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It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 16 APRIL 2020

Virus Update

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  • The number of cases in Europe doubled within 10 days to 1 million. (…) While there have been “small positive signals” in countries such as Spain, Italy, Germany, France and Switzerland, that’s tempered by sustained or increased levels of incidents in the U.K., Turkey, Ukraine, Belarus and the Russian Federation.
  • Spain confirmed 5,183 new cases, the most in a week, taking the total to 182,816. There were 551 deaths in past 24 hours, for a total of 19,130 since outbreak began.
  • Confirmed infections [in Russia] rose by 3,448 in the past day to 27,938, Russian consumer health watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said. At 14%, the daily growth rate is the lowest since April 11. Moscow reported 1,370 new cases compared with 1,774 the day before, the first daily decline since April 11
  • China reported 46 new coronavirus cases, 34 of them imported, and no new deaths as of midnight on Wednesday. It was the third straight day of slowing growth in imported cases, 16 of which were recorded in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang province. All were in Chinese citizens returning from Russia—the source of half of China’s imported infections since the start of April.
  • Singapore late Wednesday confirmed 447 new cases of Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, its highest daily count to date. The country’s Ministry of Health reported that most of the infections were among people living in foreign-worker dormitories, a population whose number of cases “has increased significantly.” The ministry added that it has been increasing its testing of these thousands of workers, mostly from South Asia, who have low-skill jobs in industries such as construction and live in close quarters in purpose-built dormitories. There have now been 3,699 cases and 10 deaths in the tightly controlled city-state, earlier lauded for moving quickly to control initial outbreaks.
  • Japan on Wednesday also reported a daily high: 17 new deaths related to Covid-19, bringing the total in the country to 136. Some 8,582 people have been infected. (…) Mr. Abe plans to declare a nationwide state of emergency until at least May 6, Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura said Thursday. It will cover the Golden Week holidays, when many Japanese would normally travel on trains and planes around the country.
  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday announced plans to gradually reopen the nation, as the economics ministry said it expected its recession to last at least through midyear.
  • Two-thirds of people testing positive for the coronavirus without signs of being sick remain symptom-free throughout infection, according to a breakdown published by the Chinese government. Among 6,764 people without symptoms who tested positive for Covid-19, only one-fifth — or 1,297 — later developed symptoms and were reclassified as confirmed cases, a Chinese health official said Wednesday.
  • A trial for remdesivir, an experimental drug developed by Gilead Sciences Inc., in Covid-19 patients with mild or moderate symptoms, has been suspended in China, as no eligible patients could be recruited amid an abating epidemic, according to a Wednesday update on ClinicalTrials.gov. Previously, a trial for remdesivir in severely ill Covid-19 patients was terminated due to a stall in enrollment
  • Abbott Laboratories said on Wednesday that it had launched a test that can detect whether a person has Covid-19 antibodies, regardless of whether they have ever shown symptom  of infection.

Confused smile Counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway appeared on Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” Wednesday morning, attempting to take a shot at the World Health Organization — and has been brutally mocked for her seemingly scientifically inaccurate comment. The White House, however, claims she did not misspeak. “This is COVID-19, not COVID-1, folks,” she declared, “and so you would think the people in charge of the World Health Organization, facts and figures, would be on top of that.”

PANDENOMICS
U.S. Retail Sales Record Plunge

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Largest Drop In Industrial Production in 75 Years

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(…) Xiong’s experience provides a window into the uncertain future facing small-business owners around the globe as they contemplate life after lockdowns. While many hope to pick up where they left off, Wuhan’s cautious emergence shows it likely won’t be that easy. The city, once a bustling hub for steel and auto manufacturing, remains gripped by fear of reinfection. Companies are testing employees before they’re allowed back to work and disinfecting their premises daily. If a customer or worker gets the virus, businesses typically have to shut down again for weeks of quarantine—something even the most painstakingly prepared business plan can’t predict. (…)

Data: CivicScience; Chart: Axios Visuals

This is what it will take to get us back outside How to safely ease social distancing while we wait for a covid-19 drug or vaccine.

The coronavirus issue(…) In recent weeks a consensus has started to build among various groups of experts on what this new normal might look like. Some parts of the strategy will reflect the practices of contact tracing and disease monitoring adopted in the countries that have dealt best with the virus so far, such as South Korea and Singapore. Other parts are starting to emerge, such as regularly testing massive numbers of people and relaxing movement restrictions only on those who have recently tested negative or have already recovered from the virus— if indeed those people are immune, which is assumed but still not certain.

