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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: 24 JUNE 2020

  • New coronavirus cases spiked in several states, with Arizona, Texas and California reporting new daily records of infections, prompting elected officials to tighten rules on gatherings and strongly urge people to stay home and follow social-distancing guidelines.
  • Coronavirus cases in the U.S. increased by 35,695 from the same time Monday to 2.33 million, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University and Bloomberg News. The 1.6% gain was higher than the average daily increase of 1.3% the past seven days. Deaths rose 0.7% to 120,913.
  • Cumulative hospitalizations of Floridians rose by 199, or 1.5%, to 13,318. On a rolling seven day-basis, they reached 1,112, the highest level since May 25. The new rate of people testing positive for the first time climbed to 10.9% for Monday, from 7.7% on Sunday.
  • Texas health department reported 5,489 new cases, bringing the total to 120,370. That represented a 4.8% increase, well in excess of the 3.7% seven-day average. Hospitalizations, meanwhile, surged more than 10% to 4,092. The 381 new admissions were the biggest daily increase since the pandemic emerged.
  • There are 1,488 Covid-19 patients in ICU beds across the county, leaving only 134 intensive-case beds available and another 326 surge beds in reserve.
  • The volume of daily coronavirus tests has risen 23% over the last two weeks, and the positive test rate has risen by 1.3pp to 6.2%. Fatalities have declined over the last two weeks (-12% to 1.9 per million), but fatalities lag new cases by multiple weeks.
  • The federal government recommends states meet four criteria to proceed with
    reopening: symptoms should be declining, new cases should be declining, the positive test rate should be below 10%, and at least 30% of ICU capacity should be available. Currently Arizona and South Carolina—accounting for 4% of the US population—meet none of the four criteria; 8 states including Texas and Florida meet only 1 criterion; 14 meet 2; 12 meet 3; and only 14 states meet all 4 criteria.
  • States make their own decisions about reopening, but we think a decline in
    hospital capacity below 20% could pressure states to consider slowing or reversing reopening. According to the CDC, Alabama and Maryland currently have 23% of ICU beds available (with Covid patients accounting for 7% and 13% of occupancy respectively), and Arizona has 25% available (with Covid patients accounting for 11%). (GS)

Charts from the FT:

Americans increasingly concerned about ‘second wave’ of coronavirus in the U.S.

Our latest Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index finds that Americans are increasingly concerned about coronavirus and seeing ‘regular’ activities as increasingly risky after sentiment moderated earlier in June.

  • Currently, 85% of Americans are at least somewhat concerned with the outbreak, including 56% who are extremely or very concerned. This is up from 80% and 48% respectively in early June.
  • Concern with communities re-opening too soon (to 71% from 64%) and the possibility of getting sick (to 76% from 69%) are also up 7 percentage points over the last two weeks.
  • Eighty-five percent of Americans are concerned about a second wave of the coronavirus, including 59% who are extremely or very concerned.

“Normal” activities are seen as increasingly risky by many including doing their job, going to the grocery store, or socializing with friends after multiple weeks of minimizing concerns.

Americans continue to report that if a second wave hits their state, they will substantially withdraw to protect their health. They also express that they are watching for a wide range of signals of a second wave indicating it may not be official announcements that trigger a rebound in behavior.

  • Americans would rather return to lockdown

A new survey from data firm CivicScience of nearly 2,500 U.S. adults finds 65% of the general population over the age of 18 supports returning to lockdown if cases of COVID-19 rise significantly.

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  • Two economists from the University of Chicago confirm what many had expected: fear of catching COVID-19 caused people to stay at home, whether that was required by law or not. https://bfi.uchicago.edu/wp-content/uploads/BFI_WP_202080v2.pdf
  • Coronavirus Races Across Latin America, a Warning to Poor Nations Latin America is the new center of the pandemic, accounting for nearly half the world’s Covid-19 deaths in the past two weeks. The pandemic is sending poverty rates skyrocketing and eroding the social gains the region made in the past two decades.
  • India Reports Almost 16,000 New Cases
  • In South America, the number of new diagnoses continues to rise, particularly in Brazil and Chile, with the latter country adding a large number of previously omitted cases last week. Cases are clearly rising in North America too, though mainly in parts of the United States that suffered relatively few cases earlier in the year.

