific stocks slid to the lowest since the middle of last month, with travel shares among the biggest decliners. Singapore Airlines shares fell nine cents, or 1.7 per cent, to $5.16.

Japan's Nikkei index sank 2.23 per cent, Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index fell 0.9 per cent while South Korea's Kospi index was down 0.48 per cent.

Just after opening, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index tumbled 0.96 per cent while the Shanghai Composite dropped 0.23 per cent.

The benchmark Straits Times Index was down 1.06 per cent as at 9.35am.

While researchers are yet to determine whether the B.1.1529 variant is more transmissible or lethal than previous ones, the authorities around the world have been quick to act. Britain and Israel temporarily banned flights from South Africa and five neighbouring countries as a precautionary measure. Hong Kong confirmed two cases of the new strain in travellers arriving in the city, the government said on Thursday evening.

The detection of the strain comes on top of concerns in markets about high inflation and the prospect of quicker exit from ultra-loose monetary settings. Global shares have climbed about 16 per cent this year, weathering a plethora of risks after investors poured almost US$900 billion (S$1.23 trillion)  into equity exchange-traded and long-only funds this year - topping the combined total from the past 19 years.

"Traders are trimming risk positions because of concern over the new virus variant," said Dr Alvin T. Tan, head of Asia foreign exchange strategy at RBC Capital Markets in Hong Kong. "The risk-off sentiment is magnified given the thin liquidity as it's Asia morning plus the US holiday."

IG Markets analyst Kyle Rodda said that the virus variant is "a scary headline", so it may have caused a knee-jerk reaction.

He added that "North America off the desks means there's a wall of buyers missing", and thinner markets make for more pronounced moves.

United First Partners head of Asian Research Justin Tang said: "There is some risk off happening from Japan to Africa due to concerns around a new virus variant being found in South Africa, but the good thing is countries such as UK are acting fast to curtail its spread."

He added: "Given that the world has gone through this before with Delta, there is already a playbook for such situations - even if the new variant overstays."

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield dropped as much as 5 basis points to 1.58 per cent as cash trading resumed following the holiday. The yen rose 0.4 per cent against the dollar, while the Swiss franc saw a 0.2 per cent rise, both outperforming their Group of 10 peers. The rand slid as much as 1.3 per cent to a one-year low of 16.1717 per dollar.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs Group economists said they expect the US Federal Reserve to tighten policy faster than previously anticipated, including doubling the pace at which it tapers bond purchases to US$30 billion a month from January. They see an interest-rate lift-off from near zero in June next year.

"The increased openness to accelerating the taper pace likely reflects both somewhat higher-than-expected inflation over the last two months and greater comfort among Fed officials that a faster pace would not shock financial markets," the Goldman team, led by Dr Jan Hatzius, wrote in a note.

In China, the economy continued to slow this month, with car and homes sales dropping again as a housing market crisis dragged on, according to Bloomberg's aggregate index of eight early indicators.

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2021-11-26 01:45:23Z
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Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day - Bloomberg

JPMorgan CEO says he regrets his China comments. Binance is in talks with sovereign wealth funds. NFT is the Collins Dictionary word of the year. Here’s what you need to know today. 

Jamie Dimon is walking back his words, saying he regrets quipping at a Boston event on Tuesday that JPMorgan is likely to outlast the Chinese Communist Party. His comments detract from constructive dialogue, he said, and it’s “never right to joke about or denigrate” a country. Beijing has so far stayed silent in response, and as of midday Wednesday in China the bank hadn’t communicated with government officials on the issue. JPMorgan went into damage-control mode as soon as he said his words. With nearly $20 billion of exposure in China, JPMorgan has a lot riding on maintaining cordial relations.

Asian stocks looked set for a mixed open Thursday after the latest Federal Reserve minutes flagged the risk of a faster reduction in stimulus. The U.S. dollar jumped and the Treasury yield curve flattened. There are signs this week that showed this year’s love for risky assets has hit a rough patch. OPEC expects that oil stockpiles released by consuming nations could massively swell the surplus in global markets, ahead of the oil bloc’s meeting on whether to further increase output. And traders expecting Australia’s central bank to soon follow New Zealand and South Korea in hiking rates may have to wait.

Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, confirmed it’s in talks with sovereign wealth funds about them taking a stake, as the closely held firm faces increasing regulatory pressure worldwide. Meanwhile, India is considering a proposal to treat cryptocurrencies as a financial asset while safeguarding small investors. The legislation may stipulate a minimum amount for investments in digital currencies, while banning their use as legal tender. And aficionados are turning to technical indicators for clues as to where Bitcoin and Ether may go next.

