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Saturday, June 8, 2024

'Texas bird flu strain kills ferrets used to mimic disease in humans, CDC says'

 The bird flu virus strain that infected a Texas dairy farm worker in March was lethal to ferrets in experiments designed to mimic the disease in humans, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported on Friday.

Seasonal flu, by contrast, makes ferrets sick but does not kill them, the CDC said.

Ferrets are considered the best small mammal for studying influenza virus infection and transmission and are commonly used as a tool to inform public health risk assessments of emerging influenza viruses, according to the CDC.

The strain of the (A)H5N1 avian influenza virus found in Texas spread easily among healthy ferrets when they were placed in direct contact with infected ferrets, the researchers found.

The virus was less efficient than other influenza strains at spreading by respiratory droplets, however.

This suggests that viruses like this one "would need to undergo changes to spread efficiently by droplets through the air, such as from coughs and sneezes,” the CDC said.

Bird flu has been reported in more than 80 dairy herds across 11 U.S. states since late March. Scientists are on alert for changes in the virus that could signal it is adapting to spread more easily among humans.

Reuters reported earlier on Friday that U.S. federal and state agencies are planning research into potential respiratory spread of bird flu among dairy cattle in a move aimed at guiding efforts to contain the virus and reduce exposure to humans. Respiratory spread could give the virus more opportunity to evolve, they said.

The U.S., Mexico and Australia have reported a total of five human cases of different versions of H5 bird flu since March. The three U.S. cases were mild, with two dairy workers - one infected in Texas - experiencing just conjunctivitis, or pink eye, while a third case involved some respiratory symptoms.

The man in Mexico, who had other chronic conditions, died from multiple factors, the WHO said on Friday.

The new findings in ferrets “are not surprising and do not change CDC’s risk assessment for most people, which is low,” the agency said.

“The results do reinforce the need for people who have exposure to infected animals to take precautions and for public health and agriculture communities to continue to work together to prevent the spread of the virus to additional dairy herds and people.”

https://www.yahoo.com/news/texas-bird-flu-strain-kills-222540566.html

Over half of Aramco share sale allocated to foreign investors

 Saudi Arabia placed over half of an $11.2 billion share sale in Aramco with foreign investors, two people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Saturday.

Saudi Arabia has been seeking to lure international investment to pour tens of billions of dollars into projects to diversify away from its reliance on oil. Yet foreign investment has repeatedly missed targets.

"There were multiple orders from the U.S., UK, Hong Kong and Japan," one of the sources said.

International demand for the secondary share sale was greater than for Aramco's IPO in 2019, sources had previously told Reuters.

Aramco said on Friday shares were priced at 27.25 riyals ($7.27) after the company set a price range of 26.70-29.00 riyals.

The secondary offering, codenamed Project Bond by the banks involved, took months of planning.

As a result of the transaction, more than 120 new international investors will be added to Aramco, one of the sources said.

"The overall demand for the offering was greater than $65 billion across global blue chip institutions and the domestic retail offering," he said.

Saudi de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's Vision 2030 is funding endeavours as diverse as electric vehicles to building futuristic cities in the desert, mainly via its Public Investment Fund (PIF).

The $925 billion sovereign fund, after scaling back some of its flagship giga-projects, aims to sharpen its focus to drive forward the vision.

Proceeds from the share sale are likely to be funneled to the PIF, sources and analysts have said, though funds could also help plug the kingdom's budget deficit which has risen as the oil price has weakened.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/over-half-aramco-share-sale-131418764.html

NewsBreak: Some US lawmakers call for more scrutiny of news app with Chinese origins

 Three U.S. lawmakers have called for more scrutiny of NewsBreak, a popular news aggregation app in the United States, after Reuters reported it has Chinese origins and has used artificial intelligence tools to produce erroneous stories.

The Reuters story drew upon previously unreported court documents related to copyright infringement, cease-and-desist emails, and a 2022 company memo registering concerns about "AI-generated stories" to identify at least 40 instances in which NewsBreak's use of AI tools affected the communities it strives to serve.

“The only thing more terrifying than a company that deals in unchecked, artificially generated news, is one with deep ties to an adversarial foreign government," said Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat who chairs the Intelligence Committee.

"This is yet another example of the serious threat posed by technologies from countries of concern. It’s also a stark reminder that we need a holistic approach to addressing this threat – we simply cannot win the game of whack-a-mole with individual companies," he said.

The lawmakers expressed concerns about NewsBreak's current and historical links to Chinese investors, and the company's presence in China, where many of its engineers are based.

In response to a request from Reuters for comment about the lawmakers' statements, NewsBreak said it was an American company: "NewsBreak is a U.S. company and always has been. Any assertion to the contrary is not true," a spokesperson said.

