Coronavirus live updates: New cases in China drop to 394; Beijing revises diagnosis protocol

FAN Editor

This is a live blog. Please check back for updates.

All times below are in Beijing time.

10:07 am: China says there were 114 additional deaths and 394 new cases

China’s National Health Commission reported an additional 114 deaths, and 394 new confirmed cases as of Feb. 19. That brings the total deaths in the mainland to 2,118 and the confirmed cases to 74,576 cases.

The number of new cases was drastically lower than the 1,749 reported the day before.

Hubei reported 349 new confirmed cases, after the removal of 279 cases with negative nucleic acid test results. On Wednesday, China released the “No. 6 trial” measures for virus prevention and control, which removed a classification for Hubei that allowed the province to include a “clinically diagnosed” category. — Weizhen Tan, Evelyn Cheng

9:40 am: China cuts a key lending rate to help boost economy

China’s central bank cut the loan prime rate on Thursday in a widely-anticipated move that will help lower borrowing costs for businesses, and prop up the economy that is reeling from the virus outbreak.
The one-year loan prime rate was reduced by 10-basis points — from 4.15% in January to 4.05% in February. The five-year LPR was lowered by 5-basis points — from 4.8% to 4.75%.

The LPR is the interest rate that banks charge their most creditworthy customers. In August last year, the People’s Bank of China changed the way commercial lenders set interest rates for loans. — Joanna Tan

9:12 am: South Korea says another 31 new cases found

South Korea’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has confirmed another 31 new cases, bringing the total number of people infected to 82.

One case was identified in the capital of Seoul, the rest were in the city of Daegu and the Gyengbuk province, KCDC said. — Joanna Tan

8:30 am: Australians on board the Diamond Princess return home for quarantine, more passengers to disembark

More than 150 Australians have disembarked the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship docked off Japan, and have arrived back in their country, according to Reuters. They will serve out a two-week quarantine.

They arrived in Darwin on Thursday morning, according to the report. A second group of about 600 passengers — Japanese and other nationalities — are set to disembark the ship on Thursday as well, according to a separate Reuters report.

The Diamond Princess has been docked at Yokohama near Tokyo since Feb. 3, with an initial 3,700 passengers, and more than 600 have since been found infected. — Weizhen Tan

7:58 am: Hubei reports an additional 108 deaths bringing total fatalities in province to 2,029

Hubei’s health authorities reported there were 108 additional fatalities on Feb. 19, bringing the total number of people who died in the province to 2,029.

The Hubei Provincial Health Committee reported there were 349 new cases on Feb. 19 — down from 1,693 newly confirmed cases the day before. The commission stated that 349 was the final tally after deducting 279 cases from 10 Hubei cities. According to Reuters, the number of new cases reported daily is a net figure including such deductions. That means the number of new cases on Wednesday stood at 628, when the deductions were removed.

The virus — believed to have first emerged from Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province — has killed more than 2,000 people so far. Less than 10 people outside the mainland have died from the virus. — Joanna Tan

A Chinese woman slides steam buns down a ramp used to prevent touching and contact as the customer takes his order at a local take out on February 19, 2020 in Beijing, China.

Kevin Frayer | Getty Images

All times below are in Eastern time.

5:06 pm: Markets may face ‘pretty serious reckoning’ as coronavirus slows growth

The coronavirus may significantly weaken a global economy that was already in a precarious position, Yale University’s Stephen Roach told CNBC. “If the global economy is as weak as I think it is in the first half of this year, that points to a pretty serious reckoning for frothy financial markets,” the former Morgan Stanley Asia chairman said on “Closing Bell.” Investors have been trying to make sense of what the coronavirus means for businesses since late January. And yet, the market has only seen a few pullbacks in that stretch as the major U.S. stock indexes continue to set fresh highs. — Stankiewicz

4:23 pm: Goldman says market underestimating virus risk: ‘Correction is looking much more probable’

Goldman Sachs sounded the alarm to clients about a possible correction in the stock market, noting investors are underestimating how big of a risk the coronavirus really is. “We believe the greater risk is that the impact of the coronavirus on earnings may well be underestimated in current stock prices, suggesting that the risks of a correction are high,” strategist Peter Oppenheimer wrote in a note. Oppenheimer thinks the market could be in trouble if earnings expectations aren’t ratcheted down. “Equity markets are looking increasingly exposed to near-term downward surprises to earnings growth,” said Oppenheimer. “While a sustained bear market does not look likely, a near-term correction is looking much more probable.” — Imbert

A worker at a factory in Nanjing sorting face masks being produced to satisfy increased demand during China’s COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak, in China’s Jiangsu province.

Stringer | AFP | Getty Images

2:41 pm: CDC issues travel guidelines for Hong Kong after second coronavirus-related death

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidelines on Wednesday for American travelers to Hong Kong after the city reported its second death from the new coronavirus. Travelers to Hong Kong should avoid contact with sick people, the CDC said, and regularly wash their hands. It is the CDC’s lowest-level travel warning, but it is the first coronavirus-related travel notice issued by the U.S. government for a territory beyond mainland China. — Feuer

Read CNBC’s coverage from the U.S. overnight: Fed sees risk to global growth, markets face ‘pretty serious reckoning’

— CNBC’s Fred Imbert, Kevin Stankiewicz contributed to this report.

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