This will entail a considerable degree of surveillance and social control, though there are ways to make it less intrusive than it has been in some countries. (…)

In their report on March 16, the researchers at Imperial College proposed a way of alternating between stricter and looser regimes: impose widespread social distancing measures every time admissions to intensive care units (ICUs) start to spike, and relax them each time admissions fall. (…)

What counts as “social distancing”? The researchers define it as “All households reduce contact outside household, school, or workplace by 75%.” That doesn’t mean you should feel free to go out with your friends once a week instead of four times. It means if everyone does everything they can to minimize social contact, then on average, the number of contacts is expected to fall by 75%.

Under this model, the researchers concluded, both social distancing and school closures need to be in force some two-thirds of the time— roughly two months on and one month off—until a vaccine or cure is available. They noted that the results are “qualitatively similar for the US.”

The researchers also modeled various less stringent policies, but all of them came up short. (…)

Those scenarios, however, assumed that being shut in applies equally to everyone. But not everyone is equally at risk, or risky. The key to getting to normal will be to establish systems for discriminating—legally and fairly—between those who can be allowed to move around freely and those who must stay at home.

Assorted proposals now coming out of bodies such as the American Enterprise Institute, the Center for American Progress, and Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, describe how this might be done. The basic outlines are all similar.

First, keep as many people as possible at home until the rate of infections is well under control. Meanwhile, massively ramp up testing capacity, so that once the country is ready to relax social distancing rules, anybody who asks for a test—and some who don’t—can take one and get the result within hours or, ideally, minutes. This has to include testing both for the virus, in order to detect people who are currently sick even if they don’t have symptoms, and for antibodies, in order to find people who have had the disease and are now immune.

People who test positive for antibodies might be granted “immunity passports,” or certificates to let them move freely; Germany and the UK have already said they plan to issue such documents. People who test negative for the virus would be allowed to move around too, but they would have to get retested regularly and agree to have their cell phone’s location tracked. This way they could be alerted if they come into contact with anyone who has been infected. (…)

The Safra Center, for example, outlines various schemes for “peer-to-peer tracking,” in which an app on your phone swaps encrypted tokens via Bluetooth with any other phones that spend some minimum period of time nearby. If you test positive for the virus, you put that information into the app. Using the tokens your phone has collected in the past few days, it sends alerts to those people to self-isolate or go get tested. Your actual location doesn’t have to be tracked, only the anonymized identities of the people you’ve been near. (…)

There also needs to be nationwide data-gathering and analysis to better understand how the virus is spreading and spot high-risk areas that might need more testing or medical resources, or another quarantine. This strategy has to include serological surveys—random testing for antibodies to find out how widely the virus has already spread. Some other ways to gauge its prevalence without spying on people directly might be to crowdsource the information using sites like covidnearyou.org, infer it from the volume of Google searches for covid-19 symptoms in different places, or even look for the virus in samples of sewage.

It’s also important to make sure people who have tested positive or been exposed are staying in quarantine. This, however, seems hard to do without more direct surveillance. Countries like Singapore and South Korea use various means, such as making people share their location via WhatsApp or download a specialized tracking app. Whether the US or European countries could impose (let alone enforce) that kind of control isn’t clear. Without it, we have to rely on people to be responsible citizens and self-isolate when necessary.

The point is, there are more and less creepy ways of doing all this, and the crisis could catalyze a broader conversation about how to use people’s data for the collective good while protecting the individual.

Regardless of the methods chosen, the goal is the same: after a couple of months of shutdown, to begin selectively easing restrictions on movement for people who can show they’re not a disease risk. With good enough testing capacity, data collection, contact tracing, enforcement of or adherence to quarantines, and coordination between the federal, state, and local governments, local outbreaks might be contained before they spread and force another national shutdown.

Gradually, more and more people would be able to return to some semblance of normality. It would still be a far cry from the packed bars and sports arenas of the past, but it would be a less unbearable way to wait for the discovery of a vaccine or cure. More important, the economy could start ticking back to life.

This depends on a lot of things going right, though. First, the initial shutdown probably needs to be harsher than it currently is in the US. At the time of writing some US states still had no stay-at-home orders, few cities were enforcing those orders, and there were no restrictions on travel between cities or states. (…)

Second, by some estimates, millions of virus tests a day, promptly performed, may be required to properly keep tabs on the pandemic in the US. By April 8 the country was testing around 150,000 people a day, and many results were taking more than a week to come back.

(…) the US in particular has precious little coordinated national strategy. The chaotic management of the crisis by the Trump administration, the separation of powers between the federal government and the states, and the fragmented nature of privatized health care make it unclear how systems for automated contact tracing, quarantine enforcement, or immune certification will emerge.

