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Message: Historical Pandemics and Equities
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Historical Pandemics and Equities

posted on Apr 28, 09 06:38PM

Wakefield, MA – April 7, 2009 – Agion Technologies, the worldwide leader in natural silver-based antimicrobial solutions, today announced they have been featured in a new study published in the Journal of Food and Environmental Virology. The study, “Assessment of the Antiviral Properties of Zeolites Containing Metal Ions,”was conducted by a team of researchers from the University of Arizona that included Dr. Charles Gerba, a world renowned microbiologist known for his research on microbes in the environment. The study used Agion’s silver antimicrobial technology as the basis for the assessment and concluded that “Metal-zeolites could possibly be used in applications to reduce virus contamination of fomites and thus the spread of viral diseases.”

Link: http://tinyurl.com/d9c4vm



1918 Spanish Flu and the Market

B.I.G.

April 29, 2009

The 1918 Spanish Flu was a global flu pandemic that affected nearly half of the world's population at the time (or up to one billion people). The 1918 outbreak was the worst of the 20th century, and it fell under the H1N1 virus subtype, which is the same subtype as the current swine flu outbreak. It's estimated that the 1918 flu killed anywhere from 20 million to 100 million people, which would have equaled a mortality rate of 2.5%-5% of those infected.

The 2009 swine flu is still new to the public, but it is beginning to stoke fear since 152 people have died from it in Mexico as of now. The current swine flu is nowhere near as bad as the 1918 flu pandemic, but we thought we'd look at what the US stock market did during that outbreak period. Below we have grabbed a chart from a CDC article on the 1918 Influenza that highlights deaths per 1,000 people infected with influenza and/or pneumonia, and overlayed a chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. There were three pandemic waves from 1918-1919, with the worst coming from October to December of 1918. While fear of the flu was widespread, the market really didn't react too badly. Following the first pandemic wave, the market sold off a little bit, but then rallied during the summer months before topping out prior to the second wave. The market trended downward during the worst wave of the flu outbreak, but it only went down 10.9% from peak to trough, and then it rallied significantly during and following the third wave. World War I was also coming to an end in late 1918, so the end of the pandemic and the war probably contributed to the subsequent rally in stocks.



chart1



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