As U.S. stocks climb to their most expensive levels in two decades, the executives in charge of the companies benefiting the most are bailing out. Corporate insiders, whose buying correctly signaled the bottom in March, are now mostly sellers. Almost 1,000 corporate executives and officers have unloaded shares of their own companies this month, outpacing insider buyers by a ratio of 5-to-1. —David E. Rovella Bloomberg is mapping the pandemic globally and across America. For the latest news, sign up for our Covid-19 podcast and daily newsletter. Here are today’s top storiesThe world topped 15 million confirmed coronavirus infections, as the scourge tightened its grip on Asia Pacific with deaths reaching a daily high in Indonesia and infections hitting records in Hong Kong and Japan. Cases also set a record in Australia, once hailed as a virus success story. In the U.S., the world’s worst-hit nation, California set a daily record and topped New York as the state with most confirmed cases. Hospitals across the southern U.S. are being overwhelmed. Here is the latest. In signing a $2 billion deal to supply their experimental vaccine to the U.S., Pfizer and BioNTech are setting a price ceiling of less than $20 a dose that will impact how much other companies can charge. China vowed retaliation after the U.S. forced the closure of its Houston consulate, the latest threat to already strained ties between the countries. The Justice Department on Tuesday accused two Chinese hackers of working for Beijing in an alleged effort to steal data, including coronavirus research, from companies in 11 nations. With the U.S. Congress unlikely to act in time to renew emergency benefits from the first recession bailout, a short-term unemployment extension may be hammered out. The labor market rebound, meanwhile, is increasingly at risk of being cut short after a survey showed employment dropping sharply this month. More than five million working U.S. families with children under the age of five paid for child care before the virus struck. Now, with work-from-home options narrowing, many parents may be forced to place their children—and themselves—at potentially greater risk of infection. Africa is starting to have second thoughts about all that Chinese money, Bloomberg Businessweek reports. After years of borrowing on easy terms, many countries in the region are saddled with debt they can’t repay. New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority is considering almost $1.4 billion of spending cuts, and may impose steeper fare increases than planned. What you’ll need to know tomorrowPhiladelphia’s top prosecutor said he will arrest federal agents.Europe’s unity in fighting financial calamity leaves the U.K. behind.Still, Britain’s Covid-19 response could be considered world class.Apple, Amazon offices raided in Italy over Beats headphone sales.How Ben & Jerry’s applied corporate activism to Black Lives Matter.SoftBank semiconductor company is said to attract Nvidia interest.Forget those best-case climate crisis projections. Sponsored Content by SugarBear Sleep Having trouble sleeping? We get it and we're here to help. SugarBear Sleep gummies are formulated with the highest quality vegan and organic ingredients to help you fall asleep faster, improve the quality of your sleep, and help you wake up feeling refreshed. SugarBear Sleep is the most complete vitamin complex on the market! What you’ll want to read in Bloomberg PursuitsAs if restaurants didn't have enough to deal with amid the pandemic, now an ill-timed rainstorm can wipe out a day’s worth of profit. That’s why Dale Talde, owner of Goosefeather restaurant in Tarrytown, New York, wakes up every day and immediately checks the weather report. Almost 90% of the seats at his Westchester restaurant are outside, so a sudden downpour means hauling in 50-pound tables made for indoor dining. Then, if the sun comes back out, it’s time to set up the shade umbrellas, anchored by 80-pound weights. This is the new reality of pandemic dining. Like Bloomberg’s Evening Briefing? Subscribe to Bloomberg All Access and get much, much more. You’ll receive our unmatched global news coverage and two in-depth daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close. Diversity is a business issue. Sign up now for our weekly Bloomberg Equality newsletter to get the latest on how companies and institutions are confronting issues of gender, race and class.Download the Bloomberg app: It’s available for iOS and Android. Before it’s here, it’s on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals can’t find anywhere else. Learn more. |