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PANDENOMICS
U.S. FLASH PMI
Economic downturn eases markedly in June as lockdown lifts

U.S. private sector firms signalled a notable slowdown in the rate of output contraction in June, as businesses began to reopen on a larger scale. Manufacturers and service providers alike registered much softer declines in output compared to May.

Adjusted for seasonal factors, the IHS Markit Flash U.S. Composite PMI Output Index posted 46.8 in June, up from 37.0 in May, indicating that the rate of contraction slowed further from April’s record low. The decrease was the softest since February, before the pandemic escalated.

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New business across the private sector declined further in June, albeit at only a marginal pace. Despite many firms noting a rebound in client demand, some stated that renewals and requests for new business were historically muted.

The rate of contraction nevertheless slowed notably, with manufacturers in particular registering only a fractional decrease.

The downturn in new business from abroad also slowed significantly, as clients in key export markets increased their buying activity amid looser lockdown restrictions.

The June survey meanwhile signalled further cuts to workforce numbers across the private sector, albeit at only a modest rate. Where an increase was noted, some businesses reported the return of furloughed staff. That said, hiring freezes and relatively weak demand led many other companies to shed employees in an effort to cut costs.

Backlogs of work also continued to be reduced, with the rate of decline faster among manufacturers than service providers.

For the first time since February, private sector firms recorded increases in both input prices and output charges. Firms stated that higher input costs from suppliers due to COVID-19 related supply chain issues were partially passed on to clients, with some mentioning that demand conditions were such that discounting was no longer required.

Private sector firms also reported a notable pick-up in confidence in June, with the degree of optimism about output in the year ahead reaching a four-month high. Expectations of a rise in activity over the coming year contrasted with negative sentiment seen in April and May. The reopening of states and reports of client interest reportedly sparked the return to optimism.

The seasonally adjusted IHS Markit Flash U.S. Services PMIâ„¢ Business Activity Index registered 46.7 in June, up from 37.5 in May. The pace of contraction eased substantially as increasing numbers of service providers returned to work.

The slower decline in activity was commonly linked to only a marginal decrease in new orders. A pick-up in domestic and foreign client demand reportedly helped boost sales across some firms, although conditions remained historically muted overall.

That said, companies were able to partially pass higher costs onto clients in June as both input prices and output charges increased. The moderate rise in selling prices contrasted with a sharp fall seen in May.

Service providers were generally optimistic of an increase in activity over the coming year at the end of the second quarter. Hopes that demand will return to previously seen levels came amid the reopening of states and client businesses.

Manufacturers indicated only a fractional deterioration in operating conditions in June, as the IHS Markit Flash U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI™)posted only slightly below the 50.0 no-change mark at 49.6, up from 39.8 midway through the second quarter.

The marked softening in the pace of overall decline largely stemmed from notably slower falls in output and new orders. Although still signalling contractions, rates of decrease were their slowest since before the escalation of the pandemic.

Although the rate of job shedding eased in June, backlogs of work continued to be reduced sharply, showing signs of ongoing spare capacity. Where higher employment was noted, this was generally linked to the return to work of furloughed workers and the hiring of extra staff.

Alongside a boost to business confidence, which was reportedly linked to hopes of a swift return to pre-pandemic new order volumes, firms began to increase their output charges in an effort to pass on higher cost burdens to clients. The increase in output prices was the first such rise since February.

Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at IHS Markit:

“The flash PMI data showed the US economic downturn abating markedly in June. The second quarter started with an alarming rate of collapse but output and jobs are now falling at far more modest rates in both the manufacturing and service sectors. The improvement will fuel hopes that the economy can return to growth in the third quarter.

“However, although brief, the downturn has been fiercer than anything seen previously, leaving a deep scar which will take a long time to heal. We anticipate that the US economy will contract by just over 8% in 2020. The coming months will therefore see the focus turn to just how much recovery momentum the economy can muster to recoup this lost output.

“Any return to growth will be prone to losing momentum due to persistent weak demand for many goods and services, linked in turn to ongoing social distancing, high unemployment and uncertainty about the outlook, curbing spending by businesses and households. The recovery could also be derailed by new waves of virus infections. Continual vigilance by the Fed, US Treasury and health authorities will therefore be required to keep any recovery on track.”

Fifth District manufacturing held fairly steady in June, according to the most recent survey from the Richmond Fed. The composite index rose from −27 in May to 0 in June, as shipments were relatively flat, more firms reported increases in new orders, and firms generally reported continued declines in employment. The index for local business conditions rose notably in June, indicating optimism among firms after three months of some of the most negative readings on record for that series. Manufacturers were also optimistic, overall, that conditions would improve in the next six months.

