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China’s rubber-stamp legislature approved sweeping national security laws in Hong Kong, defying condemnation of a move democracy advocates and residents of the former British territory warn will allow Beijing to crush free speech, freedom of assembly and a free press. Demonstrators have begun calling for independence from the mainland, while the White House has threatened unspecified action. David E. Rovella

Bloomberg is mapping the pandemic globally and across America. For the latest news, sign up for our Covid-19 podcast and daily newsletter.

Here are today’s top stories

U.S. unemployment claims shrank for the first time during the coronavirus pandemic as some return to work, though millions more Americans filed for benefits and tens of millions remain jobless.

U.S. Covid-19 infections continue to increase at about the same rate as the past week’s average, while Texas cases spiked. Egypt saw its biggest one day jump with 1,127 new cases while Moscow revised its death count higher. One-third of Russians polled, however, think the threat of the virus, which has killed 358,000 worldwide, is overblown.

Former Vice President Joe Biden said he hopes to select his running mate by Aug. 1. The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee said the commission he appointed to oversee the search has already interviewed a list of potential candidates.

GlaxoSmithKline said it plans to produce 1 billion doses of a vaccine adjuvant, a booster that can help any brand of shot, to support immunization against the Covid-19 pandemic.

Cisco Systems is in advanced talks to buy software company ThousandEyes for almost $1 billion.

It began in mid-March when Exxon Mobil and Verizon sold a combined $12 billion of bonds in one day. Others quickly followed, emboldened by the Fed, and before long, deals were being rushed out at a clip never before seen. On Thursday, that boom reached a milestone: $1 trillion worth of investment-grade corporate debt sales were brought to market in the first 149 days of the year.

What can one year in one neighborhood tell us about how the pandemic will remake America? Bloomberg Businessweek is going to find out, in a commercial district of Seattle.

What you’ll need to know tomorrow

What you’ll want to read in Bloomberg Markets

This Is How Deeply Covid-19 Has Changed Us

A deadly microscopic predator sent humans into hiding and slammed the brakes on global commerce. Economic destruction like this hasn’t been seen since the Great Depression. Bloomberg Markets illustrates the coronavirus’s effect on basic metrics such as gross domestic product and unemployment, the collapse in fuel demand, the adoption of telehealth and the surge in liquor purchases. An economy, in other words, built on fear.

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How are global investors and financial regulators navigating the current financial landscape, and what’s on the horizon for global markets? Hear from U.S. Securities and Exchange Chairman Jay Clayton, Jenny Johnson of Franklin Templeton and David Hunt of PGIM on June 2 in the latest installment of our virtual series, Bloomberg Invest Talks.

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