That means a reopening of the US in June is optimistic, to say the least, and a reopening by April 30, as President Donald Trump was still hoping for in early April, is a fantasy. (…)

Business Leaders Tell Trump Testing Is Inadequate to Reopen Economy In the first meeting of President Trump’s task force to reopen the economy, banking and financial services executives said the administration needed to dramatically increase the availability of coronavirus testing before the public would be confident enough to return to work.

The push for more testing came in the first of four Wednesday phone calls that Mr. Trump held with business executives on his newly formed task force to reopen the economy. (…)

The task force, known formally as the Great American Economic Revival Industry Groups, includes more than 200 business and political leaders, who have been divided into smaller groups based on their industry. (…)

The president said reopening the country would not mean the end of social distancing and that people might have to get used to wearing masks even after businesses reopened, the people said. (…)

EARNINGS WATCH

As of Tuesday night, we had 35 reports in. Half of the 10 Financials beat but Financials’ overall surprise factor was –26.9%. These 35 companies reported earnings down 33.1%. The current blended estimated growth for Q1 is –12.8% with Q2 at –25.2%.

Full year EPS are now seen declining 11.4% to $144.42. If the unemployment rate rises to 10-15% as many predict, profits could end up much worse:

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Coronavirus latest: Goldman warns stocks have risen ‘too far, too fast’
Don’t Trust the ‘E’ in the Stock Market’s P/E Ratio Analysts have cut earnings forecasts sharply for U.S. companies, but the actual numbers will likely be much worse

For the first quarter, analysts estimate earnings for companies in the S&P 500 will be 12.3% below their year-earlier level, according to I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv. Back at the start of the year, they were looking for a first-quarter gain of 6.3%. In the just-started second quarter, they expect earnings to drop by 23.6%. Third- and fourth-quarter earnings are seen falling by 11.3% and 3.5%, respectively. (…)

Considering what has happened in past recessions, though, the earnings hit will likely be much bigger than they are guessing. (…)

Based on current analyst estimates, the S&P trades at nearly 19 times expected earnings over the next year—roughly where the forward price/earnings ratio was in early February, before coronavirus worries took hold. Whether one finds that reassuring or worrisome, the actual figure is almost certainly much higher. Investors could be in for a rude awakening in the months ahead.

U.K. Earnings Could Halve This Year, Citi Says

The bank warned clients that the pandemic’s economic impact will be greater in the U.K. due to the country’s dependency on its services industry, which is deeply affected by social distancing efforts. While consensus is for a 20% decline in earnings, “we think that this is not low enough,” strategists including Robert Buckland wrote in a note. Citi expects U.K. gross domestic product to drop 7.6% this year versus a 2.3% decline globally.

Biggest Wall Street banks set aside $25bn for loan losses Shares in lenders fall as Goldman chief Solomon warns of recession lasting into 2021

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari says that large U.S. banks should raise $200 billion from private investors and stop paying dividends so they can support the economy.

“The most patriotic thing they could do today would be to stop paying dividends and raise equity capital, to ensure that they can endure a deep economic downturn,” Kashkari writes in a Financial Times op-ed.

Under severe coronavirus scenarios, large banks with assets of more than $100 billion each could together lose hundreds of billions of dollars of equity capital, stress test modeling by the Minneapolis Fed indicates. (…)

If the current crisis “turns out less serious than we fear, banks can return the capital through buybacks and dividends once the crisis passes,” he said.

Earlier this month, former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who led the central bank through the financial crisis, said that while U.S. banks are in much better shape than they were back then, he saw a case for regulators to ask banks to be cautious about paying out dividends or executing share buybacks — provided that could be done without unduly alarming investors about the financial health of the institutions.

13/34–Week EMA Trend

Strange Relationship Between Stocks and Havens Unnerves Investors Safer assets from gold to Treasurys are rising alongside major indexes, a sign that the stock market rebound hasn’t assuaged investors’ fears about the world economy.

The S&P 500 has rebounded 24% from its March 23 multiyear low. At the same time, gold on Tuesday climbed to its highest level in nearly 7½ years, bringing its gains for the year to 15%. Billions of dollars have flowed into gold exchange-traded funds, and sales of physical bars and coins have soared.