Olaf Scholz is  set to succeed Angela Merkel as German chancellor after forging a coalition that aims to revamp the economy by tackling climate change and promoting digital technologies. After almost two months of talks, Scholz's center-left Social Democrats finalized an agreement with the Greens and the pro-business Free Democrats. Scholz set out to steer Germany through the resurgent pandemic and transform Europe’s largest economy into a climate leader

The Collins Dictionary declared NFT its  word of the year in recognition of the convergence of the worlds of money, tech and art in what became known as “non-fungible tokens.” Collins defines them as “a unique digital certificate, registered in a blockchain, that is used to record ownership of an asset such as an artwork or a collectible.” 

What We’ve Been Reading

What’s caught our eye over the past 24 hours:

And finally, here’s what Tracy’s interested in today

For a moment on Wednesday, crypto went on sale in India. News that parliament will consider a bill to regulate “private cryptocurrencies” sparked a massive selloff. Altcoins like Shiba and Doge slipped precipitously on trading platforms popular with Indian investors, yet the same coins were remarkably stable on exchanges like Binance and Kraken. At one point, Bitcoin was down almost 14% on WazirX but a mere 0.5% elsewhere in the world. Anyone who could figure out how to quickly and efficiently get money into and out of the country could have bought crypto on the cheap and simply sold it for a higher price elsewhere.

relates to Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day
Source: TrendingView.com

Of course, therein lies the rub and the precise reason why pricing arbitrages like this can exist in crypto. One of the great ironies of ostensibly decentralized money is that it is in fact highly centralized once traded on exchanges that are vulnerable to outages and must meet national rules around KYC or moving funds in and out of the country. That’s one of the reasons why the crypto market’s most famous pricing discrepancy has persisted for so long.

You can follow Tracy Alloway on Twitter at @tracyalloway.

— With assistance by Tracy Alloway

(Corrects to remove reference to old article in last paragraph.)

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    2021-11-24 23:44:57Z
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    Selasa, 23 November 2021

    The Chinese dad making medicine to treat his dying son - The Straits Times

    KUNMING, CHINA (AFP) - Two-year-old Haoyang has likely just months to live, but the only medicine that can help his rare genetic condition is not found anywhere in China and closed borders due to the Covid-19 pandemic mean he cannot travel for treatment.

    Instead, his desperate father, Mr Xu Wei, has created a home laboratory to create a remedy for the boy himself.

    "I didn't really have time to think about whether to do it or not. It had to be done," the 30-year-old told AFP from his DIY lab in a high-rise apartment building in southwestern Kunming.

    Haoyang has Menkes Syndrome, a genetic disorder that impacts how copper - which is crucial for brain and nervous system development - is processed in the body.

    Sufferers rarely survive beyond the age of three.

    But Xu, who has only high school education and ran a small online business before his son became ill, is determined to give him a fighting chance.

    "Even though he cannot move or speak, he has a soul and feels emotions," he said, holding Haoyang in his lap to give him honey mixed in water.

    After being told the disease was incurable and the only medication that could help ease symptoms was not available in China, he began researching and teaching himself pharmaceuticals.

    "My friends and family were against it. They said it was impossible," he remembers.

    Most online documents on Menkes Syndrome were in English, but undeterred, Mr Xu used translation software to understand them before setting up a home lab in his father's gym.

    On discovering copper histadine could help, he set up the equipment to create it himself, mixing copper chloride dihydrate with histidine, sodium hydroxide and water.

    Blocked by covid-19


    Xu Wei holding his son Xu Haoyang at his home laboratory in Kunming, China, on Oct 20, 2021. PHOTO: AFP

    Mr Xu now gives Haoyang a daily dose of homemade medicine, which gives the child some of the copper his body is missing.

    The amateur chemist claims that a few of the blood tests returned to normal two weeks after beginning the treatment.

    The toddler can't talk, but he gives a smile of recognition when his father runs a gentle hand over his head.

    His wife, who didn't want to give her name, cares for their five-year-old daughter in another part of the city.

    Menkes Syndrome is more prevalent in boys than girls, and it is estimated one in 100,000 babies are born with the disease globally, according to organisation Rare Diseases.

    There is little information or data available, but Mr Xu said pharmaceutical companies have shown little interest as the treatment "does not have commercial value and its user group is small".

    Under normal circumstances, he would have travelled abroad to bring back treatments for Haoyang from specialist centres overseas, but China has largely closed its borders since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Mr Xu felt he had no choice but to make it himself.

    "At first, I thought it was a joke," said Haoyang's grandfather Xu Jianhong.

    "(I thought) it was an impossible mission for him."