Survey results suggested that some manufacturing firms saw decreased employment in June. Meanwhile, wages, the average workweek, and availability of skills appeared fairly flat, on the whole. Survey respondents expected employment, wages, and the average workweek to increase in the coming months.

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The WEI is an index of ten daily and weekly indicators of real economic activity, scaled to align with the four-quarter GDP growth rate. The WEI is currently -8.20 percent, scaled to four-quarter GDP growth, for the week ended June 20 and -7.74 percent for June 13; for reference, the WEI stood at 1.54 percent for the week ended February 29.

May U.S. Home Sales Dropped 9.7%

(…) The May closings represent the lowest annualized sales activity since October 2010, said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist.

Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal expected an 8.8% monthly decline.

Homes typically go under contract a month or two before the contract closes, so the May data largely reflects purchase decisions made in March or April, when millions of Americans were staying home to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

“We hit a low point in the month of May, [but] it looks like quite a sharp rebound ahead,” Mr. Yun said, citing an increase in pending sales in some regions in recent weeks. “It looks like a V-shaped recovery for the housing sector.” (…)

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(Haver Analytics)

Small businesses face post-lockdown cash crunch

A recent poll of 7,317 small business owners by Alignable finds that 43% of firms that received money through the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) say they could be out of cash in a month or less.

That’s largely because they spent all of the money in the first eight weeks after receiving it so they could qualify to have the loans forgiven.

69% of small businesses that did not receive PPP funding say they expect to be out of cash reserves next month.

76% of minority-owned businesses that did not receive PPP funding say they will run out of cash in July — with 52% saying they have already depleted their reserves.

An IBM Institute for Business Value survey poll of more than 18,000 U.S. consumers in May and early June found that 21% of consumers say they’re shopping less and more than half believe the country will experience a major economic downturn over the next year or more.  

This could mean spending plateaus or even declines after this month rather than accelerating. (Axios)

Macklem Sees Long Road Ahead for Canada’s Economic Recovery

(…) In his first public speech as governor, Macklem said Canada’s economy should resume growth in the third quarter as containment measures are lifted. He cautioned, however, that any recovery will be “prolonged and bumpy” and the central bank will be “laser-focused” on supporting the rebound with stimulus.

“It will be a very long period before we start discussions about removing stimulus,” Macklem said in response to questions after his speech, which he gave via video-conference to Canadian Clubs and Cercles canadiens. “It’s not a discussion we’re engaged in right now.” (…)

The bank sees the economy rebounding quickly during the first phase after governments allow normal activities to resume. But after that, the growth trajectory may be uneven and slow, since not all industries will be able to operate until a vaccine is created. (…)

The bank continues to express concern around the potential for lower inflation. Although businesses are reopening, millions of Canadians remain out of work and spending has dropped. The bank expects supply to be restored faster than demand, which could put downward pressure on prices. (…)

Macklem isn’t a fan of negative rates. The governor made sure to highlight in his speech that low rates could lead to distortions in the behavior or financial institutions, while reiterating policy makers will using asset purchases until a recovery is underway. (…)

Regulator Keeps Capital Buffer at 1% for Canada’s Big Banks

Canada’s banking regulator kept the domestic stability buffer for the biggest banks unchanged at 1% of risk-weighted assets in its semi-annual review of the capital requirement, signaling confidence in the nation’s financial system amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“Canada’s largest banks entered this downturn from a position of strength and both the quantity and quality of their capital remains strong,” the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions said Tuesday in a statement. “Fiscal and monetary policy responses have helped to cushion the impact of the pandemic.” (…)

Reasons to fear the march of the zombie companies

(…) Even before the Covid-19 crisis, a decade of low interest rates helped to fuel a rise in the number of “living dead”: companies unable to cover their debt-servicing costs from profits in the long term. Leverage in the corporate sector has increased significantly since 2008. Deutsche Bank Securities estimates the zombies’ share of US companies alone has roughly tripled since the financial crisis to more than 18 per cent.

