Top 5 Things to Know in the Market on Thursday, February 13th

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- Markets reeled after China revised its data to show a big jump in the number of confirmed Covid-19 cases, while the number of confirmed deaths rose by over 250. Central bankers are trying to stay calm, but the economic fallout across the world is becoming more and more visible. Another international agency slashed its estimates for world oil demand this year. MGM Resorts scrapped its guidance due to the virus and said its CEO will step down early, and the ghost of Jeffrey Epstein keeps cropping up in unexpected places. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, 13th February.

1. Virus toll leaps as China comes clean(er) on counting

The number of confirmed Covid-19 cases leaped by one-third while the death toll rose by over 250 after Chinese authorities announced changes to their counting methodology. The Communist Party fired its top officials in the region of Hubei and the city of Wuhan, the outbreak’s epicenter.

Hubei province extended a forced shutdown of its factories by another week, while data showed Chinese car sales were down some 20% on the year in January, due partly to the impact of the virus.

International impacts were also in evidence: Singapore reported the number of its confirmed cases has topped 50, while the world’s biggest mobile telecom conference, the MWC in Barcelona, was cancelled due to contagion fears. The European Commission named the virus a “key downside risk” but left its forecasts for EU growth this year and next unchanged.

2. Central bankers put a brave face on virus impact

Global monetary officials tried to put a brave face on things, hoping that last year’s monetary easing measures would be enough to support the world economy through a soft patch.

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said a “v-shaped” recovery for the world economy is still the Fund’s baseline scenario: “In other words, sharp decline in economic activities in China, followed by a rapid recovery and a total impact on China relatively contained.”

The European Central Bank’s chief economist Philip Lane said the eurozone economy could expect a “pretty serious short-term hit”, while Australia’s central bank governor Philip Lowe drew attention to the hit from the loss of Chinese tourist arrivals and disruptions to commodity purchases.

"Things are going to be softer than we thought,” Lowe said.

Canadian central bank governor Stephen Poloz was the outlier, talking up the resilience of the Canadian economy in a speech in Australia. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell also concluded his two days of testimony before Congress without giving any hint of more accommodation near-term.