Archives of “February 19, 2020” day
rssDistribution of wealth in the US UU.
ICYMI – China sold around $19.3bn of US government bonds in December
For the whole of 2019 China sold down USD54.4bn of USTs
- To take their holdings to around 1.07 trillion now.
The release of the data each month usually causes a freak out, you know the drill.
But I was so totally caught up on other things I didn’t post.
Let me try and make up for it now
China official coronavirus cases increase by 1,749 as of end Feb 18
China’s National Health Commission update
- Total for mainland China as of end February 18 is 74,185
- Total deaths across China’s mainland reaches 2,004
Horrible numbers. If there is any consolation its that new cases outside of Hubei province (the epicentre of the outbreak) have declined now for 15 straight days (taking the numbers as given by the National Health Commission, and it should be noted there are doubts as to the validity of the official numbers)
—
So far:
- Jan 17: 41
- Jan 19: 62
- Jan 20: 201
- Jan 21: 291
- Jan 22: 440
- Jan 24: 830
- Jan 25: 1,287
- Jan 26: 1,975
- Jan 27: 2,744
- Jan 28: 5,974
- Jan 29: 7,711
- Jan 30: 9,692
- Jan 31: 11,791
- Feb 1: 14,380 (death toll 304)
- Feb 2: 17,205 (death toll 361)
- Feb 3: 20,438 (death toll 425)
- Feb 4: 24,324 (death toll 490)
- Feb 5: 28,018 (death toll 563)
- Feb 6: 31,161 (death toll 636)
- Feb 7: 34,564 (death toll 722)
- Feb 8: 37,198 (death toll 811)
- Feb 9: 40,171 (death toll 908)
- Feb 10: 42,638 (death toll 1,016)
- Feb 11: 44,653 (death toll 1,113)
- Feb 12: 59,805 (death toll 1,367)
- Feb 13: 63,851 total cases. Death toll now 1,380. 6,723 discharged from hospital.
- Feb 14: NHC reports total cases at 66,492. Deaths on Feb 14 across China were 143, takes the total at 1,523.
- Feb 15: 68,500, 1,665 dead.
- Feb 16: 70,548 total cases in mainland China. Deaths up 105 to 1,770
- Feb 17: Total mainland cases 72,436. Deaths toll is now 1868.
- Feb 18: Total confirmed coronavirus cases on the mainland 74,185. Total number of deaths is 2,004.
Japan core machinery orders for December -12.5% m/m (expected -8.9%)
A capex indicator for Japan in the months ahead, 6 to 9 months out.
-12.5% m/m
- expected -8.9%, prior 18.0% m/m
-3.5% y/y
- expected -0.7%, prior 5.3% y/y
The m/m is very volatile, the y/y is a little smoother. Both are misses though.
As part of the process the Cabinet Office survey manufacturers:
- the firms expect core orders will fall 5.2% in Q1 of this year (from -2.1% in Q4 2019)
Hubei province coronavirus infection update: 1693 new cases on Feb 18, 132 deaths
Hubei’s capital is Wuhan, the epicentre of the viral outbreak.
For end February 18:
- 1,693 new cases of the infection
- 132 deaths added to the toll (takes total deaths in the province to 1,921 and in China to 2,000; we will get a whole of China update later)

Apple supply shortage to last into April: sources
Apple will likely miss its schedule for mass producing a more affordable iPhone, while inventories of existing models could remain low until April or longer, despite suppliers in China gradually resuming production amid the coronavirus outbreak, sources familiar with the matter told the Nikkei Asian Review.
Apple had previously planned to release a more affordable iPhone this spring to maintain sales momentum into the first half of the year. Mass production was supposed to start by the end of February, but multiple sources say meeting that target is now very challenging and production could be delayed until sometime in March.
The U.S. tech giant had previously asked suppliers to ready up to 80 million units of iPhones, including up to 15 million units of the cheaper model, for the first half of 2020, the Nikkei Asian Review reported. With that aggressive production plan now uncertain, Apple became the latest major tech company to lower its revenue forecast on Monday.
“The suppliers are doing their best to produce and ship the [cheaper] iPhone within four weeks. …The delay can’t be too long, otherwise it will affect the sales strategy of Apple’s new products in the second half of this year,” one of the people, who has direct knowledge of the matter, told Nikkei.
“On average, suppliers in the iPhone supply chain are currently operating at around 30% to 50% of capacity,” another source told Nikkei. “The constrained supply of iPhones will likely extend to April. There are still a lot of hurdles, from labor shortages to logistics transportation.”
“The biggest uncertainty is still lingering as no one can be sure whether the coronavirus is under control,” the person said. The source added, however, that most suppliers expect to have more employees back at work as soon as next Monday, after the 14-day quarantine period expires for those who returned from other provinces by Feb. 10. (more…)
UK PM Boris Johnson speaks with China President Xi – says “I love China” (or did he?)
Chinese state media reports that BJ proclaimed his love for China in his phone call with Xi, which came just days after US President Trump threatened BJ over Huawei
You’ll recall the UK is OK with granting sensitive contracts to Huawei despite Trump’s opposition.
On the love, South China Morning Post says:
- Johnson displayed a cosiness with Beijing that contrasts with his hardline approach to the European Union amid Brexit trade talks.
(SCMP link is here for more)
More:
“Britain welcomes investment from Chinese companies,” Johnson told Xi, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV. “We would like to strengthen our cooperation with China under the Belt and Road Initiative.”
Putin, Trump, Xi, Johnson.
Sheesh.
Keeping track of who owns who is getting complicated.

US stocks end the session with mixed results.
NASDAQ is a record close
The major indices all opened sharply lower on the overnight news that Apple earnings and revenues would be lower as a result of the coronavirus. However, although the S&P and Dow remained in the red, the NASDAQ index eked out a small gain which was also good enough for a new record close.
The final numbers are showing him him:
- Dow industrial average, -165.69 points or -0.56% at 29232.39
- S&P index -9.84 points or -0.29% at 3370.32
- NASDAQ index +1.56 points or 0.02% at 9732.74