The pandemic has created new ones. There are also fears of a proliferation of unviable “zombie jobs”, kept on life support through furlough schemes. People working in sectors struggling under strict social-distancing rules, such as hospitality and retail, are especially vulnerable. (…)

Research has shown these companies are a drag on productivity growth. (…)

PANDEMONIUM

U.S. Eyes $3.1 Billion of EU, U.K. Imports for New Tariffs

The U.S. is weighing new tariffs on $3.1 billion of exports from France, Germany, Spain and the U.K., adding to an arsenal the Trump administration is threatening to use against Europe that could spiral into a wider transatlantic trade fight later this summer.

The U.S. Trade Representative wants to impose new tariffs on European exports like olives, beer, gin and trucks, while increasing duties on products including aircrafts, cheese and yogurt, according to a notice published late Tuesday evening. The statement lays out a month-long public comment period ending July 26. (…)

In October the U.S. gained the upper hand when the WTO authorized President Donald Trump to retaliate against $7.5 billion worth of EU exports in response to Europe’s illegal subsidies to Airbus SE. Next month the WTO is expected to deliver a retaliation award to the EU in its separate but related case against U.S. subsidies to the Boeing Co. (…)

“The U.S. has stepped back from the settlement talks in recent weeks,” EU Trade Commissioner Phil Hogan told European trade ministers on June 9. “If this remains the case, the EU will have little choice but to exercise its retaliation rights and impose our own sanctions.” (…)

Silicon Valley CEOs Criticize Trump’s Visa Restrictions Silicon Valley executives pushed back against President Trump’s move to suspend new immigration on several employment-based visas programs, warning it could damage the U.S. tech industry’s competitiveness and jeopardize job creation.

(…) He wants America to be the world’s high-tech business hub, but then he closes off the human talent essential to stay globally competitive. (…)

As the National Foundation for American Policy recently noted, the vast majority of H-1Bs—which are capped at 85,000 a year—are for computer programming. The unemployment rate for these occupations was 2.5% in May compared to 13.3% for the entire economy. The Labor Department’s JOLTS survey found 122,000 information industry job openings in April, slightly more than the year before. (…)

Keeping out high-skilled foreign workers will hamstring U.S. innovation, aiding China’s effort to dominate artificial intelligence, semiconductors and biotech. The winners will be China’s national champions including Huawei, Baidu and Tencent.

The same goes for L-1 visas for foreign transfers in managerial positions or those requiring special skills, which provide multinationals flexibility to manage their global workforces and support American jobs. If companies can’t bring foreign managers into the U.S., they will move jobs abroad.

As for seasonal guest workers, H-2B visas are capped at 66,000 each year. Businesses must show they tried to hire American workers before applying for H-2B visas and pay at least the market “prevailing” wage. Good luck getting college students to change bed linens at Aspen hotels or mow fairways at Mar-a-Lago. (…)

Seasonal businesses can’t move jobs abroad so they will close or reduce operations if they can’t get enough workers.

This will have ripple effects on local economies—note that the top H-2B states were Texas, Colorado, Florida, North Carolina and Pennsylvania—and retard the national recovery. Mr. Trump’s immigration limits won’t help American workers even as they hurt American companies and the economy.

(…) “Innovation has always been happening, but right now it’s happening at an exponential pace” because of the pandemic, said Eva Lau, the founding partner of Two Small Fish Ventures and a long-time tech-sector leader in Toronto, including at Wattpad Corp. Mr. Trump’s move, she continued, “is putting us in the best position to capture the next generation of tech giants here in Canada.” (…)

The Council of Canadian Innovators, a lobbying group that represents more than 100 scale-up tech companies, estimates that the sector had 220,000 job vacancies before the pandemic began. That’s more than domestic workers could fill and includes positions that would benefit from experience gained elsewhere. (…)

US lawmakers consider making it easier to sue China over coronavirus

Risk of military conflict between US and China higher than ever, experts say Tensions rose after near-collision between American and Chinese destroyers, president of National Institute for South China Sea Studies says.

FYI:

Gross Share Buyback Announcements

Free Trades, Jackpot Dreams Lure Small Investors to Options

(…) Adding to the appeal: The contracts allow an investor to put down a relatively small amount of cash—called option premium—for a potentially outsize return if the investor’s hunch proves to be correct. The downside is that an investor can lose the premium paid should a stock or index move unfavorably.

A record 28 million options contracts have changed hands on an average day this year, a jump of 45% from last year, according to Options Clearing Corp. data.

Individuals are helping drive the surge. The percentage of options volume stemming from small trades of just one contract on 50 of the most-traded stocks has risen to 14% this year, from 10% at the end of 2019, according to an analysis by Goldman Sachs.

