Stock week ahead: global effort to move Covid-19 vaccines has begun



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What’s happening: The US Food and Drug Administration has licensed the vaccine for emergency use. The UK and Canada have given the green light to begin distribution.

Approval of Modern (MRNA) The vaccine could also be imminent, following reviews that showed it to be safe and effective.

Companies have been preparing for this moment for months. Thermo King, which revolutionized food transportation through advancements in temperature-controlled shipping before World War II, has been working with pharmaceutical companies, governments, and logistics companies to ensure vaccines remain frozen while traveling to clinics and hospitals.

To make this happen, they have reworked the containers typically used to transport fresh tuna to Japan, which requires similar cold conditions.

“We took that product and modified it,” Francesco Incalza, president of Thermo King Europe, Middle East and Africa, told me.

Tuna should be stored at -60 degrees Celsius, or -76 degrees Fahrenheit, to maintain its quality and deep red hue when it reaches supermarkets and restaurants, Incalza said. Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine should be stored at -70 degrees Celsius, or -94 degrees Fahrenheit, while in transit.

So Thermo King, part of Ireland-based Trane Technologies, made some adjustments, added extra insulation, and adjusted the cooling system so it could cool even more. Now each 20-foot-long container can carry 300,000 doses of the Pfizer (PFE) vaccine by land or sea. Some have already been sold and are making their way around the world.

It is just one example of how companies are prepared to handle the delicate and complex process of vaccine distribution.

My colleagues Gregory Wallace and Pete Muntean report that within 24 hours of an emergency use authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration, manufacturers and shippers are prepared to activate the delivery chain, a system complex involving warehouses, trucks and planes. Planning, dry testing and storage are already underway.

Airlines will be at the center of the effort. Vaccine delivery will require about 8,000 flights, according to the International Air Transport Association.

Practice makes perfect: american airlines (AAL) says its Boeing 787 wide-body jets can carry about half a million doses of vaccines. It began conducting test flights between South America and Miami in November.
FedEx (FDX)Meanwhile, it says it has more than 90 cold storage facilities around the world to help keep Pfizer vaccine cool enough. UPS (UPS) he will oversee “a highly coordinated set of movements” from a command center in Louisville, Kentucky.
But the United States is not alone in requiring coordination. In a recent interview with CNN’s Poppy Harlow, Melinda Gates urged leaders of rich countries not to forget about the rest of the world.

“Everybody needs this vaccine,” said Gates, co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. “If we only take it to high-income countries, this disease will spread. We will see double the deaths.”

The British pound could be heading for a crash

The British pound could fall if the UK does not finalize a trade deal with the European Union, reports my colleague from CNN Business, Charles Riley.

Currency traders who once assumed a deal would be completed before the Brexit transition period ended on January 1 have been nervously watching the latest signs from London and Brussels.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson traveled to Brussels last week to dine with the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen. The trip failed to produce a breakthrough on thorny issues, including fishing rights, government grants for businesses and how disputes would be resolved.

But officials returned to the negotiating table and the UK and the European Union announced on Sunday that the talks would be extended once again. Sunday had been the last self-imposed deadline.

Investors are likely to view the extension as a positive sign. But they won’t be able to fully relax until a deal has been made.

“The binary result [deal or no-deal] it’s on the razor’s edge, potentially setting the pound up for a huge move once the Brexit saga comes to an end, “said Han Tan, a market analyst at FXTM, in a research note on Friday. The fact that the pound has not yet “capitulated” against the dollar suggests there is still “pent-up hope” that a deal will be secured, he added.

The pound was trading around $ 1.35 earlier this month when a deal between the UK and its biggest export market seemed most likely. Analysts have warned that the currency could drop quickly to $ 1.20 if it becomes clear that a deal is no longer possible. On Friday, it was hovering around $ 1.32, a decrease of 0.6%.

Until next time

Monday: OPEC monthly report

Tuesday: The European Union is expected to propose new technology regulations; US industrial production data; American outdoor brands (AOBC) Profits

Wednesday: Decision of the Federal Reserve; Retail sales in the United States; Flash PMI data

Thursday: Decision of the Bank of England; Unemployment and Home Construction Applications in the United States; Accenture (ACN), General mills (CHALK), help ritual (RAD), Blackberry (Bed and breakfast) and FedEx (FDX) Profits
Friday: Bank of Japan Decision; Nike (OF) Profits
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