NewsBreak launched in the U.S. in 2015 as a subsidiary of Yidian, a Chinese news aggregation app. Both companies were founded by Jeff Zheng, the CEO of NewsBreak, and the companies share a U.S. patent registered in 2015 for an "Interest Engine" algorithm, which recommends news content based on a user's interests and location, Reuters reported.

Yidian in 2017 received praise from ruling Communist Party officials in China for its efficiency in disseminating government propaganda. Reuters found no evidence that NewsBreak censored or produced news that was favourable to the Chinese government.

“This report brings to light serious questions about Newsbreak, its historical relationship with an entity that assisted the CCP, and to Chinese state-linked media," said Representative Raja Krishnamoorthi, the top Democrat on the House select committee on China, in a reference to Yidian and its former investor, state-linked media outlet Phoenix New Media.

DEI Programs Could Soon Face Supreme Court

 by Eric Lundrum via American Greatness,

The controversial business practice known as “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) could soon see its legal challenges take it all the way to the Supreme Court.

According to Axios, the case that could spark Supreme Court action was filed by the same group that successfully saw the practice of affirmative action overturned by the court last year.

The current case saw an appeals court ultimately rule that a venture capital firm had to shut down its grant program that was exclusively for black women.

The American Alliance for Equal Rights (AAER) filed a lawsuit against Fearless Fund in 2023, arguing that the black-only and women-only grant program was discriminatory. The group initially tried to have the program halted while the case played out in the courts, but a district judge ruled in favor of the company and allowed the program to continue.

Then, on Monday, a three-judge panel in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit overturned the district judge’s ruling, thus ordering Fearless Fund to cease its grant program. The two judges in the majority were appointed by former President Donald Trump, while the lone dissenter was an Obama appointee.

The appeals court’s ruling noted that the challenge by AAER “is likely to succeed on the merits” of its claims that the program is a violation of civil rights and anti-discrimination laws. As a result of this ruling, there is now a “circuit split” on the matter, increasing the likelihood that the subsequent challenge by Fearless Fund will ultimately lead to the Supreme Court for a final decision.

Similar cases against DEI programs have faced more difficult challenges. In March, a lawsuit was filed against Pfizer over its fellowship program that only applied to black, Hispanic, or Native American applicants. But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled against the plaintiffs, an advocacy group called Do No Harm, arguing that they lacked standing to sue.

DEI has long been criticized as not only discriminatory, but a means by which companies may hire people who are unqualified for certain positions, overlooking qualified and competent candidates in favor of diversity picks. Challenges against such programs have increased following the decision last year in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, the case which ultimately saw affirmative action declared unconstitutional nationwide.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/dei-programs-could-soon-face-supreme-court

3 stocks now account for 20% of the S&P 500's value, making some investors nervous

 For the first time dating back to at least 2000, three U.S. stocks - Microsoft Corp. , Nvidia Corp. and Apple Inc. - account for more than 20% of the value of the S&P 500, Dow Jones Market Data show.

This means just three stocks in the index are worth more than hundreds of other constituents combined, according to data from Bespoke Investment Group.

And although there is some historical data showing that rising concentration typically coincides with stronger returns for the S&P 500 SPX, the rapid run up in value seen by a handful of the biggest stocks is starting to make some investors nervous - even some who had been, until recently, relatively bullish.

"Strength in Nvidia and other megacaps has masked weakness in many other areas of the market," said Katie Stockton, founder of Fairlead Strategies, in a report shared with MarketWatch on Thursday. According to Stockton, small caps, midcaps and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA - along with the equal-weighted version of the S&P 500 XX:SP500EW - are all showing signs of deterioration.

Examples of this abound. Just look at the ratio of the small-cap-focused Russell 2000 RUT compared with the S&P 500, a measure which tumbled to its lowest level since 2001 earlier this week, according to FactSet data.

Or the divergence in relative price between the equal-weighted S&P 500 and its cap-weighted peer, which has grown more extreme as the equal-weight index has underperformed again this year. The ratio between the two recently touched its lowest level since 2009, according to analysts at BofA Global Research.

As high as concentration is for the S&P 500, it is even higher in the tech-heavy Nasdaq-100 NDX. As of Wednesday's close, Microsoft (MSFT), Nvidia (NVDA) and Apple (AAPL) comprised 41% of the Nasdaq-100's value for the first time since November 2023.

In both cases, the fact that so few stocks have contributed so much to the indexes' advances has become a frequent complaint expressed by bull-market skeptics. Many believe that if the rally were to fizzle out, it would be because stocks like Nvidia, which have driven an outsize percentage of the S&P 500's gains since early 2023, suddenly stop climbing.

