Not in the U.S.
New cases and new hospitalizations peaked in late April, then started a steady decline. They continued to decline after businesses started to reopen in early May and continued to decline after people crowded the beaches over the Memorial Day weekend.
Then the super-spreader mass protests and riots occurred at the beginning of June and within two weeks new cases and hospitalizations began to shoot back up. They continued to rise until they peaked again at the end of July and have fallen steadily ever since.
I was anticipating an Autumn increase that would affect us. -Tom
a paragraph from the Motley Fool Sept. 2020-
Now here's the bad news: Over in Britain, the government's chief scientific advisor is warning that the U.K. faces a second wave of coronavirus that could see infections rise to 50,000 new cases per day by the middle of next month. The United Kingdom is bracing for a potential second lockdown of its economy, which would firstly deprive cruise lines of British passengers for the foreseeable future, and secondly perhaps foreshadow a renewal of lockdowns in the U.S. as well, depriving cruise lines of all passengers.