The coverage on this live blog has ended — but for up-to-the-minute coverage on the coronavirus, visit the live blog from CNBC's Asia-Pacific team. All times below are in Eastern time. Global cases: At least 101,587, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Global deaths: At least 3,460, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

US cases: At least 245, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

US deaths: At least 14, according to the CDC and state health officials.

6:41 pm: Owners of NBA, NHL teams opposed to playing games with no fans if outbreak worsens

Houston Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta and Florida Panthers owner Vincent Viola both told CNBC that they do not want their teams to play games without fans in attendance. "I don't think you ever want to play games in front of no audiences," Fertitta said, adding he would instead prefer to suspend play for a week. "But you don't want to play games with no fans." Viola said he did not foresee the NHL putting the season on a temporary delay, but he stressed the league and its leadership would not compromise the safety of its fans. —Young, Stankiewicz

6:18 pm: McDonald's cancels convention for worldwide franchisees

McDonald's has canceled its in-person biennial convention for worldwide franchisees due to the coronavirus outbreak. The four-day event, scheduled for April, was supposed to take place in Orlando, Florida. CFO Kevin Ozan told analysts on the earnings call in January that the convention typically costs between $25 million to $30 million. It is unclear how much McDonald's might save by canceling the in-person convention. —Lucas

6:07 pm: 21 people on cruise ship off California coast test positive for coronavirus

Vice President Mike Pence on Friday said 21 people on the Grand Princess cruise ship off California tested positive for coronavirus. There are more than 3,500 people aboard the ship. Of the 21 positive tests, 19 are crew members and two are passengers, Pence said, adding that the ship will be brought to a non-commercial port and every person tested. "Those who need to be quarantined will be quarantined," Pence said. —Feuer

5:52 pm: Tilman Fertitta's restaurant empire losing about $1 million per day in sales

Tilman Fertitta, chairman and CEO of Landry's, said urban areas and popular tourist locations were particularly affected by the sales drop, and the decline is likely linked to business conferences being canceled across the country. Fertitta's restaurant brands include Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. and Morton's The Steakhouse. Fertitta said the coronavirus presents business managers with a challenge but said revenue declines of about 8% to 12% are manageable. "You don't want to go 20% off. When you get to 20% off in a same-store sales, no matter what business you're in, that's when you start getting into trouble," Fertitta said. —Stankiewicz

5:10 pm: New York state coronavirus cases quadruple to 44, thousands under 'precautionary quarantine'

The number of coronavirus cases in New York state has quadrupled over the last 48 hours to 44, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Friday. "The number will continue to go up because it's mathematics," Cuomo said at a news briefing. "The more you test, the more you will find." Cuomo used Twitter to revise the state's case count from 33 released earlier Friday to 44. The state reported 11 cases Wednesday evening, 22 on Thursday, 33 Friday afternoon and 44 Friday evening — a fourfold increase over the previous 48 hours. There are roughly 2,700 people in New York City under 'precautionary quarantine' with more than 1,000 others also in voluntary isolation across the state, Cuomo said. —Feuer

5 pm: SXSW canceled due to coronavirus after Austin declares 'local disaster'

South by Southwest, the annual tech, film and music conference held in Austin, Texas, has been canceled due to concerns surrounding the COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak. Local government officials announced the update at a press conference Friday afternoon discussing the status of the outbreak and events in the city. Austin's Mayor Steve Adler said he had declared a local disaster in the city and issued an order canceling the conference. In a statement on its website, SXSW said it would "faithfully follow the City's directions." "We are devastated to share this news with you," organizers wrote in a statement on the SXSW website. — Graham

4:35 pm: Elon Musk says 'the coronavirus panic is dumb' as tech peers shift to remote work

Tesla CEO Elon Musk said Friday that people are overreacting about the deadly COVID-19, while health officials across the world prepare for a possible pandemic. "The coronavirus panic is dumb," Musk said on Twitter to his more than 31 million followers. Musk does not have a background in medicine or virology. Musk's comment comes as the novel coronavirus spreads rapidly across northern California, where the electric car maker is headquartered. A Tesla spokesman did not respond to a request for comment on the company's policies if an outbreak occurs. Meanwhile, west coast tech companies -- including Facebook, Amazon, Twitter, Google and Microsoft -- are telling employees to work from home to avoid spreading the virus. —Bursztynsky

