Hubei’s capital is Wuhan, the epicentre of the viral outbreak.
- 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 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…)
EPS missed estimates ($1.38 actual vs $1.43 forecast) and revenue also fell short of expectations ($141.67 billion actual vs $142.41 billion forecast), meanwhile comp. sales grew by just 1.9% in the final quarter of last year.
The bulk of the amount will be for the health ministry to stymie the spread of the coronavirus as well as to mitigate its impact. In the budget, the finance ministry says that they are planning two special packages totaling S$5.6 billion to bolster the economy.
China trade body: some customers in Russia, Turkey, Middle East and North Africa have stopped accepting deliveries of China metal products amid coronavirus outbreak