Online brokerages have seen big jumps in customer options activity. E*Trade Financial Corp. ETFC 1.02% reported record levels of derivatives trades, which mostly involve options, for the first quarter of 2020. Data from TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. AMTD -1.47% show daily options trades surged about 60% in the quarter ended March 31 from the previous quarter, although overall trading, including stock volumes, grew even faster. (…)

“Other than a casino, there’s nowhere else you can get a return like that,” Mr. Rodela said. “It’s much higher risk and higher reward” than stocks. (…)

Robinhood imposes fewer hurdles on options than some other brokers. New clients assess their own suitability through a questionnaire. Those who say they don’t have much of an investing background can’t open an options account initially. But users can simply revise their answers to enable trading. (

THE DAILY EDGE: 23 JUNE 2020

  • Reopening plans have slowed in Louisiana, where Gov. John Bel Edwards said the state wouldn’t move into its third phase of reopening by the end of the week as planned due to increased infections and hospitalizations. Mr. Edwards said 630 people were in hospitals for the coronavirus, an increase of almost 90 over the past 10 days. The state passed two milestones Monday, with more than 50,000 total cases and 3,000 total deaths.
  • Texas: Gov. Greg Abbott said the virus was “now spreading at an unacceptable rate” after two weeks of record hospitalizations and as the rate of positive coronavirus tests roughly doubled since late May. Mr. Abbott emphasized that he doesn’t want to backtrack on his opening of Texas and said residents need to take it upon themselves to wear masks and practice social distancing.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs points out

With reopening under way, regular hospital occupancy is increasing as patients resume elective procedures and seek non-Covid medical care for illnesses and trauma. Exhibit 3 below, shows the share of inpatient hospital beds that are occupied. Occupancy has risen by about 15pp to 60-65% in California, Florida, and Texas. In Arizona, occupancy is even higher, and only about 30% of capacity is available, just 5-10pp below the levels reached in New York and New Jersey at the peak of the outbreak.

Exhibit 3: States with High Rates of Case Growth Also Have Less Hospital Capacity Available

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Notably, Covid patients currently make up only a small fraction of this occupancy. (…) only about 5% of patients hospitalized in California, Florida, and Texas are Covid patients. In New York and New Jersey, Covid patients occupied over 40% of hospital beds at the peak.

The upshot is that without lockdowns in place, a smaller increase in hospitalizations could overwhelm capacity. For example, in Arizona, a doubling in COVID-19 patients would increase occupancy to 80%, reducing available capacity to the minimum recommended limit for any degree of reopening. At the moment, state officials have opened the door for local governments to impose mask requirements but have not entertained reversing the reopening or imposing stricter social distancing requirements. If hospital capacity becomes problematic in a state, officials could be forced to limit certain elective procedures requiring inpatient care. Back in March, many states limited medical procedures before imposing broader lockdown orders.
Pence Warns of Young People Testing Positive as Hot Spots Worsen

Vice President Mike Pence told governors Monday that government health experts were worried that more young people are testing positive for the coronavirus around the country. (…)

The mayor of Miami, Francis Suarez, meanwhile delayed the reopening of movie theaters, nightclubs and other large venues because of the spike in coronavirus cases. He and the mayors of neighboring cities in Florida’s Miami-Dade County also said they were mandating the wearing of masks in public upon the advice of state health officials.

“This is a real spike,” Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber said at a news conference. “Nobody can argue with the fact that more people are being hospitalized.”

California saw its third-biggest daily increase in new cases, 4,230, a 2.4% rise to 178,054, according to state data. And new signs emerged that recent protests against police brutality may have helped spread the virus.

Anthony Fauci Doesn’t See Covid Summer Lull as Sun Belt Cases Swell

Asymptomatic patients may shed virus for longer than others, study says

Beijing Outbreak Shows Covid-19’s Insidious Ability to Hide

(…) Now, more than 200 people have tested positive across Beijing, schools are shut and thousands of domestic flights canceled. The resurgence offers a stark warning to countries that appear to have cut chains of transmission: The coronavirus’s ability to cause little or no symptoms in a large proportion of people enables it to spread silently for weeks — even months — creating viral reservoirs that can remain hidden until someone becomes sick enough to warrant testing. (…)

Some countries and cities that appeared to have tamed the virus are seeing cases start to increase again. Victoria, Australia’s second-most populous state, tightened control measures Monday after a spike in cases. New Zealand appointed a military leader last week to oversee the quarantining of citizens returning from abroad to head off fresh outbreaks. The country earlier this month removed physical distancing requirements after reporting zero active Covid-19 cases, indicating it had achieved its aim of eliminating the virus.