4:00 pm: Dow falls 250 points to end a turbulent week on Wall Street

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 250 points, or about 1%, Friday. The losses extend a deep rout in Thursday's session and end a turbulent week on Wall Street. Friday's declines came as the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield tumbled below 0.7% for the first time ever. Investors continued to seek safer assets amid fears that the coronavirus will disrupt global supply chains and tip the economy into a recession. —Li

3:43 pm: Wild market swings are becoming the 'new normal' amid coronavirus concerns

Investors just witnessed the equity benchmark swinging up or down 2% for five days straight in the face of a coronavirus panic, and Wall Street strategists say get used to it. In the index's history dating back to 1927, this is the first time the S&P 500 had a week of alternating gains and losses of more than 2% from Monday through Thursday, according to Bespoke Investment Group. "The message to all investors is that they should expect this volatility to continue. This should be considered the new normal going forward," said Mike Loewengart, managing director of investment strategy at E-Trade. —Li

3:35 pm: Amazon, Apple ask employees to work from home

An empty check-in area is seen at the United Airlines domestic check-in area at San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco, on Thursday, March. 5, 2020. David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Amazon and Apple are asking San Francisco-area employees to work from home amid the coronavirus outbreak if they can, company spokespeople confirmed to CNBC. The update comes one day after Amazon told employees at its Seattle and Bellevue, Washington offices to work from home, and after the Santa Clara Public Health Department, where Apple is based, issued guidance for companies to make it easier to "work in ways that minimize close contact with large numbers of people." Apple stores in the area remain open. Amazon is headquartered in Seattle and has offices in Bellevue, where it employs more than 2,000 people. Earlier this week, Amazon confirmed that an employee who works in one of its Seattle offices tested positive for COVID-19. Apple has not yet reported any COVID-19 cases among its employees. —Palmer, Leswing

3:30 pm: Colombia confirms first case

Colombia confirmed its first case of coronavirus on Friday, joining other South American countries which have reported cases of the fast-spreading disease. According to the World Health Organization, the disease has been reported in some 90 countries, leading to about 3,400 deaths. —Reuters

2:54 pm: Restaurants up preventative measures

Customers wearing protective masks wait in line to enter a McDonald's restaurant during lunch time in Shanghai, on March 2, 2020. Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Delivery drivers shouldn't be eating customers' fries, but as the number of virus cases rises in the U.S., restaurants are trying even harder to make sure that doesn't happen. CapitalSpring, a restaurant investment firm with about 4,000 locations nationwide in its portfolio, is deploying tamper-proof packaging for food delivery orders for its restaurants. Nationwide, restaurants are responding to the outbreak. McDonald's, Dunkin' and Starbucks are among the chains stepping up their in-store cleanliness efforts and creating crisis teams. In a time when labor costs have put pressure on profit margins, restaurants are adding more staff or extending hours to ensure that employees can keep up with increased cleaning efforts. February same-store sales, which grew by 0.3% nationally, did not show a hit from the virus, but consumer fears could mean lower restaurant traffic in March, according to industry tracker Black Box Intelligence. —Lucas

2:32 pm: Emerald City Comic Con postponed to summer 2020

Organizers of the Seattle-based Emerald City Comic Con announced they are pushing the event from its March 12 start to summer 2020 due to the coronavirus outbreak in Washington state. "Our hearts go out to the entire Seattle community, everyone impacted by the COVID-19 virus, and all of you, the nearly 100,000 amazing human beings who look forward to this event each year," Reedpop, an offshoot of event organizer Reed Exhibitions, wrote in a statement Friday. "Our team was incredibly excited to see you at Emerald City Comic Con next week, however, fans, artists, exhibitors and the rest of the community are what make Reedpop events so special and it is our duty to make sure that your safety comes first." —Whitten

2:29 pm: Lufthansa slashes flights as virus hits bookings

Deutsche Lufthansa will slash up to half the flights across its stable of airlines from April as passengers balk at flying for fear of contracting the coronavirus, the company said on Friday. "In recent days, the Lufthansa Group has been exposed to drastic declines in bookings and numerous flight cancellations due to the spread of the COVID-19 virus. All traffic areas are now affected," it said in a statement. The company, which includes Swiss International Air Lines and Austrian Airlines, also said it was considering temporarily grounding its entire fleet of 14 Airbus A380 superjumbos in Frankfurt and Munich. —Reuters

2:08 pm: France says it now has 613 confirmed cases

France has 613 confirmed cases of coronavirus, the head of the public health service, Jerome Salomon, said on Friday, which is an increase of 190 compared to a day earlier. During a press briefing, he added the death toll from the disease was still at nine and that 39 persons were in intensive care. —Reuters Correction: Confirmed cases of COVID-19 in France rose by 190 to 613. An earlier version of this headline misstated the increase.

