Wall Street is closing out a painful week of earnings reports with one bright spot: Clorox reported higher profit off demand for cleaning products. As states struggle to find the balance between keeping their populations safe and allowing workplaces to restart their engines, the market is cheering news about possible Covid-19 vaccines and treatments. Gilead Sciences and Moderna continue to make headlines as drugmakers work furiously to end the pandemic.
This is CNBC’s live blog covering all the latest news on the coronavirus outbreak. All times below are in Eastern time. This blog will be updated throughout the day as the news breaks.
- Global cases: More than 3.2 million
- Global deaths: At least 233,704
- US cases: More than 1 million
- US deaths: At least 63,019
The data above was compiled by Johns Hopkins University.
10:00 am: Target, Walmart workers and others plan ‘sickout’ protests over coronavirus safety
Workers are planning to call out of work Friday as part of a nationwide employee “sickout” involving companies like Target, Whole Foods, Amazon Instacart, FedEx and Walmart.
They are protesting the slashing of hours, unstable schedules, and the need for greater health benefits. They are also asking for greater safety protections from the coronavirus at their jobs.
Read the full report from Reuters on workers’ protest plans here. —Hannah Miller
9:50 am: Coronavirus patients describe symptoms that last a month or more
Teresa Rodriguez
Source: Teresa Rodriguez
Teresa Rodriguez said on March 23, she woke up feeling extremely tired, and her health deteriorated quickly from there. It’s now been more than a month and she’s still battling a lingering headache, cough and fatigue.
Patients diagnosed or suspected to have Covid-19 are posting via online forums and on social media about symptoms that feel endless. Many say it comes in waves. They start feeling better after a few weeks, but it hits them again and persists.
Read the full report from CNBC’s Christina Farr on coronavirus patients’ symptoms here. —Melodie Warner
9:40 am: Dow falls 400 points after best month in three decades, Amazon leading tech lower
9:30 am: Exxon reports first-quarter loss on writedowns tied to plunging oil
Fuel prices are displayed at an Exxon Mobil Corp. gas station in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., on Wednesday, April 29, 2020.
Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Exxon Mobil lost $610 million in the first quarter due to writedowns tied to falling oil prices. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. oil benchmark, has dropped more than 70% this year.
“Covid-19 has significantly impacted near-term demand, resulting in oversupplied markets and unprecedented pressure on commodity prices and margins,” CEO Darren Woods said in a statement.
Read the full report from CNBC’s Pippa Stevens on Exxon’s first-quarter results here. —Melodie Warner
9:12 am: Amazon lets some employees work from home through Oct. 2
Amazon employees who can perform their jobs from home will be allowed to continue to work from home until at least Oct. 2. The company said Friday that the new timeline applies to workers around the globe, Reuters reported.
Amazon did not provide details about how much of its overall workforce works remotely or which roles are included. On Thursday, Amazon said it will spend all of its profit for the second quarter of 2020, at least $4 billion, on its response to the coronavirus pandemic.
Read the full report from Reuters on Amazon’s extended work from home order here. —Elisabeth Butler Cordova
9:04 am: Germany’s economic response is an example for the world, union chief says
Germany’s approach to employment in the coronavirus crisis is an example of how the world can deal with the economic fallout of the pandemic, the head of the United Nation’s labor agency said.
Guy Ryder, the director-general of the International Labour Organization (ILO), told CNBC that under Germany’s “Kurzarbeit,” or “short-time work,” program workers are sent home or see their hours slashed but are paid around two-thirds of their salary by the state.
Read the full report from CNBC’s Vicky McKeever on ILO Director-General Guy Ryder’s comments here. —Melodie Warner
7:25 am: Clorox sees 15% sales jump on strong demand
Clorox announced results for its fiscal third quarter, reporting a 15% jump in sales as demand for its cleaning products skyrocketed.
Net income and earnings per share also rose year over year, coming in at $241 million, or $1.89 per share.
Read the full report from CNBC’s Amelia Lucas on Clorox earnings here. —Sara Salinas
7:15 am: China’s Hubei province, where Covid-19 was first detected, set to relax lockdown
Travelers walk to the exit of the Hankou Railway Station in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province Wednesday, April 08, 2020, after 76 days of lockdown of the city due to Covid-19.
Barcroft Media | Getty Images
China’s central province of Hubei, where the coronavirus was first detected in late 2019, is reportedly poised to ease lockdown restrictions.
Hubei’s health commission posted on its official WeChat account on Friday that it will move to lower its emergency response level to the second-highest grade on Saturday, according to Reuters.
It marks a major milestone in China’s fight against the coronavirus outbreak. Theories about the origins of the outbreak include that it emerged from a seafood market in Wuhan, Hubei’s provincial capital, in December.
To date, more than 3.27 million people have contracted Covid-19 worldwide, with 233,704 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. —Sam Meredith
6:45 am: Iran reports 63 new deaths, death toll at 6,091
Iranian sanitary workers disinfect Qom’s Masumeh shrine on February 25, 2020 to prevent the spread of the coronavirus which reached Iran, where there were concerns the situation might be worse than officially acknowledged.
MEHDI MARIZAD | AFP | Getty Images
Iran reported the number of cases reached 95,646, the health ministry said, according to Reuters.
The ministry also confirmed 63 new deaths over the last 24 hours, bringing the total number of Covid-19 deaths in the country up to 6,091.
The Islamic Republic is one of the countries hardest hit by the pandemic in the Middle East. —Sam Meredith
6 am: Spain’s death toll climbs to 24,824
Two soldiers of the Military Emergency Unit are seen carrying material to disinfect the nursing and day centre ORPEA Sanchinarro for the second time to stop coronavirus infection on April 01, 2020 in Madrid, Spain.
Europa Press News
Spain reported 281 new fatalities over the last 24 hours, the health ministry said, taking the nationwide death toll up to 24,824. The previous day’s death toll was 268.
The number of cases rose to 215,216, up from 213,435 the day before. Spain has reported the second-highest number of Covid-19 infections worldwide.
The U.S. has recorded the most coronavirus cases, accounting for roughly one-third the global total after surpassing the 1 million milestone earlier this week. —Sam Meredith
5:20 am: How the gas that gave the world Viagra could help treat coronavirus patients
Viagra pill
John Greim | LightRocket | Getty Images
Studies and clinical trials underway at Massachusetts General Hospital aim to find out whether inhaled nitric oxide could help treat patients with the coronavirus.
Nitric oxide is a colorless, tasteless and short-acting gas that widens blood vessels in the lungs when inhaled.
Preliminary data has suggested that inhaled nitric oxide could have a virus-killing effect on the coronavirus, Massachusetts General said in an online statement. It is due to the genomic similarities between Covid-19 and those that caused the SARS and MERS outbreaks. Studies during the SARS outbreak in 2004 to 2005 demonstrated that nitric oxide was effective in killing that virus.
To be sure, the effectiveness of nitric oxide in treating the new coronavirus has not been studied before. There are no known vaccines or specific antiviral medicines against Covid-19.
In the ’90s, nitric oxide played a central role in the development of the erectile dysfunction drug Viagra. — Sam Meredith
Read CNBC’s coverage from CNBC’s Asia-Pacific and Europe teams overnight here: EU chief backs investigation into virus origin; Russia reports record spike in cases