Treasurys prices have joined the rally, pushing the yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note down to 0.64% from 1.26% on March 18. The Swiss franc and Japanese yen also have posted gains. (…)

But stocks and havens have risen in tandem since the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates near zero last month and stepped up lending programs and asset purchases. (…)

Stock prices suggest a short recession with a swift rebound in corporate profits, while gains in havens signal worries about a longer downturn. (…) Even within the stock market, many are favoring companies with more cash that can withstand the crisis. (…)

With the Fed flooding the economy with cash to stabilize growth, some analysts think the dollar could weaken, making gold an attractive bet. Low or negative government-bond yields also make it less likely investors will miss out on outsize returns by owning gold instead of bonds. (…)

Asset correlations are upset by central banks’ interventions just about all over the place.

Huawei chip unit orders up more domestic production as U.S. restrictions loom: sources

Huawei Technologies Co Ltd is gradually shifting production of chips designed in-house away from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) and towards a mainland Chinese firm in preparation for more U.S. restrictions, sources familiar with the matter said.

The move towards Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC) comes as Washington readies new rules which would require foreign companies using U.S. chipmaking equipment to obtain a license before supplying chips to Huawei – rules that would directly affect TSMC.

It also highlights how U.S. restrictions against Huawei can act as an impetus for Chinese companies to accelerate the development of homegrown technology. (…)

THE DAILY EDGE: 15 APRIL 2020

Virus Update

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Virus Death Toll Likely Far Higher Than First Reported Discrepancies risk making it harder to judge when outbreak has peaked and when restrictions can be eased

Newly published figures show deaths linked to the new coronavirus in the U.K. have far exceeded preliminary estimates, adding to a growing body of evidence across Europe that closely watched daily death tallies don’t reveal the virus’s true toll.

Behind the discrepancy are lags in recording some deaths that can stretch to a week or more, as well as deaths in nursing homes and other non-hospital settings that aren’t normally captured by rapid-fire estimates used to track the pandemic. (…)

Some fatalities can take weeks to be recorded in a nationwide database, the CDC says.

New York City on Tuesday added nearly 3,800 people to its estimate of Covid-19-linked deaths to total more than 10,000, including people who were presumed to have had the virus but weren’t tested for it before death. (…) The discrepancy in the British data suggesting deaths were more than 50% higher than first estimated reflects what exactly is being counted. (…)

In the Spanish capital of Madrid, 4,260 residents of nursing homes died after showing symptoms of Covid-19 in the 30 days through April 8. But only 781 had been tested and confirmed to have the infection, the vice president of the regional government of Madrid said last week. (…)

For Italy, the analysis showed that the death toll for Bergamo in March and for Brescia since the epidemic started in late February until the end of March is probably at least double, according to interviews with local officials, doctors and funeral-service providers, and comparisons with the numbers of deaths from past years. (…)

Pointing up Covid-19 twice as contagious as previously thought, study finds

Epidemiologists had previously estimated that each person with Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, infected two to three people on average, based on early cases in the city of Wuhan. The new estimation by Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico is that those who carried the coronavirus in Wuhan were passing it on to 5.7 people on average. (…)

They found that instead of taking six to seven days for the number of infected people to double, as was previously thought, it took only 2.3 to 3.3 days to do so.

Based on their newly estimated intensity of the initial outbreak, the research team said that achieving so-called herd immunity would need at least 82 per cent of people to be immune (by infection or vaccination) to stop the contagion spreading in a population – not about 60 per cent, as previous research suggested. (…)

The authors of the new Los Alamos study added that a higher level of infectiousness meant that if asymptomatic carriers accounted for a substantial proportion of transmission, then quarantine and tracing of contacts of those showing symptoms would not be enough to halt the virus’ spread. (…)