2:05 pm: Wall Street traders head to the suburbs

A person wearing a face mask walks along Wall Street after further cases of coronavirus were confirmed in New York, March 6, 2020. Andrew Kelly | Reuters

Hundreds of Wall Street traders are changing their commutes. Starting Monday, Citigroup is sending traders and salespeople from its headquarters in downtown Manhattan to a backup facility in Rutherford, New Jersey in contingency plans tied to the coronavirus, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. JPMorgan Chase told traders yesterday that some of them can expect to work from locations in New Jersey and Brooklyn, while Morgan Stanley has begun to send some employees to its Purchase, New York office, according to people with knowledge of the plans. As of Friday, there are 33 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in New York state, with several thousand people under precautionary quarantine. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Thursday confirmed four cases in the city and warned against community spread. —Son

1:35 pm: General Motors tightens travel protocols

General Motors is tightening its travel protocols for employees amid the COVID-19 outbreak. Domestic and international travel for GM employees effective Friday "requires senior leader approval," a company spokesman told CNBC. The Detroit automaker previously required such approval for international travel. A travel ban for GM employees remains in effect for China, South Korea, Italy and Japan, according to the company. —Wayland

1:21 pm: New York Gov. Cuomo says CDC coronavirus response is 'absurd and nonsensical'

New York Gov. Cuomo criticized the federal government's response to the COVID-19 outbreak, calling it "absurd and nonsensical." Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were slow to initially test people for the virus, he said, before — "in a tardy fashion" — changing the policy to allow states to test. The Trump administration's management of the outbreak isn't just "bad government and poor planning," Cuomo said at a press conference, but will also "increase the fear." Local and state officials across the country have criticized the CDC's testing criteria, scarcity of tests and poor communication. —Feuer

1:15 pm: Coronavirus threatens live events, entertainment festivals

1:01 pm: Texas reports five travel-related cases of coronavirus

The Texas Department of State Health Services is reporting four additional travel-related cases of COVID-19, bringing the state total to five. Harris County Public Health and the Houston Health Department announced four cases on Thursday, March 5 in residents of Harris County who had recently traveled abroad. The first Texas case was announced by Fort Bend County Health and Human Services on March 4. These cases are among a group that traveled overseas together and were being monitored by public health because of a possible exposure to COVID-19. Travel-related cases in Texas don't indicate spread within the state, Texas Department of State Health Services said. The immediate risk to most Texans remains low, the agency said. —Cullen

12:52 pm: Iran warns it could use 'force' to halt travel amid virus

An Iranian woman wears a protective face mask, following the coronavirus outbreak, as she walks in Tehran, Iran March 5, 2020. Nazanin Tabatabaee | West Asia News Agency via Reuters

Iranian authorities warned they may use "force" to limit travel between cities and announced the new coronavirus has killed 124 people amid 4,747 confirmed cases in the Islamic Republic. Health Ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour did not elaborate on the threat to use force, though he acknowledged the virus now was in all of Iran's 31 provinces. The threat may be to stop people from using closed schools and universities as an excuse to go to the Caspian Sea and other Iranian vacation spots. Semiofficial news agencies in Iran posted images of long traffic lines as people tried to reach the Caspian coast from Tehran, despite authorities earlier telling people to remain in their cities. Iran on Thursday announced it would put checkpoints in place to limit travel between major cities, hoping to stem the spread of the virus. —Associated Press

12:50 pm: Adidas reports one employee in Germany tests positive for coronavirus

German sportswear maker Adidas said it has one employee in Herzogenaurach who was tested positive for the coronavirus. "We can confirm that an Adidas employee in Herzogenaurach, Germany has been tested positive for the Coronavirus and is now receiving the appropriate medical care," the company told CNBC. "As a precautionary measure, employees who are considered to be at risk because of close contact with that individual have been informed and were sent home immediately the day before yesterday, March 4, as was the affected employee. The affected employees will stay in home-quarantine for 14 days or can return to work if the test result is negative." The company added that critical office areas at its headquarters were deep-cleaned on Wednesday evening to make the workplace safer for those that work onsite. "We continue to assess each situation on a case-by-case basis to determine what measures are necessary for our employees' safety and wellbeing," the company said. —Cullen