    Xu Wei pouring liquid nitrogen at his home laboratory in Kunming, China, on Oct 20, 2021. PHOTO: AFP

    But six weeks after throwing himself into the project, Mr Xu produced his first vial of copper histidine.

    To test it, he first experimented with rabbits and then injected the treatment into his own body.

    "The rabbits were fine, I was fine, so then I tried it on my son," he said.

    Reassured, he then started gradually increasing the dosage.

    But the medicine is not a cure.

    Professor Annick Toutain, specialist of rare diseases at the Tours University Hospital in France, said the copper treatment "is only efficient against certain genetic anomalies and if it is administered very early on, in the first three weeks of life".

    She said that after that the treatment will alleviate symptoms, "without leading to recovery".

    Mr Xu has accepted that it can "only slow down the disease".

    Gene therapy


    Xu Wei looking through Menkes syndrome-related material on a computer at home in Kunming, China, on Oct 22, 2021. PHOTO: AFP

    His work has led to interest from VectorBuilder, an international biotech lab, who are now launching gene therapy research with Mr Xu into Menkes syndrome.

    The company's chief scientist Bruce Lahn described it as "a rare disease among rare diseases" and said they were inspired after learning about Mr Xu's family.

    Clinical trials and tests on animals are planned for the next few months.

    Mr Xu has even been contacted by other parents whose children have been diagnosed with Menkes, asking him to make treatment for their relatives too - something he has refused.

    "I can only be responsible for my child," he told AFP, while health authorities have said they will not intervene as long as he only makes the treatment for home use.


    Xu Wei moving medical equipment at his home laboratory in Kunming, China, on Oct 20, 2021. PHOTO: AFP

    Dr Huang Yu of the Medical Genetics Department at Peking University told AFP that as a doctor he was "ashamed" to hear of Mr Xu's case.

    He said he hoped that "as a developing country, we can improve our medical system to better help such families".

    With a full-time role as an amateur chemist, Mr Xu has little income and relies mainly on his parents.

    Friends tried to talk him out of his medical efforts, but undeterred, the young father is planning to study molecular biology at university and do everything he can to protect his son.

    "I don't want him to wait desperately for death. Even if we fail, I want my son to have hope."

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    2021-11-23 06:27:31Z
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    Senin, 22 November 2021

    Suspect in Wisconsin Christmas parade carnage was out on bail from previous case - The Straits Times

    WAUKESHA, WISCONSIN (REUTERS) - The man accused of deliberately driving his car into a Christmas parade near Milwaukee, killing five people and injuring dozens, was out on bail from a domestic abuse case and was suspected in another violent altercation earlier that day, officials said on Monday (Nov 22). 

    The suspect, Darrell Brooks, 39, was arrested near the scene of Sunday’s vehicular attack in Waukesha, Wisconsin, and faces five counts of first-degree homicide, Waukesha Police Chief Daniel Thompson said. 

    In addition to the five people killed – ranging in age from 52 to 81 – 48 were injured, including six children who remained hospitalised in critical condition on Monday, authorities said. 

    Among the victims were members of a parade group calling themselves the "Dancing Grannies," according to a statement posted on Facebook on Monday. 

    Mr Thompson said the motive for the attack was still a mystery but that it was clear the suspect had acted intentionally. 

    "He drove right through the barricades and the officers," Mr Thompson told a briefing, adding authorities had ruled out terrorism as a motive.

    Waukesha County District Attorney Sue Opper said the suspect acted alone. 

    Police were not pursuing Brooks when he plowed into the parade, but one officer fired shots to try to stop the sport utility vehicle, the police chief said. 

    "Minutes after the incident occurred, I responded to the scene," Mr Thompson said. "And what I saw out of chaos and tragedy was heroes - first responders in the community coming together and working together on triaging victims."

    The FBI was assisting local police in their investigation. 

    Brooks has a criminal history and was last released from custody on Nov 11 after posting US$1,000 (S$1,364) cash bond, an amount the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office said was "inappropriately low in light of the nature of the recent charges" against him. 

    Brooks had been charged on Nov 5 with obstructing an officer, battery, reckless endangerment, disorderly conduct and felony bail jumping in a domestic abuse case, prosecutors and state court records show. 

    Around the time of Sunday’s carnage, police also had received a complaint of a domestic disturbance involving Brooks and a knife but were unable to respond because they were preoccupied with the parade, Mr Thompson said. 

    "Was there an initial complaint of a knife being involved?  Yes," he said. "Do we know if there actually was one there? We don’t."

    The chief said investigators had no information suggesting Brooks, a resident of Milwaukee, knew anyone in the parade.


