The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

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)

Invest with smart knowledge and objective odds

THE DAILY EDGE: 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

Small Business Jobs Index Increases Slightly

No “V” there just yet: the Paychex | IHS Markit Small Business Employment Watch draws from the payroll data of approximately 350,000 Paychex clients to gauge small business wage and employment trends on a national, regional, state, metro, and industry basis.

U.S. Consumer Confidence Rebounds Meaningfully in September

• Improves to highest level in six months.

• Appraisal of both current conditions and expectations firm.

• Confidence rises in all age brackets.

Meaningfully? Really?

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I tend to put more weight on the U. of M. survey (via Axios):

unnamed (77)
‘Hidden unemployment’ is masking the jobless problem in Europe

(…) The way Eurostat measures employment, even workers on zero hours are counted as employed. Marc de Muizon, an economist at Deutsche Bank in London, estimates between 5% and 10% of all workers were on a furlough program in the four major eurozone economies of Germany, France, Italy and Spain in August.

The Spanish furlough has been unique in that employers there tended to have their furloughed employees completely out of work, rather than just working reduced hours.

Another issue is that those workers who lost their jobs weren’t able to look for a new one. Without school closures and lockdowns, in the second half of 2020 these people should start appearing in unemployment rate statistics, he says.

By the end of 2021, de Muizon expects the official unemployment rate in the euro area to top 10%. (…)

CHINA MANUFACTURING PMI: Operating conditions continue to improve solidly in September

China’s manufacturing economy retained strong growth momentum in
September, with firms signalling further marked increases in production
and new work. Notably, new business expanded at the strongest rate since January 2011, aided by a solid rebound in export sales. Increased activity at home and abroad was reportedly driven by the easing of lockdown measures as the sector continued to recover from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

Furthermore, employment stabilised in September, which ended an eight-month period of job shedding. However, operating margins remained under pressure, as firms reported a further marked increase in input costs but raised their selling prices only slightly.

The headline seasonally adjusted Purchasing Managers’ Index ™ (PMI ™ )
edged down from 53.1 in August to 53.0 in September, to signal a further solid improvement in the health of the sector. Operating conditions have now strengthened in each of the past five months. Notably, the latest reading rounded off the best quarterly performance since Q4 2010.

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Chinese manufacturers recorded a sharp and accelerated increase in total
new work during September, with a number of firms commenting that a

further recovery in client demand
had boosted sales. Furthermore, the
rate of new order growth was the steepest recorded since the start of 2011.
imageStronger external demand also helped to lift sales, with new export business expanding at the quickest pace since August 2017.

Manufacturers registered a softer, but still marked, rise in production during September. Companies continued to report that higher inflows of new work led them to raise output.

Greater amounts of new business added further pressure on operating
capacities, as highlighted by a sustained increase in backlogs of work. At the same time, employment levels were broadly stable, which brought about an end to a period of job shedding that stretched back to January.

In line with the positive trends seen for new orders and output, manufacturers raised their purchasing activity again in September, and at
the fastest rate since January 2011. Consequently, inventories of inputs rose
for the fourth month in a row. While stocks of finished goods also increased
at the end of the third quarter, the rate of accumulation was only marginal.
A lack of stocks at distributors, meanwhile, led to a further increase in
average lead times for inputs in September. The rate at which vendor
performance deteriorated remained much less severe than that seen at the
height of the pandemic, however.

Operating expenses faced by Chinese manufacturers rose again in September amid reports of higher prices for raw materials. Furthermore, the rate of cost inflation quickened from August and was solid. However, average output charges increased at the slowest rate for three months, rising only slightly overall. A number of panellists indicated that greater market competition had restricted their ability to raise their prices.

Chinese manufacturers were generally confident that production would rise
over the next 12 months. Notably, the degree of positive sentiment improved
to a three-month high. Growth forecasts were underpinned by hopes that
client demand and global economic conditions will strengthen once the
pandemic is over.

U.S. Goods Trade Deficit Continues to Deepen in August

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Covid-19 Cases Jump in Canada, Prompting New Restrictions Canada is seeing a sharp rise in cases of Covid-19, alarming health officials and triggering a second round of lockdowns and strict distancing recommendations.

Comparing the two neighbours:coronavirus-data-explorer (27)

seven-day-daily-tests-per-thousand-since-1-per-mil-confirmed-cases

coronavirus-data-explorer (28)

NBF puts this in the broader context:

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18 of the 26 countries listed by NBF are seeing rising cases. Excluding the last 4 Asian and Oceanian countries, it’s 18 out of 22.

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China Greenlights Another Vaccine for Human Testing Chinese drugmaker Shenzhen Kangtai will test its vaccine on people after showing it protected mice and monkeys from coronavirus

(…) Chinese institutions are behind many of those experimental vaccines and are responsible for four of the 10 candidates in the final stages of testing. At the same time, Beijing has overseen an unorthodox campaign to inject members of its military—as well as hundreds of thousands of employees of state-owned enterprises, journalists and other people—with homegrown vaccine candidates before their clinical trials are complete. (…)

PANDEMONIUM
House Democrats Poised to Trim Big Tech’s Sails One possible proposal would be the forced separation of online platforms

The House Antitrust Subcommittee is nearing completion of a report wrapping up its 15-month investigation of Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Apple Inc., Amazon.com Inc., and Facebook Inc. (…)

Rep. David Cicilline (D., R.I.), who chairs the subcommittee, has indicated the panel is poised to recommend significant measures targeting Big Tech’s power, including requiring owners of huge technology platforms to separate those platforms from other businesses.