As Nvidia crossed the $3 trillion threshold and surpassed Apple as the second-largest U.S. stock on Wednesday, those concerns appeared to manifest once again.

In an X post that went viral, Richard Bernstein Advisors illustrated with a chart how the percentage of S&P 500 stocks beating the index has remained unusually low in 2024, at about 30%, according to FactSet data. The S&P 500 is up 12.2% this year to date as of Thursday's close.

The last time so few stocks outperformed the index for two years in a row was 1998 and 1999, around the peak of the dot-com bubble, RBA pointed out.

Investors would be hard-pressed to argue that the current market environment is similar to the dot-com era. The dominance of the largest stocks largely reflects earnings and sales growth that dwarfs what other companies have seen.

But the market is, of course, forward-looking, and skeptics question how much longer companies like Nvidia can keep up their breakneck pace of growth. After all, semiconductor companies have proven to be extremely cyclical in the past, RBA's Richard Bernstein said during an interview with MarketWatch on Thursday.

Nvidia likely won't be able to continue surpassing Wall Street's expectations for earnings growth forever, or even much longer, which is why Bernstein believes the company's shares are likely overvalued. At the same time, investors likely haven't given shares of other members of the large-cap index enough credit.

FactSet estimates project that the 10 largest stocks in the S&P 500 will likely see earnings-per-share growth slow during the second half of the year, while the rest of the companies in the index, in aggregate, will see an acceleration.

Bernstein noted that there are already more than 160 companies in the S&P 500 that saw their trailing 12-month net income increase by 25% or more in the first quarter of 2024 - far less than the rate seen by Nvidia, but stronger than many other megacap names, including Microsoft.

Bernstein believes this is setting investors up for a dynamic where the "Magnificent Seven" and other megacap stocks pull back while the rest of the market rises. Investors have seen shades of this already, as shares of Apple and Tesla Inc. (TSLA) have struggled in 2024.

He has also been encouraging investors for months now to look for bargains in other corners of the global equities market, like U.S. small caps and emerging-market stocks. Analysts expect both areas could see a boost once the Federal Reserve starts cutting interest rates.

See: Wall Street veteran sees 'once in a generation buying opportunity' in unloved areas of global stocks

"It's like a seesaw," Bernstein said. "There are seven stocks on one side, and everything else in the global equity market is on the other side. Which side do you want to be on - not for the next 10 minutes, but for the next 10 quarters, or the next 10 years?"

"I think you want to be on the other side of that seesaw," he added.

https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20240607254/three-stocks-now-account-for-20-of-the-sp-500s-value-thats-making-some-investors-nervous

Is California Moving Toward Government-Owned Electricity?

 by John Seiler via The Epoch Times,

In 1929, almost a century ago, the great economist Ludwig von Mises published “A Critique of Interventionism.”

It’s written in plain language and is free online. He described how government intervention in the free market is not socialism, but eventually “leads to socialism because government intervention is not only superfluous and useless, but also harmful. ... It lowers labor productivity and redirects production along lines of political command, rather than consumer satisfaction.”

He died in 1973 at the good old age of 92 and was the teacher of Friedrich von Hayek, who won the Nobel economics prize in 1974.

I bring up Mises because he could have been writing about California’s electricity market, which has been dysfunctional for three decades and well could end up entirely run by the California government.

That’s actually what was called for in a June 2 editorial in the Los Angeles Times titled, “Californians don’t have to accept skyrocketing electric bills. Here’s how to fight back.”

The way to fight back?

“Customers of publicly owned utilities such as the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power pay lower electric rates in large part because a profit margin isn’t part of the equation. Gov. Gavin Newsom threatened to take over the troubled PG&E during its last bankruptcy if it didn’t become a more responsible utility. Ultimately, the governor struck an oversight deal. But a public takeover is still worth exploring to protect Californians from unaffordable rates.”

The internal link for “is still worth exploring” clicks to a 2019 L.A. Times editorial, “We’ve reached a point where public ownership of PG&E shouldn’t just be on the table, it should be actively explored by state and local officials. Newsom has hinted he would open to public takeover of the utility and has raged about its ‘corporate greed,’ but he has also said he wants to see as many bidders for ownership as possible, including from other profit-making entities. Although it’s good for him to consider all approaches and all bidders, public ownership shouldn’t get short shrift in the process.”

The first obvious hurdle to “public ownership”—socialism—is the Fifth Amendment, which concludes, “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.”