12:38 pm: CDC reports 213 coronavirus cases, including those under investigation

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday reported 65 more cases of coronavirus in the country, which includes cases reported by individual states that were yet to be confirmed by the agency. As of 4 pm on March 5, the number of confirmed and presumptive positive cases stood at 213, the agency said. Cases detected among former passengers on the Diamond Princess cruise ship remains at 46, while 3 cases were detected in citizens repatriated from Wuhan, China, the CDC said. —Reuters

12:35 pm: Italian coronavirus deaths jump to 197, cases climb to 4,636

A cleaner wearing a protective suit adjusts a sign that reads "Attention: this zone has been sanitised" at the San Paolo stadium, ahead of the second leg of the Coppa Italia semi-final between Napoli and Inter Milan, which has since been postponed as part of measures to contain the coronavirus outbreak, in Naples, Italy, March 4, 2020. Ciro De Luca | Reuters

The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy has risen by 49 to 197, the Civil Protection Agency said, the largest daily increase in fatalities since the contagion was uncovered two weeks ago. The accumulative number of cases in the country, which has been hardest hit by the virus in Europe, totaled 4,636 against 3,858 on Thursday. The head of the agency said that of those originally infected, 523 had fully recovered versus 414 the day before. The contagion is focused on a handful of hotspots in the north of Italy, but cases have now been confirmed in each of the country's 20 regions, with deaths recorded in eight of them. —Reuters

12:33 pm: New York state coronavirus cases triple over 48 hours to 33

The number of coronavirus cases in New York state has tripled over the last 48 hours to 33, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Friday. "The number will continue to go up because it's mathematics," Cuomo said at a news briefing. "The more you test, the more you will find." The state reported 11 cases on Wednesday, 22 on Thursday and 33 by Friday morning. There are roughly 2,700 people in New York City under "precautionary quarantine" with more than 1,000 others also in voluntary isolation across the state, Cuomo said. —Feuer

12:30 pm: City employees in Seattle may be required to work from home, mayor says

Seattle could implement a work-from-home policy for city employees if the coronavirus spread worsens, Mayor Jenny Durkan told CNBC on Friday. "If people don't have to come into work and can work from home, we're encouraging that and we may go to a mandatory state of that," she said on "Squawk Alley." King County, where Seattle is located, has at least 51 confirmed cases of the coronavirus. —Stankiewicz

12:28 pm: 'False hope' coronavirus will disappear in the summer like the flu, WHO says

It's a "false hope" that coronavirus will be seasonal and subside in the summer, like the flu, the World Health Organization said Friday. "We have to assume that the virus will continue to have the capacity to spread," Dr. Mike Ryan, executive director of WHO's health emergencies program, said at the agency's headquarters in Geneva. "It's a false hope to say, yes, that it will disappear like the flu." Earlier in the outbreak, U.S. health officials said there was a hypothesis among mathematical modelers that the outbreak "could potentially be seasonal" and relent in warmer conditions. —Lovelace, Higgins-Dunn

12:25 pm: 'No Time to Die' box-office release delayed for coronavirus, but other films may not follow

On Wednesday, MGM, Universal and "No Time to Die" producers were the first in Hollywood to delay the release of a film because of the coronavirus outbreak, leading people to wonder if more studios would move their release dates. "All the studios are considering what to do with safety and loss mitigation in mind," Schuyler Moore, an entertainment attorney at Greenberg Glusker, said in an email to CNBC. But, what might work best for MGM may not be ideal for other Hollywood studios. Even if a studio wanted to move a film's release date, there is little flexibility in the movie release schedule for the rest of 2020. —Whitten

12:14 pm: Facebook closes London offices until Monday due to coronavirus

Facebook said it is closing its London offices until Monday after a visiting employee from Singapore was diagnosed with coronavirus. "An employee based in our Singapore office who has been diagnosed with COVID-19 visited our London offices February 24-26, 2020," Facebook said in a statement. "We are therefore closing our London offices until Monday for deep cleaning and employees are working from home until then." —Reuters

12:01 pm: US is considering discouraging some travelers from cruises

In this Feb. 11, 2020 photo, the Grand Princess cruise ship passes the Golden Gate Bridge as it arrives from Hawaii in San Francisco. Scott Strazzante | San Francisco Chronicle via AP

The United States is considering ways to discourage some U.S. travelers from taking cruises as part of a broader Trump administration effort to limit the spread of coronavirus, according to four officials familiar with the situation. The officials, who asked to remain anonymous, said no decision has been made. The discussions are taking place ahead of a meeting between Vice President Mike Pence, who is in charge of leading the U.S. response to the coronavirus, and the cruise industry this weekend. —Reuters