Mr. Cicilline hasn’t released details, but such a law could potentially ban Amazon from competing with sellers on Amazon.com, or Google from offering services that consumers look for on its search engine.

“You can’t set all the rules, control the marketplace and also sell on it, in the way that Amazon does, for example,” Mr. Cicilline said in a recent podcast for the Brookings Institution think tank. (…)

“It’s clear that some of these dominant platforms must be broken up. All of them must be regulated,” he said during a virtual event with progressive groups on Sept. 1.

The congressman has called the idea “Glass-Steagall for the Internet,” invoking a 1933 law that divided traditional banking businesses from Wall Street investment banks. (…)

Opponents of a Glass-Steagall-like proposal say customers can move on if a platform doesn’t offer a diverse, competitive set of options, and that it is fair for companies to make a profit off their creations. (…)

The platform-separation idea is just one of several circulating in Washington to curb Big Tech’s power. (…)

China preparing an antitrust investigation into Google – Reuters’ sources

China is preparing to launch an antitrust probe into Alphabet Inc’s GOOGL.O Google, looking into allegations it has leveraged the dominance of its Android mobile operating system to stifle competition, two people familiar with the matter said. (…)

A decision on whether to proceed with a formal investigation may come as soon as October and could be affected by the state of China’s relationship with the United States, one of the people said. (…)

A potential probe would also look at accusations that Google’s market position could cause “extreme damage” to Chinese companies like Huawei, as losing the U.S. tech giant’s support for Android-based operating systems would lead to loss of confidence and revenue, a second person said. (…)

THE FT EDITORIAL BOARD:

A tawdry debate shows the risk to US democracy Donald Trump sounds like a man preparing to contest the election result

Some 60 years have passed since the first televised debate between the two main candidates for the White House. Some of the sequels have been quotable, others soporific, but none quite as dismaying as the one held in Ohio on Tuesday. (…)

By far the bleakest lesson of the night, though, is that fears for the election itself are warranted. Mr Trump did not just waver and dissemble when asked whether he would accept defeat in November. He also urged his supporters to go to polling stations and “watch very carefully” because “bad things happen”. The evidence that voter fraud is rife, and that it disproportionately benefits the Democrats, is thin. But by stoking the idea, Mr Trump readies a pretext to contest any adverse result for him, and encourages his base to take matters into their own hands. “Dog-whistling” is the politico-speak for such language, but it implies subtlety. Mr Trump was blatant.

And this is to say nothing of his eerily ambiguous message to white nationalists. “Somebody’s got to do something about Antifa and the left”, his formulation on the night, could be a general observation or something much darker. Either way, the president had the opportunity to be plain in his condemnation of the far-right, and did not take it. Snap polls suggest that Mr Biden, though often frail-seeming and quick-tempered, “won” the debate. But no one with a care for American democracy can have switched off feeling anything but queasy. (…)

Hence in a year of lethal contagion, of state violence and economic carnage, none of these troubles is quite the largest issue at stake in November. That is America’s democratic process itself. The worst presidential debate in memory was also the most ominous. No one will have savoured it more than the nation’s autocratic enemies.

THE DAILY EDGE: 29 SEPTEMBER 2020

History and science suggest the second winter with coronavirus is likely to be worse than the first. The pathogen is more entrenched and most respiratory viruses circulate primarily in the winter months. (Bloomberg)

Wave Three?

This is from Bespoke:

“By early October the first fall outbreaks and the memory of those in the spring had already suggested that the virus attacked in a cycle; it took roughly six weeks from the appearance of the first cases for the epidemic to peak and then abate in civilian areas, and from three to four weeks in a military camp with its highly concentrated population. After the epidemic abated, cases still occurred intermittently, but not in the huge numbers that overwhelmed all services.– John M. Barry, The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History

(..) The first wave of the COVID outbreak, which was centered in the northeast, began on 2/24 when the US started to average at least one new confirmed COVID case per day.  That wave peaked 46 days later on April 10th.  Over the next 48 days, the number of cases gradually drifted lower through the end of May.  On 5/28, the decline in cases reached a low, but then started rising again as the second wave of the outbreak flared up in the sunbelt.

During the second wave of the outbreak, the number of cases quickly increased to new highs before peaking on July 22nd, a period spanning 55 days.  As case counts across the sunbelt surged, states in the northeast continued to see cases but not to nearly the same degree as they did during the first wave.  From 7/22 through 9/12 (52 days), the second wave of the outbreak started to ebb, but ever since then, we’ve started to see a renewed uptick in cases.  This time, however, the states most affected by this third wave of the outbreak have been concentrated in the midwest, while case counts in the states impacted by the first two waves are nowhere near their prior peaks.

