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)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 8 SEPTEMBER 2020

The Jobs of August

The economy added 1.4 million jobs in the month while the unemployment rate declined 1.8 percentage points to 8.4%. Temporary Census hires filled 238,000 of those jobs. But the economy has nonetheless added 10.5 million private jobs in four months, about half as many as were lost in the recession caused by government-ordered lockdowns. The recovery after the 2008-2009 recession took three years to make this much progress, and the jobless rate was still 8.1% in August 2012.

Labor force participation increased 0.3 percentage points to 61.7%, up 1.5 points from its April low. This is still 1.7 percentage points below its February peak, but the increase means that hundreds of thousands of Americans are continuing to return to the workforce. By contrast, labor force participation declined in the five years after the 2009 recession. Our contributor Donald Luskin notes that the number of Americans receiving Social Security disability payments is 9.8 million, one million fewer than in August 2012. (…)

All of this means the economy is growing again as the lockdowns ebb and despite the lack of another spending blowout from Washington, D.C. The downturn was a recession, not the depression that many feared in March. The Atlanta Federal Reserve’s GDPNow formula is predicting third-quarter growth of nearly 30% year-over-year.

Consumer spending may slow without more federal checks, but perhaps not as much as feared with a recovering job market and average hourly earnings up 4.65% from August last year. They’re up 4.9% for production workers. People have pent up savings—the savings rate was 17.8% in July—and the wealth effect from rising home and stock prices despite the selloff in tech stocks this week will also help. Home prices are up 12% year-over-year, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average has risen 51% from its March trough. (…) (WSJ editorial board)

Aggregate weekly payrolls of private employees (employment x hours x hourly wages) are slowly recovering but are more swooshing than veeing, unlike retail sales which gained from pent-up demand and government payments, both temporary.

fredgraph - 2020-09-07T072014.959

Retailers have added back 1.7 million of the 2.4 million jobs lost in March and April, accounting for 16.3% of all jobs recovered since the April low while retailing typically represent 10% of all jobs. Entering the most critical period of the year for retailers, the swooshing trends in payrolls and labor income are worrisome.

fredgraph - 2020-09-07T073650.029

BLS data show that the number of jobs reported as permanently lost swelled another 534k in August, totalling 2.13 million since February which is 18% of unrecovered jobs so far. Another way to look at it is that while the economy has recovered 10.5 million jobs, it has also permanently lost 2.1 million jobs, almost 10% of all jobs lost in March and April, and counting.

Fed’s Powell Says Economy Likely Will Need More Government Spending, Low Interest Rates Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Friday’s report showing 1.4 million Americans found or resumed work in August was good news, but the economy likely will require more government spending and low interest rates for years.

(…) “We do think it will get harder from here,” said Mr. Powell. Employment in service sectors, especially those that tend to support entry-level and lower-paid workers, “may be some of the harder jobs to find because there are some parts of the economy that will take longer to recover,” he said. (…)

“I think we’re not really going to know the pace … of the recovery with any clarity for a couple more months,” he said, according to a transcript released by NRP. (…)

Summer is over, still swooshing:

(Bespoke)

Job Market in Canada Extends Recovery With Strong Full-Time Gain

Canada’s economy added 245,800 jobs in August, a fourth-straight month of gains that has recouped almost two thirds of employment losses from the pandemic.

The hiring lowered the jobless rate to 10.2%, from 10.9% in July, and brings the number of jobs recovered since the height of the pandemic to 1.9 million. Canada lost 3 million jobs in March and April. (…)

The latest numbers capture the reopening of Toronto, Canada’s biggest city and one of the last to ease restrictions due to high Covid-19 counts. Ontario posted 142,000 new jobs last month. (…)

Canada has recouped nearly two thirds of jobs lost during pandemic

Surprised smile Population adjusted, Canada added the equivalent of 2.5 million jobs in August!

U.S. Coronavirus Cases Fall Below 25,000 Outbreaks on some college campuses have forced students to return to online learning

(…) But public-health officials worry that sending students back to their hometowns, often without testing them before departure, could lead to new outbreaks around the country. (…) “Just because a kid is asymptomatic doesn’t mean it’s safe to send that kid home. They could be exposed and incubating. They could be in fact a ticking time bomb.” (…)

Colleges and universities have found at least 51,000 coronavirus cases already, according to a NYT campus tracker. “The Times has counted more than 45,000 additional cases at colleges since late July, and more than 24,000 additional cases since late August. (…) While The Times’s survey is believed to be the most comprehensive account available, it is also a near-certain undercount.”

0_All Key Metrics (31)

1R_Reg Positive (3)

coronavirus-data-explorer (11)

Mommy, is this a second wave?

coronavirus-data-explorer (12)

Some of the recent big risers are plateauing but India and Argentina keep rising:

coronavirus-data-explorer (13)

Asymptomatic children who contract COVID-19 may ‘shed’ coronavirus for weeks

A new study published in JAMA Pediatrics suggests that children can spread SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, even if they never develop symptoms or even long after symptoms have cleared. It found a significant variation in how long children continued to “shed” the virus through their respiratory tract and, therefore, could potentially remain infectious.