Here are the valuations of the state’s two largest private utilities:

Where is the state of California supposed to get that kind of money? Float a bond? The state treasurer list California’s current state bond indebtedness at $71.7 billion. And they’ve only started issuing the $6.4 billion in new bonds for Proposition 1, which voters passed last March 5. In sum, a state takeover effectively would nearly triple state bond indebtedness.

California’s Electricity Reform Collapse

Instead of looking to the supposed price gouging by the private utilities, as the L.A. Times demands, it’s worth remembering the state’s own follies the past three decades during which I’ve written against all the anti-market attempts at restructuring. For those who want to read the details, a good history of the early years is, “The History of Electricity Restructuring in California,” from 2002 by Carl Blumstein, L.S. Friedman, and R.J. Green.

The attempt at “deregulation” the authors begin with is Assembly Bill 1890, which Gov. Pete Wilson signed in 1996. It’s worth adding something they left out: 1996 was the only year in the past five decades in which Republicans controlled a house of the Legislature, in that case the Assembly under Speaker Curt Pringle (R-Anaheim), later Anaheim’s mayor. Mr. Wilson also was a Republican. So this was a Republican attempt at “privatization,” with cooperation from Senate Democrats.

AB 1890 set up the California Power Exchange (PX), which “was required to operate an hour-by-hour spot market, in which generators could sell and retailers could buy power. ... The new markets began operation for April 1, 1998. This was three months behind the original start date, but it had not proved possible to create the necessary computer systems in time.” It seems every computer system the state sets up has problems. “The PX ran quite smoothly, with low prices.”

Then disaster struck.

“Late in the spring of 2000 the California’s new electricity market began to collapse. In May the average PX price was $50/MWh, higher than any previous month. There were also numerous price spikes. ... By the end of January, the collapse was complete. Blackouts occurred on eight days during the winter and spring even though demand was far below the summer peak. The Power Exchange suspended operations, and the CAISO [California Independent System Operator), SCE and PG&E were all insolvent.”

For some reason the study didn’t mention Gov. Gray Davis’s role in this crisis. I remember in October 2000 he actually took a month off to “study” the problem. Then he panicked and signed contracts up to 20 years for natural gas at the height of the market price.

In June 2002, Withold Henisz of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania described the damage: “Wholesale energy prices shot up tenfold and supply shortages forced repeated rolling blackouts. The crisis forced the state’s biggest utility, Pacific Gas and Electric, into bankruptcy and pushed another, Southern California Edison, to the brink. In desperation, California Gov. Gray Davis signed long-term contracts for $48 billion worth of power—prices two to three times today’s [2002] market rate.” But some of the contracts had to be paid for up to 20 years.

Mr. Davis’ mistakes were part of what led to his recall in 2002 and replacement by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Arnold Schwarzenegger’s AB 32 Disaster

In his first two years in office, 2003-05, Mr. Schwarzenegger governed reasonably, cutting taxes and restraining spending. Then in November 2005, voters rejected his plank of reform initiatives, such as banning using union dues for political campaign initiatives. He then flipped from conservative to liberal as he headed to his November 2006 reelection, which he won.

His signature legislation was Assembly Bill 32, the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, still in effect. Among its mandates:

“It is the intent of the Legislature that the State Air Resources Board consult with the Public Utilities Commission in the development of emissions reduction measures, including limits on emissions of greenhouse gases applied to electricity and natural gas providers regulated by the Public Utilities Commission in order to ensure that electricity and natural gas providers are not required to meet duplicative or inconsistent regulatory requirements.

“It is the intent of the Legislature that the State Air Resources Board design emissions reduction measures to meet the statewide emissions limits for greenhouse gases established pursuant to this division in a manner that minimizes costs and maximizes benefits for California’s economy, improves and modernizes California’s energy infrastructure and maintains electric system reliability, maximizes additional environmental and economic co-benefits for California, and complements the state’s efforts to improve air quality.”

You can see the duality problem there: The state is supposed to both limit “greenhouses gases” for electricity production while maintaining “electric system reliability.” It’s hard enough for private companies, or for that matter socialist government enterprises, to maintain one government dictate. But two dictates make it doubly difficult, even impossible.

Renewable Energy and EV Mandates

Next, throw in renewable mandates, such as this from December 2022: “The California Air Resources Board today approved the final proposed 2022 Scoping Plan, a world-leading roadmap to address climate change that cuts greenhouse gas emissions by 85% and achieves carbon neutrality in 2045. The 2022 Scoping Plan provides a detailed sector-by-sector roadmap to guide the world’s fourth-largest economy away from its current dependance on petroleum and fossil gas to clean and renewable energy resources and zero-emission vehicles.”