11:31 am: University of Washington to temporarily move all classes online

The University of Washington is moving all of its in-person classes and exams online, starting Monday, as the state deals with a large uptick in COVID-19 cases. It is among the first U.S. public universities to do so due to the flu-like virus. The Seattle-located school plans to resume in-person classes on March 30. Campus services will remain open, including dining services, resident halls, and recreation facilities according to the memo, and athletic events will be held as scheduled. —Bursztynsky

11:27 am: Cameroon, Togo confirm first cases of coronavirus

Cameroon and Togo confirmed their first cases of coronavirus, bringing the number of countries in sub-Saharan Africa hit by the epidemic to five. The outbreak has largely spared that part of Africa so far, but since last month cases have been detected in Nigeria, Senegal, and South Africa. North African countries have registered more than two dozen cases. In the central African country of Cameroon, the health ministry said a 58-year-old French citizen who arrived in the capital Yaounde on Feb. 24 had fallen ill with the virus. It later said the man's female partner had also tested positive. Togo said its case was a 42-year-old female resident of the capital Lome who had visited Benin, Germany, France, and Turkey in late February and early March. She was in a stable condition. —Reuters

11:18 am: Airline stocks rally on hopes for federal aid to offset effects of coronavirus

Airline stocks rebounded sharply after chief economic advisor Larry Kudlow said the White House is considering "targeted measures" to offset the negative impact on the industry. American Airlines jumped 4%, while United Airlines surged more than 7%. Alaska Air Group surged 8% and Southwest Airlines rose 3%. — Fitzgerald

11:13 am: Google internal emails reveal how execs are prepping employees for coronavirus response

Alphabet's top executives are urging employees to stay motivated to run Google's global infrastructure amid coronavirus fears. Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said the company's security and "resilience" teams are running a 24-hour command center to help executives monitor updates in real-time and coordinate across the company. It's "kicked off a number of workstreams to prepare for how the virus could affect the welfare of our community," Pichai said. The company told employees Thursday that all Bay Area employees would have the option to work from home on Friday "if roles allow," a company spokesperson confirmed to CNBC. The company has several offices and thousands of employees across the region. By having a mostly-remote work day, Alphabet said it hopes to test its "business continuity processes." —Elias

10:11 am: Three Biogen employees test positive for the virus

Three Biogen employees have tested positive for coronavirus after attending a meeting in Boston last week, the biotech company confirmed to CNBC. "At the present time, these individuals are doing well, improving and under the care of their health-care providers," Biogen spokesman David Caouette said. He added that all meeting attendees, with or without flu-like symptoms, have been directed to work from home for two weeks out of "an abundance of caution." —Lovelace

10:02 am: Pennsylvania announces first cases

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said the state has confirmed its first two cases. One patient is from Wayne County in northern Pennsylvania near Scranton, Wolf said in a statement. The other is from Delaware County, just outside of Philadelphia, Wolf said, adding that the patient recently returned from an area of U.S. where COVID-19 is already present. Both patients are in isolation in their respective homes, he said. "Further spread of this virus throughout the nation will likely occur," the state's health secretary Dr. Rachel Levine said in a statement. "We encourage people to prepare for potential life disruptions. The same family emergency plans and kits that we use to prepare for flu or norovirus, and even snowstorms and floods, are important now." —Feuer

9:10 am: Employee at Seattle Seahawks stadium tests positive

Seattle Seahawks Field Seats Source: Seattle Seahawks

Seattle-area officials announced late Thursday an employee of a 72,000-seat stadium in the city tested positive for COVID-19. CenturyLink Field is home to the NFL's Seattle Seahawks, Major League Soccer's Seattle Sounders FC and the XFL football league's Seattle Dragons. Local officials said the employee worked a Seattle Dragons XFL game on Feb. 22, which 22,060 people attended, according to the Seattle Times. "Public Health has worked with the employee and the operator of the stadium, First and Goal, to evaluate potential exposures" at the Dragons game, King County said in a release, adding that the risk of infection to attendees was low. —Feuer

8:54 am: Coronavirus cases surpass 100,000 worldwide

COVID-19 cases surpassed 100,000 worldwide as the flu-like virus continues to spread outside of China, the epicenter of the outbreak. The total number of cases now stands at 100,055 as of 8 a.m. ET on Friday, according to data compiled by John Hopkins. The majority of the cases are in mainland China, followed by South Korea, Iran and Italy. Deaths in the U.S. climbed to 14, the data shows. On Thursday, the World Health Organization called on all nations to "pull out all the stops" to fight the COVID-19 coronavirus as it continues to spread outside of China. —Lovelace