Elsewhere, countries from South Korea to Germany are battling new clusters, trying to stamp out sparks before they become raging fires. (…)

  • Gilead Sciences Inc. said it will soon begin clinical studies of an inhaled form of remdesivir with the aim of expanding the drug’s use to healthier, nonhospitalized Covid-19 patients. Remdesivir, used to treat seriously ill coronavirus patients, is currently given via daily intravenous infusions, limiting its use to patients in the hospital. An inhaled formulation could allow the drug to be used by patients with symptoms that aren’t severe enough to require hospitalization.
  • Health authorities said the Seoul metropolitan area is experiencing a second wave of coronavirus infections, with most of the new cases this month occurring in the area. South Korea added 46 new cases, bringing the nation’s total to 12,484. Thirty of the new cases were imported and 16 of them were linked to a Russian-flagged ship with 21 crew members that has been docked in Busan since Sunday. The crew members were tested on Monday after the captain, who disembarked in Russia a week ago, tested positive. Port workers who came into contact with the crew members have been quarantined.
  • Australia-New Zealand: Health authorities might start testing asymptomatic people in a handful of Melbourne suburbs that have become coronavirus hot spots, the premier of Victoria state said. Meanwhile, New Zealand said it will start testing asymptomatic border-control workers and aircrews as thousands of citizens return from global hot spots. The number of people returning to the country from overseas doubled since last month, with some 4,200 people in quarantine—close to the limits of government-run facilities.
PANDENOMICS
Key Support for the Economy May Be About to Buckle Government stimulus programs have helped support spending by lower-income Americans, but the money could soon run out

(…) An analysis conducted by nonpartisan research group Opportunity Insights of credit- and debit-card data collected by Affinity Solutions shows that by early April, spending by U.S. consumers had fallen 33% from January levels. Then starting in mid-April, when many Americans began receiving stimulus payments, things started picking up. As of June 10, spending was off by just 11.3%. (…)

But with many stimulus checks already spent, and with unemployed Americans scheduled to stop receiving the extra $600 a week in jobless benefits on July 31, poorer Americans’ wherewithal to spend is in danger of collapsing. (…)

The Senate, where some Republicans are balking at additional stimulus, won’t take up deliberations until mid-July, and hammering out a plan could take time. For investors who have pinned their hopes on a strong economic recovery, the next several weeks could be fraught.

Trump tells aides he backs new round of stimulus, but some in GOP are skeptical President Trump has told aides he is largely supportive of sending Americans another round of stimulus checks, believing the payments will boost the economy and help his chances of reelection in November, according to three people aware of internal administration deliberations.
Chicago Fed National Index Signals Easing in Recession in May

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Hundreds of cash-strapped cities halt plans to repair roads, water systems
FLASH PMIs
Eurozone downturn slows markedly for second month running in June

The eurozone economic downturn eased markedly for a second successive month in June as lockdowns to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak were further relaxed, according to provisional PMI® survey data. The month also saw a continued strong improvement in business expectations for the year ahead.

The flash IHS Markit Eurozone Composite PMI rose further from an all-time low of 13.6 seen back in April, surging to 47.5 in June from 31.9 in May. The 15.6-point rise was by far the largest in the survey history with the exception of May’s record increase. The latest gain took the PMI to its highest since February, though still indicated an overall decline in business output.

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Output fell again in both manufacturing and services, the latter showing the slightly steeper rate of decline. Both sectors nevertheless reported markedly reduced rates of contraction for a second month running.

The ongoing downturn in output was linked to a fourth consecutive monthly deterioration of inflows of new business, which in turn contributed to a further steep decline in backlogs of orders for companies to work through. However, rates of decline of both new orders and order book backlogs moderated considerably during the month.

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For those companies continuing to report falling output and order books, the pandemic was again by far the most commonly cited cause. The persistent closure of non-essential business, notably in hotels, restaurants, travel and tourism and other consumer-facing sectors, continued to be widely reported as many social distancing measures remained in place. Many other companies reported weakened demand as business and consumer customers remained cautious with respect to spending.