  • Spain reported the biggest increase in the number of confirmed cases in six days on Wednesday, while the daily death toll declined. There were more than 5,000 new infections in the 24 hours through Wednesday, taking the total to 177,633, according to Health Ministry data.
  • Germany is set to agree on an extension of nationwide lockdown measures until at least May 3 as the government debates with regional leaders on how to gradually relaxing restrictions on public life in the coming weeks. The number of new cases in Germany fell for a sixth day on Wednesday. There were 2,138 new infections, the lowest increase this month, bringing the total to 132,210, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.
  • Austria will carry out a second round of random tests to get a clearer picture of total infections, after a first study in early April concluded there were about 28,500 cases in the country, more than triple the official number at the time.
  • China for the first time publicized a breakdown of people testing positive for the coronavirus without outward signs of being sick, revealing that those among them who remain symptom-free throughout infection are in the majority.
    Among 6,764 people who tested positive for infection without showing symptoms, only one fifth of them — 1,297 — have so far developed symptoms and been re-classified as confirmed cases, China’s National Health Commission spokesman Mi Feng said at a briefing in Beijing Wednesday.
  • The Associated Press earlier reported that it obtained internal documents showing Chinese officials waited six days in January before President Xi Jinping warned the public of the dangers of the outbreak. The delay allowed millions of people to travel from the epicenter in Wuhan to elsewhere in the country and the world, the report said.
  • A group of Harvard disease researchers wrote in the journal Science that people around the world might need to practice some level of social distancing intermittently through 2022, Bloomberg reports.
  • Hydroxychloroquine, the 65-year-old malaria drug that President Donald Trump has praised, appeared not to help patients get rid of the pathogen in a small study. The pill didn’t help patients clear the virus better than standard care and was much more likely to cause side effects, according to a study of 150 hospitalized patients by doctors at 16 centers in China. The research, which hasn’t been peer-reviewed, was released Tuesday.
  • FAA’s Medical Experts Warn of Potential Hazards of Anti-Virus Drugs Touted by Trump U.S. air-safety regulators have emphasized the potentially serious side effects from two medications touted by President Trump as potential treatments for the novel coronavirus.
PANDENOMICS
  • How much will the coronavirus pandemic cost the world economy in terms of lost output? About $9 trillion according to the International Monetary Fund. The economic damage would be even larger if the IMF’s assumption of the pandemic fading out in the second half of 2020 proves too optimistic. Global real GDP is now expected to contract 3% this year, the biggest annual slump since the Great Depression, while trade is estimated to fall 11%. While there’s little doubt about the ongoing economic downturn, the latter’s amplitude is unclear. That’s reflected in the IMF’s use of the word “uncertainty” 11 times in WEO’s first chapter alone. (…) The IMF’s emphasis on downside risks makes even more sense when looking at its separately-released Global Financial Stability Report which points to a string of potential second round effects due to financial market stress. If anything, the IMF’s message this morning is one of utmost caution with regards to not just this year’s economic outlook but for 2021 as well. (NBF)
  • Employment in the US has fallen dramatically, with new jobless claims totaling almost 17mn over the last 3 weeks. We expect an additional 5.5mn claims this week and about 15mn more through the end of May, for a total of about 37mn from March-May. (GS)

5. Labor Market Slack Is Set to Spike Through 2020Q3, but Should Recover Fairly Rapidly. Data available on request.

“(…) I expect something more like negative quarters of growth throughout 2020, and then a gradual return to positive growth in 2021,” Ms. Daly said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday. Even then, she added, that view is entirely dependent on how the health crisis plays out. (…)

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Oil Demand Projected to Fall by Record Amount Global oil demand is expected to fall by a record 9.3 million barrels a day this year as government-implemented lockdowns keep the economy at a near standstill, the International Energy Agency said.

In its closely observed monthly oil-market report, the IEA projected that demand for crude would drop in April by 29 million barrels a day to levels not seen in a quarter of a century. That would equate to roughly 29% of the world’s 100-million-barrel daily oil-demand figure from 2019. (…) Even after April, the Paris-based organization expects demand to be 26 million and 15 million barrels a day lower in May and June than a year earlier. (…) The agency said it expects a 4.8% fall in global economic growth this year. (…)

The IEA forecasts that the agreement will contribute to a record 12-million-barrel-a-day drop in global oil supply in May. (…)

With an estimated 1.2 billion barrels of storage available at the end of January, the IEA forecasts that global stocks could increase by 11.9 million barrels a day in the second quarter, hitting “operational capacity” limits by the middle of the year. (…)

  • Goldman Sachs: “combined commercial and government storage fill capacity would become saturated in April, requiring c.4 mb/d of production shut-ins even before the OPEC+ deal starts. We therefore reiterate our view that the level of voluntary cuts and government purchases remain too little and too late to balance the market, leading to further downside to inland crude prices like WTI into the May expiration.”
Big Banks’ Profits Plunge as Losses on Loans Loom JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo set aside billions to get ready for a flood of customers to default on their loans as the pandemic pummels the economy.

(…) JPMorgan set aside an additional $6.8 billion in the quarter for potentially bad loans, largely in its consumer bank. That raised its total provision to $8.29 billion, more than the bank has had to take since 2010. But even that may not be enough, the bank warned.

The bank said the provision was based, in part, on the assumption that U.S. gross domestic product would fall an annualized 25% and unemployment would rise to more than 10% in the second quarter. But JPMorgan economists have recently amended their forecast to a 40% decline in GDP in the quarter and a 20% unemployment rate.

(…) banks and other lenders are starting to toughen their loan-approval standards, particularly for new customers. That means many people could find it hard to get credit just when they most need it. (…)

At yesterday’s 2849 high: R20 P/E = 19.87

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