    Abandoned items remain strewn along a street in Waukesha after the Christmas parade, on Nov 22, 2021. PHOTO: NYTIMES

    'Still totally shocked'

    Police identified the five dead as Ms Virginia Sorenson, 79; Ms LeAnna Owen, 71; Ms Tamara Durand, 52; Ms Jane Kulich, 52; and Mr Wilhelm Hospel, 81. 

    On Monday morning, a pink hat, a lone shoe and candy lay strewn across the main thoroughfare in Waukesha. 

    Dozens of orange evidence circles were painted on the street and most shops were closed in the city’s downtown district.

    A woman tied a bouquet of flowers to a street post as police officers blocked intersections along the main road. 

    "It was terrifying," said Waukesha resident Brian Hoffman, 33, who was present as the vehicle rammed through parade attendees. "I saw children who were ran over... I am still totally shocked."

    The Children's Wisconsin hospital officials said at a briefing they treated 18 children, including six who remained in critical condition and three in serious condition on Monday. The rest were in fair condition or released. The hospital made no mention of any fatalities.

    A message posted on Monday by the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies Facebook page paid tribute to those who lost their lives as "the glue... (that) held us together." 

    "Those who died were extremely passionate Grannies. Their eyes gleamed.....(with the) joy of being a Grannie. They were the glue....(that) held us together," read the message posted on the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies Facebook page. "Our hearts are heavy at this most difficult time."

    Schools will remain closed on Monday and additional counsellors will be available for students, the district superintendent of schools said.

    Waukesha authorities said a fund for the affected families had been set up.

    US President Joe Biden said his administration was monitoring the situation in Waukesha "very closely." "The entire community is struggling, struggling to cope with these horrific acts of violence," Biden told reporters on Monday.

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    2021-11-22 20:44:38Z
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    Singapore health minister says return to strict COVID-19 curbs a last resort - Reuters

    SINGAPORE, Nov 22 (Reuters) - A return to stricter COVID-19 curbs in Singapore will be a "last resort", Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said on Monday, as the city-state partially eased limits on social gatherings and dining out under its calibrated reopening approach.

    Ong also said the international travel and tourism hub would continue to open "travel lanes" with more countries for vaccinated visitors.

    Singapore is gradually granting small groups of vaccinated people increased liberties, resuming in-person business events and permitting quarantine-free travel from select countries as it ramps up its vaccine booster programme.

    Register now for FREE unlimited access to reuters.com

    "I feel it's important to do it this way, because it minimizes the chance of us having to backpedal too frequently," Ong told Reuters in an interview on Monday for the upcoming Reuters Next conference.

    "You can't rule out having to throttle back sometimes, but it should always be a last resort, because it's extremely frustrating for people."

    Singapore has vacillated between tightening and easing restrictions for its population of 5.45 million in recent months as, like many countries, it was hit by a fresh wave of infections fuelled by the Delta variant.

    Ong said it was too difficult to put a timeframe on when Singapore would reach a "new normal", but he hoped the country's high vaccination rates and the current roll-out of booster shots meant it would continue to ease restrictions.

    "I hope that whatever liberty that we now gradually, progressively can return back to the people, we can keep them for next year, even as a new wave arrives," said Ong.

    Singapore was one of several so-called COVID-zero countries that enforced some of the world's strictest measures to keep infections and deaths from the pandemic - at around 252,200 and 662, respectively - relatively low.

    This year, it switched to a strategy of living with the virus as endemic. Around 94% of those eligible have been vaccinated, while 23% of the total population has received a booster shot.

    Among its latest easing measures, limits on social gatherings and dining out were eased from two to five people, still restrictive compared to many other countries.

    Authorities have also tightened measures against unvaccinated people, effectively barring them from dining out or entering malls and will begin to charge them for COVID-19 treatment if they refused a vaccine by choice.

    TRAVEL HUB

    Singapore has been expanding quarantine free travel from more than a dozen countries, including Britain, France, Germany, Australia, Canada and the United States via so-called vaccinated "travel lanes."

    It will start these lanes with Malaysia and India at the end of the month. The lanes allow fully vaccinated people to enter the island without quarantining if they pass their COVID-19 tests.

    "It is important for us to establish this, as such a small outwardly oriented country, we need to connect with the world," said Ong. "For the foreseeable future, I think vaccinated travel lanes will be the norm."

    To watch the Reuters Next conference please register here https://reutersevents.com/events/next/

    Register now for FREE unlimited access to reuters.com

    Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan in Singapore; editing by Jane Wardell

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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    2021-11-22 06:32:00Z
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