While the virus was detectable for an average of about 2.5 weeks in the entire group, a significant portion of the children —about a fifth of the asymptomatic patients and about half of the symptomatic ones — were still shedding virus at three weeks, meaning they were releasing it into the environment. The researchers also found that the duration of COVID-19 symptoms also varied widely, from three days to nearly three weeks.

A recent systematic review estimated that 16% of children with a SARS-CoV-2 infection are asymptomatic, but evidence suggests that as many as 45% of pediatric infections are asymptomatic, according to the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (…)

The risk, as Israel discovered, is providing an environment where children unwittingly spread the virus to each other, which can lead to community transmission. That’s particularly worrying for those who have underlying conditions, and the elderly, who are more vulnerable to the most severe effects of the virus. Community transmission also makes contact tracing more difficult. (…)

Vaccine CEOs issue safety pledge amid Trump’s quest for pre-election approval The joint statement by nine chief executives represents an extraordinary effort to bolster public faith in a coronavirus vaccine.

“We believe this pledge will help ensure public confidence in the rigorous scientific and regulatory process by which covid-19 vaccines are evaluated and may ultimately be approved,” the executives wrote in their joint statement.

The statement included a vow that the companies would “only submit for approval or emergency use authorization after demonstrating safety and efficacy through a Phase 3 clinical study that is designed and conducted to meet requirements of expert regulatory authorities such as FDA.”

They also vowed to “always make the safety and well-being of vaccinated individuals our top priority.” (…)

Vaccine manufacturers want to bolster public faith in the safety and efficacy of a vaccine to counter perceptions that the Food and Drug Administration will cave to political pressure, said Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security.

“It just reflects the fact that we have seen political meddling from the start in this pandemic response,” Adalja said. (…)

Americans are told that the private sector will protect them against the public institutions and politicians, those that are supposed to protect them against potential private sector abuses. Pathetic!

Politico reported last week:

Trump said in a press briefing Friday that there would be a vaccine “before the end of the year and maybe even before Nov. 1. I think we can probably have it sometime in October.”

The president’s remarks came a day after the head of the government’s vaccine accelerator, Moncef Slaoui, said that the government was “very unlikely” to greenlight a vaccine by early November, because data from late-stage clinical trials of leading vaccine candidates would not be ready by then.

“There is a very, very low chance that the trials that are running as we speak could read before the end of October,” said Slaoui, who heads the government’s Operation Warp Speed, told NPR. (…)

The federal government’s top infectious disease expert, Anthony Fauci, also cautioned this week that result could take longer.

“If you look at the projection of the enrollment and the kinds of things you’ll need to get a decision about whether the vaccine is safe and effective, most of us project that that’s going to be by November and December, by the end of this year,” Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, said on CNN. “It is conceivable that you could have it by October, though I don’t think that that’s likely.”

But Trump remained adamant yesterday;

(…) “We’ve done an incredible job, and in speed like nobody’s ever seen before,” said Trump during a kitchen-sink press conference from the North Portico of the White House, referring to a vaccine. “This could have taken two or three years. And instead it’s going to be done in a very short period of time. Could even have it during the month of October.

“The vaccine will be very safe and very effective and it will be delivered very soon,” he continued. “You could have a very big surprise coming up.” (…)

Pointing up Trump went on to say that Biden and Harris are spreading “fake rhetoric” that “undermines science” and holds back “this incredible vaccine.” (…)

That last line is truly incredible. You can’t make this stuff up!

Lastly,

(…) As for Covid-19 itself, Dr. [Scott] Atlas [Trump coronavirus advisor] is upbeat. “We’re doing a lot better with this,” he says. “The length of stays in hospitals are a third of what they were in the peak” in the spring. “I think most of the damage, honestly, has been done.” He’s optimistic about a vaccine—“there’s a lot of incredible speed in its development”—and anticipates “roughly a hundred million doses are going to be available toward the end of the year.” We are, he thinks, “on the road to getting rid of this threat.” He rejects confident predictions of a “second wave”: “That’s just conjecture. Not every virus has a second wave.” And he says: “The talk of anybody saying we’d better do another societal lockdown is completely anti-data.” (WSJ)

EQUITIES
SoftBank’s Bet on Tech Giants Fueled Summer Stock Rally The Japanese conglomerate placed billions in options bets on fast-rising tech stocks. Investors say that turbocharged the tech sector.

Investors watching the vertigo-inducing rise—and this week’s fall—of technology stocks are buzzing about a single trade, a giant but shadowy bet on Silicon Valley big enough to pull the market up with it.

The investor behind that trade, according to people familiar with the matter, is Japan’s SoftBank 9984 -3.21% Group Corp., which bought options tied to around $50 billion worth of individual tech stocks. Investors and analysts, aware of the activity but in the dark as to who is behind it, say it has turbocharged the tech sector, whose sheer size drives broader market moves. (…)

Regulatory filings show SoftBank bought nearly $4 billion of shares in tech giants such as Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Netflix Inc. this spring, plus a stake in Tesla. Not included in those disclosures is the massive options trade, which is built to pay off if the stock market rises to a certain level and then lock in gains, the people said.