What’s also notable about the first two waves of the outbreak is that all of the legs higher and lower have spanned a period of between 46 and 55 days or six to eight weeks.  That’s similar to the ‘roughly six weeks’ that each wave lasted during the 1918 pandemic.  Given the fact that the second wave saw more cases than the first wave, does that mean the third wave will see a higher number of cases than the second?  Not necessarily.  Anything can happen but with the states being hit hardest by COVID now collectively having smaller populations and less geographic density than the areas hit hardest in the first two waves, the likelihood of larger caseloads would seem less likely.

Hospitalizations and deaths follow similar trends with a lag:

8_US Cross Curves (8)

Bespoke continues:

Taking the seven-day average case counts from notable states around the country further illustrates the similarities between now and 1918.  States like New York, Arizona, Florida, and California all appear to be past the peaks of the epidemic in their regions, and while case counts haven’t disappeared, new reported cases have been much less frequent and continuous than they were at their peaks.  Meanwhile, states in the midwest, like Missouri, which were previously spared by much of the new case burden, are only just now hitting the peaks of their outbreaks. How the COVID-19 pandemic progresses from here through the winter months is impossible for anyone to predict, but the fact that the current outbreak has been following similar patterns to the way the 1918 pandemic played out provides some degree of encouragement.

Let’s hope. But this ain’t totally obvious just yet.

This chart isolates the Midwest where cases now average 12k/day, nearly 30% of the U.S. total and hospitalizations exceed 6.6k/d (22%):

MIDWEST8_US Cross Curves (10)

But even excluding the Midwest, U.S. cases and hospitalizations seem on the verge of another flare up:

U.S. EX MIDWEST8_US Cross Curves (9)

Covid Exit Strategy is a group of public health and crisis experts with former experience working at the White House, Department of Health and Human Services, and on the Ebola epidemic in West Africa. “We are a non-partisan group, having worked across multiple administrations. We built this site to track each state’s progress towards stopping the spread of COVID-19.” Great set of charts.

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Canada's Covid-19 Case Curve Steepens

  • Germany’s Angela Merkel will recommend limiting private meetings and public gatherings to reverse a recent spike, reports said.
  • In Moscow, all schools were ordered to close for two weeks from Oct. 5.
Study finds 9 in 10 coronavirus patients experience side effects after recovery

Nine out of 10 patients who tested positive for the coronavirus reported at least one side effect of the disease following their recovery, according to a new online study of more than 900 people by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency.

Researchers say more than 90 percent of patients reported side effects frequently associated with the disease, including loss of taste and smell, fatigue and psychological issues.

Fatigue was the most common reported side effect, with more than 26 percent of patients experiencing extreme tiredness, followed by difficulty in concentration, according to researchers behind the survey. (…)

An estimated 300,000 people in Britain have reported symptoms lasting more than a month, and 60,000 people reported symptoms for more than three months, according to the Covid Symptom Study app. (…)

  • “If we focus just on the death rate, eventually everyone is going to say this is no big deal,” [Colin Furness, an infection control epidemiologist at the University of Toronto] said. “We should reframe our understanding of Covid as vascular disease that causes widespread brain damage in the population.”

Barely two in 10 Americans would take a first-generation coronavirus vaccine if President Trump alone told them it was safe — one of several new measures of his sinking credibility in the latest wave of the Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index.

Manhattan Offices Are Nearly Empty, Threatening New York City’s Recovery

Office vacancies spike in Toronto, Vancouver as pandemic fuels work-from-home migration

Democrats Unveil $2.2 Trillion Pandemic Relief Bill House Democrats released a new coronavirus relief package that would restore $600 weekly jobless benefits, a last-ditch effort to revive stalled talks with the White House. Any legislation would face immediate hurdles in the GOP-led Senate, where many Republicans have resisted a large new round of deficit spending and expressed more confidence that the economy is recovering, after a sharp slump earlier this year.
TECHNICALS WATCH

Yesterday’s market strength was broad as small caps rose 2.8%. Lowry’s Research’s Buying Power rose 5 while Selling Pressure dropped 5.

SPAC ATTACK

It was just a question of time: Easterly Alternatives is seeking to raise $100 million for a fund that will invest exclusively in up to 15 special purpose acquisition companies, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg. A Spac Spac.

Inside the JPMorgan Trading Desk the U.S. Called a Crime Ring The U.S. says the precious metals desk at JPMorgan was a racketeering operation. Now the bank is poised to pay a record penalty for spoofing. Here’s a look behind eight years of alleged conspiracy

EIGHT years! But what’s a $1B fine when you are worth $400B? (answer: 0.25%). And what about all the other institutions/individuals that benefitted?

Just one more in a long, long list (libor, mortgage, bonds, FX) involving an also long, long depressing list (WFC, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, RBS, City, etc…)

Also depressing:

David Kotok, CEO at Cumberland Advisors: “We enter the fourth quarter waiting for well-tested COVID vaccines and safe, proven treatments, and we hold our breath for a peaceful and uncontested election outcome.”

In the USA?!

Only 41% of Republicans would commit…unnamed (76)