More parts of China battle Covid and threats of lockdown as cases spike again

More parts of China battle Covid and threats of lockdown as cases spike again


Covid-related restrictions tightened in parts of China as local cases climbed, while lighter measures such as virus testing linger on in Shanghai, pictured here on July 3, 2022.

Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

BEIJING — Just days after China relaxed some Covid controls, virus cases in different parts of the country have put new regions on alert.

The number of cities restricting local movement more than doubled in a week to 11 as of Monday, up from five a week earlier, according to Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura.

The latest measures affect regions that account for about 14.9% of China’s GDP, up from 10.1% a week earlier, Nomura said.

Mainland China’s daily Covid case count, including those without symptoms, has surged from a handful of cases to around 200 or 300 new cases in the last several days. Most are asymptomatic.

Many of the new cases are in the region around Shanghai. The nearby city of Wuxi in Jiangsu province said late Saturday that bars and gyms would need to close temporarily, while restaurants could only offer takeaway.

Last week, a far smaller region called Si county in the neighboring province of Anhui ordered residents to stay in their homes, and leave only at designated times for virus testing.

In June, Beijing and Shanghai tried to resume normal business activity after weeks of restrictions that had kept children out of schools and many restaurants essentially closed. The southeastern metropolis of Shanghai was by far hit the hardest and locked down for April and May.

Last week, mainland China cut the quarantine period for international travelers and close contacts of Covid cases. The country also changed a nationwide travel system that would theoretically make it easier to move within the country.

The daily Covid case count in Beijing and Shanghai has fallen to single digits or zero in the last several days.

“Markets could become a bit too complacent if they ignore the rebound of covid cases and underestimate the costs of persistent covid containment measures,” Nomura’s Lu said in a report Monday.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

In addition to new cases on the mainland in economic powerhouses like Jiangsu province, Lu noted the spread of Covid in nearby economies — evident in Hong Kong’s climbing case count and Taiwan’s daily average of more than 100 new deaths in the past week.

Mainland China has not reported new deaths from Covid for weeks.

“We have been in the upswing phase of China’s ‘Covid Business Cycle (CBC)’ since late May, thanks to a decline in the number of Covid-19 cases, the lifting of lockdowns and other easing of zero-Covid strategy (ZCS) restrictions, and stimulus measures,” he said. “However, another wave of Omicron could prompt a return to a downswing phase, even though the timing of such an occurrence is uncertain.”



Source

CNBC Daily Open: U.S. producer prices are flat — but they don’t factor in imports
World

CNBC Daily Open: U.S. producer prices are flat — but they don’t factor in imports

A worker arc welds a metal door at the Metal Manufacturing Co. facility in Sacramento, California, U.S., on Tuesday, May 27, 2025. David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images No one likes being the person who goes “but actually…”. Sometimes, however, it is necessary. The U.S. producer price index in June was flat, meaning […]

Read More
Trading in Japan’s Seven & i halted after Couche-Tard withdraws  billion bid to acquire the retailer
World

Trading in Japan’s Seven & i halted after Couche-Tard withdraws $47 billion bid to acquire the retailer

A 7-Eleven convenience store, operated by Seven & i Holdings Co., in Kawasaki, Japan, on Monday, Aug. 19, 2024.  Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images Trading in Japan’s Seven & i was halted Thursday after Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard withdrew its $47 billion bid to acquire the retailer. Convenience store operator Couche-Tard announced Wednesday that it […]

Read More
Expect tariff ‘cascade’ effect across slowing global economy, top UN official warns
World

Expect tariff ‘cascade’ effect across slowing global economy, top UN official warns

The leading arm of the United Nations’ organization focused on trade and development, UNCTAD, said President Trump’s tariff policies are already creating new costs and disruptions in the global supply chain, and for less developed nations that trade with the U.S., the worst economic fallout hasn’t hit yet. “We already see a disruption in the […]

Read More