However, COVID-19 containment measures eased considerably across the eurozone during the month, helping many firms reopen and driving improved demand for many goods and services.

The relaxation of some lockdown measures, and planned further easing in coming months, also helped propel business sentiment for the coming year to its highest since February. The number of optimists exceeded pessimists for the first time in four months. Sentiment improved markedly in both manufacturing and services, resulting in the second-largest rise in the output expectations index since comparable data were first available in 2012.

imageJobs were cut on balance, however, for a fourth successive month in June as firms continued to worry about the lack of demand. While rates of job losses moderated in both sectors for a second month in a row, taking the rate of job shedding to its lowest in the current sequence, factory headcounts continued to be reduced at an especially marked rate as producers scaled-back operating capacity.

Average prices charged for goods and services meanwhile fell for a fourth month running as firms once again reported widespread discounting to boost sales, though the rate of deflation continued to cool from April’s near-11-year record as some companies reported improved pricing power. The resulting overall fall in prices was the smallest seen over the past four months.

Average input prices across manufacturing and services increased for the first time since February, driven principally by rising wage pressures. Average prices paid for inputs in manufacturing continued to fall sharply amid weak demand, albeit dropping to the least extent since February.

By region, France led the improvement with output returning to growth for the first time since February, fueled by a surge in manufacturing production. Germany lagged behind, reporting a steeper fall in output than the rest of the region outside of France and Germany. However, over the past four months Germany has seen the shallowest downturn, followed by France, with the rest of the region trailing behind.

(…) We therefore continue to expect GDP to slump by over 8% in 2020 and, while the recovery may start in the third quarter, momentum could soon fade meaning it will likely take up to three years before the eurozone regains its pre-pandemic level of GDP.

Japan: Downturn eases sharply as state of emergency lifted
  • Flash Composite Output Index, Jun: 37.9 (May Final: 27.8)
  • Flash Services Business Activity Index, Jun: 42.3 (May Final: 26.5)
  • Flash Manufacturing Output Index, Jun: 28.9 (May Final: 30.3)

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Flash PMI data for June show us that economic activity in some parts of Japan has picked up at the back-end of the second quarter. Crucially, however, a sub-50.0 reading in the Composite Output Index indicates that the underlying picture remains bleak and many firms are yet to see a rise in output volumes. Nevertheless, a 10-point rise is an encouraging sign that parts of the economy are recovering and should provide some momentum for a more broad-based uptick as we head into the second half of the year.

Still, there are some disconcerting signs when we look at the sector splits. While the service sector downturn eased noticeably, goods production fell at an accelerated pace in June. The rate of decline in manufacturing order books remained severe, hinting that the shape of the recoveries in the services and manufacturing sectors could be very different. A two-speed recovery would undermine a sustainable return to pre-COVID-19 levels of economic activity.

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China in Recession and Heading for Full-Year Decline: Beige Book

Key metrics including manufacturing profits, capital expenditures and retail sales volumes remained at historically low levels and barely improved from those in the first quarter, CBB International said in a quarterly report based on a survey of more than 3,300 firms. (…)

Sluggish global demand remained a key drag on growth, with regions more internationally exposed performing worse, while interior regions received a boost from a marked rebound in domestic orders, according to the report.

“The eventual return to growth does not mean a return to anything approaching the old levels of growth,” the firm said in its quarterly report on China’s economy. “Until and unless global demand recovers more forcefully, the incremental quarterly improvement just seen will make for a contraction for full-year 2020.” (…)

VEHICLES

As expected, North American light vehicle production saw a significant
increase M/M in May, up ~24x to 248,602 vehicles versus 10,247 vehicles in
April, according to Wards. April auto production ground to a halt as OEMs
and suppliers idled facilities as lockdown measures were introduced to
combat the spread of COVID-19. That said, light vehicle production was still down 83.2% when compared to May 2019. On a YTD basis, volumes are down 42.8% Y/Y to 4,028,697 vehicles.

Within North America for the month of May, U.S. light vehicle production
increased ~30x M/M but was down 79.1% Y/Y to 196,839 units. In Canada,
output fell 82.9% Y/Y to 31,411 vehicles, but this compares to nil production
in April. Mexican production was down 94.2% Y/Y to 20,352 vehicles, but
this compares to just 3,722 units produced in April.