Renewable energy, such as wind and solar, requires expensive new power lines on top of the existing power lines. The zero-emission vehicle mandate is for 100 percent new cars to be zero-emission by 2035.

And now AI—Artificial Intelligence—is developing rapidly in Silicon Valley, which leads the world in this area, and requires even more electric juice every year.

Finally, there’s the latest attempt at reforming sky-high electricity rates, which I wrote about last week in, “New California Electricity Scheme Promotes ‘Equity,’ ‘Clean Energy Transition.’” It’s only going to make matters worse.

It’s been three decades of folly and disaster. No wonder for March 2024 the Energy Information Agency pegged California’s average residential rate at 32.47 cents per kilowatt hour (kwh), the second-highest in the nation. North Dakota’s was the lowest, at 10.44 cents.

In a future article, I’ll discuss some free-market remedies to restore to California a sensible electricity market and lower prices for consumers.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/california-moving-toward-government-owned-electricity

Big Food, Bigger Conspiracy

 Via SchiffGold.com,

Food has gotten big. LiterallyA walk through the produce aisle of a 21st-century grocery store would enthrall people of any historical period other than our own. The size of tomatoes and heads of lettuce is unprecedented in the history of humankind. In just a few short generations we have become accustomed to increasingly genetically modified food. This new food is much more tasteless and durable than food of the past. Variations in soil and growing conditions allowed food grown for different reasons to possess unique regional flavors. Food grown near the place it was sold allowed taste to be prized over transportability. While many have described this decrease in food quality as a result of industrialization and the demands of efficiency, it is much more correctly enunciated to be a result of government corruption arising from a socialistic instinct.

Politicians on both sides of the aisle generally support the idea of America as a free market economy, yet they all fall victim to a basic human fallacy: “What you see is all there is.” Their desire to protect the foundation of America’s high quality of life is clouded by the lobbyists and lucrative PACs right in front of them. Timeless principles of wise governance seem unimportant and distant when a Kansan Sorghum Farmer is shedding real tears onto your office carpet. The farmer’s desire to keep things as they are infests the minds of all politicians who happen to interact with him. Small details, like the fact that he is representing a near-risk-proof corporate farm with an army of middle management, become unimportant. Smaller farms that cannot hire lobbyists will inevitably receive the short end of the stick because they have no way to remind the politicians of their existence. Fallible Politicians with a desire to make things right through government intervention rather than honor liberal principles will inevitably favor corporate farmers above both small farmers and the American populace.

Governmental inability to hold back from action has damaged the very concept of local cuisine. Small family farms already had difficulty surviving against larger farms with vast economies of scale, and government support of “American Farmers” (corporations large enough to keep perpetual spokespeople on staff) only makes this struggle more difficult. Even from an interventionist standpoint, it would be better for more unstable businesses to receive more assistance, so the free market would be perceived as better than the current situation where the strongest multi-state farms are subsidized most heavily. Local history and growing conditions converged to create a rich and multifaceted food landscape. Unique types of plants and animals were preserved as they found a valued place in the palates of locals. Slight losses of efficiency were offset by regional cuisines which reveled in distinctiveness. However, some areas of America are more conducive to producing farms large enough to seek government aid. Massive farms in America’s breadbasket sympathy-farmed great depression sentiments until they entered a spiral of lobbying and growth that could not be stoppedThrough technological superiority, crop homogeneity, and government cheerleading, they were able to lower prices to the point where local farms could not hope to compete.

The death of local farms would not be nearly so great a problem if the larger farms provided even a semblance of the taste and quality that local farms provided. Food has grown large and tasteless as a direct result of this sympathy-fueled government campaign to protect a certain subgroup of farmers. greater geographic distance from the markets where produce is sold has greatly enhanced the value of firmer variations which can ripen well after being picked. Ripening while still attached to the plant allows more nutrients to enter and increase its flavor profile. Efficiency is also aided by an increase in size because a larger fruit is often easier to pack and has less chance of breaking. While consumers would undoubtedly prefer more flavorful produce, government incentives have exacerbated the prioritization of shelf-life and easy transport. Government-funded GMO research has also accelerated the problem of an abundance of large and tasteless food. The long-term health effects of GMOs are not known, yet because they directly serve the interest of the most well-funded farmers, their use is rarely scrutinized by regulatory agencies.

Americans could once again be culinarily respected by the rest of the world if those in power developed a spine strong enough to stand up to sob story rent-seeking. Quality of life and local farming could gradually increase as the unjust power structures of the agricultural world begin to shift. Healthier and tastier options could become the norm rather than the expensive exception as they stop being crowded out by tasteless produce designed for anything but human consumption.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/big-food-bigger-conspiracy