Canada Joins US to Warn Against China Travel as Virus Spreads, Markets Slide

Canada Joins US to Warn Against China Travel as Virus Spreads, Markets Slide
Medical officials are seen as passengers leave at the Pudong International Airport in Shanghai, China, on Jan. 27, 2020. Aly Song/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

SHANGHAI—Canada has joined the United States in warning against travel to China, issuing a more narrow travel warning as the deadly coronavirus outbreak continues spreading.

The outbreak has stranded tens of millions during the biggest holiday of the year and rattled global markets.

Global stocks fell, oil prices hit three-month lows, and China’s yuan dipped to its weakest in 2020 as investors fretted about damage to the world’s second-biggest economy from travel bans and an extended Lunar New Year holiday.

U.S. President Donald Trump offered China whatever help it needed on Monday, while the U.S. State Department said Americans should “reconsider” visiting all of China due to the new virus.

Medical officials are seen as passengers leave the Pudong International Airport in Shanghai, China on Jan. 27, 2020. (Aly Song/Reuters)
Medical officials are seen as passengers leave the Pudong International Airport in Shanghai, China on Jan. 27, 2020. Aly Song/Reuters

Canada, which has two confirmed cases of the virus and is investigating 19 more potential cases, warned its citizens to avoid travel to China’s Hubei province, at the heart of the outbreak.

Authorities in that Chinese province are taking increasing flak from the public over their initial response to the virus. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang visited the city of Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak, to encourage medical workers and promised reinforcements.

Visiting Wuhan in blue protective suit and mask, Li praised medics, said 2,500 more workers would join them in the next two days, and visited the site of a new hospital to be built in days.

A Transmission Electron Microscopy image of the first isolated case of the coronavirus, on January 27, 2020. (Handout via Reuters)
A Transmission Electron Microscopy image of the first isolated case of the coronavirus, on January 27, 2020. Handout via Reuters
The most senior leader to visit Wuhan since the outbreak, Li was shown on state TV leading medical workers in chants of “Wuhan jiayou!”—an exhortation to keep their strength up.

Mounting Anger

On China’s heavily censored social media, officials have faced mounting anger over the virus, which is thought to have originated from a market where wildlife was sold illegally.

Some criticized the governor of Hubei province, of which Wuhan is the capital after he corrected himself twice during a news conference over the number of face masks being produced.

“If he can mess up the data multiple times, no wonder the disease has spread so severely,” said one user on the Weibo social media platform.

In rare public self-criticism, Wuhan Mayor Zhou Xianwang said the city’s management of the crisis was “not good enough” and indicated he was willing to resign.

The central Chinese city of 11 million people is in virtual lockdown, and much of Hubei, home to nearly 60 million people, is under travel curbs.

Elsewhere in China, people from the region faced questioning about their movements. “Hubei people are getting discriminated against,” a Wuhan resident complained on Weibo.

Security personnel checks the temperature of a customer entering Alibaba's Hema Fresh chain store, following the coronavirus outbreak, during the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday, in Beijing, China January 27, 2020. (Tingshu Wang/Reuters)
Security personnel checks the temperature of a customer entering Alibaba's Hema Fresh chain store, following the coronavirus outbreak, during the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday, in Beijing, China January 27, 2020. Tingshu Wang/Reuters

Cases linked to people who traveled from Wuhan have been confirmed in a dozen countries, from Japan to the United States, where authorities said they had 110 people under investigation in 26 states.

Sri Lanka was the latest to confirm a case.

Investors Worried

Investors are worried about the impact on travel, tourism, and broader economic activity. The consensus is that in the short term, economic output will be hit as authorities limit travel and extend the week-long New Year holiday—when millions traditionally travel by rail, road, and plane—by three days to limit the spread of the virus.

Asian and European shares tumbled, with Japan’s Nikkei average sliding 2 percent, its biggest one-day fall in five months. Demand spiked for safe-haven assets such as the Japanese yen and Treasury notes. European stocks fell more than 2 percent.

The U.S. S&P 500 closed down nearly 1.6 percent.

“China is the biggest driver of global growth, so this couldn’t have started in a worse place,” said Alec Young, FTSE Russell’s managing director of global market research.

During the 2002-2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which originated in China and killed nearly 800 people globally, air passenger demand in Asia plunged 45 percent. The travel industry is more reliant on Chinese travelers now.

Chinese-ruled Hong Kong, which has had eight cases, banned entry to people who had visited Hubei recently.

Some European tour operators canceled trips to China, while governments around the world worked on repatriating nationals.

Officially known as 2019-nCoV, the newly identified coronavirus can cause pneumonia, but it is still too early to know just how dangerous it is and how easily it spreads.

“What we know about this virus it that transmission occurs through human contact, but we are speaking of close contact, i.e., less than a meter,” said Jerome Salomon, a senior official with France’s health ministry.

“Crossing someone (infected) in the street poses no threat. The risk is low when you spend a little time near that person and becomes higher when you spend a lot of time near that person.”

By Cheng Leng and Josh Horwitz