8:50 am: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accuses China of setting back coronavirus prevention efforts

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accused China of putting the rest of the world "behind the curve" in trying to contain the coronavirus outbreak. Pompeo said it has proven "incredibly frustrating" to work with the Chinese government around obtaining data on the coronavirus, "which will ultimately be the solution to both getting the vaccine and attacking this risk." "Remember, this is the Wuhan coronavirus that's caused this, and the information that we got at the front end of this thing wasn't perfect and has led us now to a place where much of the challenge we face today has put us behind the curve," Pompeo said in an interview with CNBC's "Squawk Box." —Stankiewicz

8:21 am: Trump cancels CDC visit after Pence said he planned to sign coronavirus bill there

President Donald Trump is no longer planning to travel to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention headquarters in Atlanta, an administration official said. Vice President Mike Pence, who is leading the government's response to coronavirus, had said Thursday that Trump planned to sign an $8.3 billion emergency spending bill at the CDC. —Javers, Hirsch

7:20 am: What to do if you are boarding a plane

A health worker sprays disinfectant inside a Vietnam Airlines airplane to protect from the recent coronavirus outbreak, at Noi Bai airport in Hanoi, Vietnam February 21, 2020. Kham | Reuters

The spread of coronavirus and cutbacks in domestic and international airline schedules continue to raise concerns and insecurities for those with travel plans for the next months. If your airline cancels your flight, your employer restricts business travel, or an organization cancels its scheduled conference, your decision about whether to go or stay home will be made for you. But if you're in the wait-and-see mode or decide to pack your bags and go, here's what medical experts say about avoiding germs while flying. —Baskas

7:15 am: Costco gets a sales boost from the coronavirus

People load Clorox into their car in the Costco parking lot after the first confirmed case of coronavirus was announced in New York State, in Brooklyn, New York, March 2, 2020. Andrew Kelly | Reuters

Costco reported stronger sales than analysts were expecting, thanks in part to a boost from consumers stocking up at its stores to prepare for the new coronavirus. Throngs of shoppers this past weekend and into this week have flocked to Costco stores across the country to stock up on water, paper towels, sanitizing wipes and other household goods. The company told analysts Thursday it has been receiving deliveries daily. It also said that in some instances, it is placing limits on how much people can purchase. "February sales benefited from an uptick in consumer demand in the fourth week of the reporting period," the company said. "We attribute this to concerns over the coronavirus." —Thomas

7:10 am: Egypt confirms 12 new cases on a cruise ship

Twelve new cases of coronavirus registered on a Nile cruise ship are all asymptomatic, the health ministry and World Health Organization said in a joint statement on Friday. The individuals are all Egyptian workers on the ship, which is heading to the southern city of Luxor, the statement said. The country had until now diagnosed three people with the virus, one of whom it said had fully recovered after receiving treatment. —Reuters

7:06 am: France's Macron urges tight limits on retirement home visits

French President Emmanuel Macron urged citizens to avoid visiting relatives in retirement homes to prevent exposing them to possible coronavirus infection. "We must avoid visiting our elderly relatives as much as possible," Macron said Friday during a visit to a retirement home in Paris. —Reuters

6:35 am: Iran says death toll rises by 17, to 124 people

Iran, which has one of the largest coronavirus outbreaks outside of China, reported a rise in its death toll to 124 people. A health ministry spokesman said in Tehran that there were 1,000-plus new infections, according to Reuters. —Clinch

5:35 am: Netherlands confirms first coronavirus-related death

The Netherlands' National Health Institute on Friday confirmed the country's first fatality as a result of the coronavirus outbreak. An 86-year-old man infected with coronavirus died in the port city of Rotterdam, health authorities said. As of Thursday, the WHO reported 38 cases of the coronavirus in the Netherlands. —Meredith

5:30 am: China invokes 'force majeure' to protect businesses — but companies may be in for a 'rude awakening'

Widespread disruption brought on by the coronavirus outbreak has hammered global supply chains and spurred Chinese companies to declare "force majeure" — a provision that exempts them from contractual obligations. But experts warn that such a move may not work. According to the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, a government-linked entity, China has issued 4,811 force majeure certificates as of Tuesday due to the epidemic. They covered contracts worth 373.7 billion Chinese yuan ($53.79 billion), state media Xinhua reported. —Tan

4:40 am: Vatican City reports first coronavirus case