While North American auto sales are expected to take years to recover, over
the near term this segment should continue to provide a sequential boost to
freight volumes as it bounces off its April lows, which we view as the silver
lining. Wards’ North American production schedule forecast has June down
22.5% Y/Y, July down 11.3% Y/Y, August down 16.9% Y/Y, and September
down 7.9% Y/Y. We would also note that truck demand remains healthy in
North America (SUV/CUV/pickups) and OEMs are looking to ramp-up
production given low inventory levels.

Looking at the weekly rail data, we have seen a significant improvement in
auto carload trends, which have been down 30%-40% Y/Y the last couple of
weeks versus down 85+% Y/Y back in April. Auto sales should continue to
benefit from the reopening theme as states and municipalities ease
lockdown measures. With expectations that U.S. light vehicles sales will
continue to improve through the balance of the year, we would expect auto
freight volumes to follow a similar trajectory. (CIBC)

Magna International:

The plants in China were the first to come offline and the first to ramp
back up and are now operating at ~85%-90% capacity. Operations in
Europe were the next to shut down and are now operating at nearly 80%
capacity
. And North America, while it was the last to come offline, its
ramp-up is being driven by healthy demand and the plants are now
operating at just above 80% capacity.

SENTIMENT WATCH
‘Everything Is Expensive’ as Global Stock Valuation Debate Rages

Bank of America Corp. clients are sounding the alarm on stock prices like never before — nearly 80% of them said in a survey the market is overvalued even as they sink cash into the market in droves. Bears are finding new reasons to bristle at forward price-to-earnings ratios at historic extremes, while bulls hit back with more reasonable interpretations of multiples, often relative to other asset classes. (…)

relates to ‘Everything Is Expensive’ as Global Stock Valuation Debate Rages

Via Axios:

A report from BCA Research published Monday finds Robinhood users are moving into speculative bets at an incredible rate, radically increasing holdings in three groups of stocks — airlines, cruise ships and mortgage REITs. (…)

Retail investors may be leading the charge, but the recent surges in many of the stocks BCA examined suggest that “algorithms, hedge-funds and other fast-money pools of capital may be amplifying the momentum that retail activity has set in motion.”

Which was my point in last week’s THE PROS AND THE CONS.

China Trade Deal ‘Fully Intact,’ Trump Says, as Top Adviser Stirs Confusion President Trump said the U.S.-China trade deal remains in place shortly after a senior aide appeared to say on national television that the agreement was over, prompting confusion among investors.

“The China Trade Deal is fully intact,” Mr. Trump wrote on Twitter at 10:22 p.m. on Monday. “Hopefully they will continue to live up to the terms of the Agreement!”

In a Monday night interview on Fox News, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro was asked about the trade deal, with anchor Martha MacCallum noting that the president wanted to maintain the agreement and ensure that China made good on its commitments. “But given everything that’s happened and all the things you just listed, is that over?” she asked.

“It’s over. Yes,” Mr. Navarro, a vocal critic of China, responded.

As stock futures dropped, Mr. Navarro quickly sought to clarify his comments, telling The Wall Street Journal they had been “taken wildly out of context.”

(…) “I was simply speaking to the lack of trust we now have of the Chinese Communist Party after they lied about the origins of the China virus and foisted a pandemic upon the world.” (…)

Wondering what exactly has been taken wildly out of context. Between 9:05pm and 9:39pm yesterday, E-Mini S&P 500 futures sank 1.8% before recovering.

Following talks [last week] by U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo and China’s top foreign policy official Yang Jiechi, China pledged again that it would buy US$36.5B worth of American agriculture products under the phase one deal, up from US$24B in 2017 before the trade war. But we note that China has bought only US$4.65B in the first four months of the year, which is only 13% of the annual goal set in the trade deal and almost 40% below the same period in 2017. (CIBC)

U.S. Set to Announce Aluminum Tariffs on Canada by End of Week

U.S. Temporarily Suspends New H-1B and Other Job Visas President Trump signed an order temporarily barring new immigrants on a slate of employment-based visas, including the H-1B for high-skilled workers, from coming to the U.S. amid the coronavirus pandemic.722

More House Republicans Come Out Against Trump’s Troop Cut in Germany Six members of the Foreign Affairs Committee said the U.S. should ‘lead by example’ in a letter warning President Trump that his plan is ill-advised and would imperil American interests in the region.

Trump’s Polls Are Plunging But It’s Too Early to Count Him Out

EU urges Xi: drop Hong Kong security law or risk ‘negative consequences’