SoftBank bought a roughly equal amount of call options tied to the underlying shares it bought, as well as on other names, according to people familiar with the matter. It also sold call options at far higher prices. This allows SoftBank to profit from a near-term run-up in stocks and then reap those profits by unloading its position to willing counterparties.

Investors pay a small premium to buy options, giving them exposure to a much larger notional amount of shares. In SoftBank’s case, the roughly $4 billion in options generated an exposure of around $50 billion, according to the people familiar with the matter. (…)

SoftBank is best known for its $100 billion Vision Fund, which invests in startups including Uber Technologies Inc. and TikTok owner Bytedance. But in July its founder and CEO, Masayoshi Son, announced a new unit to invest in public markets, similar to a hedge fund in its scope and tactics. (…)

The whale is out of the bag. SentimenTrader had revealed the highly unusual call options trading starting in mid-May (vertical line). Then came the 50% eruption in NDX volume in the first 2 weeks of June pushing the NDX up 5% in 8 trading days.

ndx

The subsequent investor frenzy brought the NDX more than 30% above its 200dma, a 20-year high:

Nasdaq 100 Deviation from 200-Day Moving Average

Wait, wait…there’s more scary stuff:

200-Day Moving Average of FAAMG Stocks

ZeroHedge today reports that

(…) for all intents and purposes, SoftBank is now out of most – if not all – of its public equity positions and “Nasdaq Whale” bets which were, as we reported last week, the primary catalyst for the market’s tremendous rally. (…)

But Softbank was not alone betting on the one-way market:

Back in January, a bunch of chat-room denizens got it in their heads that they could rev up returns in a stock portfolio by corralling options dealers to their side. It’s starting to seem like they were on to something.

While not new and a long way from risk-free, the strategy celebrated in the Reddit forum r/wallstreetbets is at least fairly simple. Spend some money on bullish calls on shares you own in hopes of forcing the sellers to purchase the same stock as a hedge. An ensuing feedback loop drives everything higher, or so the theory goes.

Now, by happenstance or design, something like this appears to be happening on a grand scale in U.S. technology shares, dialing up a blistering rally — and possibly worsening last week’s decline. Armies of mom-and-pop traders have piled into options with gusto. More recently SoftBank Group, the Japanese conglomerate, bought large positions in contracts tied to megacap tech shares. (…)

“This entire summer has been about the public being right, early and often, and institutions piling in after,” said Julian Emanuel, chief equity and derivatives strategist at BTIG, who sees the options bets stoking market volatility. “The public is trapped long and institutions are trapped long and the snowball that was pushed very quickly up the hill and got big is now at risk of becoming an avalanche.” (…)

A bigger influence is retail investors — a constituency that goes far beyond the Reddit crowd — who have shelled out $40 billion in call premiums in a month, data from the Options Clearing Corp. compiled by Sundial Capital’s Jason Goepfert show. The total dwarfs SoftBank’s reported outlay. (…)

“What we’ve thought all throughout August as volatility and stocks rose in tandem is that the public buying of short-dated calls throughout the summer led to institutional buying,” he said. “Which in turn led to dealers having to hedge their short gamma (the calls they had sold the public and other large players), creating more stock to buy the higher the stocks ran. Classic momentum/short gamma snowball effect, which the public exacerbated, blissfully unaware.”

SentimenTrader offers this chart showing “an average of the 8 other times the Nasdaq hit a 3-year peak that wasn’t surpassed for at least the next year.

That average is v-toppy, meaning there wasn’t a lot of back-and-forth activity surrounding the peak. The Nasdaq soared higher, then…did not. The individual signals show that when the Nasdaq peaked, it PEAKED, underlined and with all-caps. There wasn’t much dickering around. (…)

Interestingly, it is in mid-May that Lowry’s Research’s Buying Power Index exploded 35% to peak in mid-June and lose almost all of it since. Strangely (!), Lowry’s Selling Pressure Index stalled in mid-June, as investors froze, scared to feed the raging bull anymore, in FOMO fashion.

Is it a coincidence that the NDX crashed the very same day that the Softbank name was first linked to the highly unusual activity in options? Could it be that nervous equity holders finally got the cue that this last crazy leg could be because of a single size buyer, therefore unsustainable? Downside volume swelled to 2.7x upside volume on Sep. 3. During the previous 4 sessions, downside volume averaged 0.7x upside volume.

After Friday’s close, the NDX still stands 24% above its 200dma while the S&P 500 is 10.8% above its own 200dma, down from 15.9% on the morning of Sep. 3 but still uncomfortably high:

Market Cracks, Market Finally Cracks. Is The Bull Market Rally Over? 09-04-20

So, while Lowry’s analysis and narrative tells us that “there is a long-list of evidence encompassing breadth, new highs and momentum that remains positive for the intermediate-term”, I continue to heavily weigh the worrisome short-term trends in its Buying Power/Selling Pressure data: rising markets are stronger when demand is strong and vulnerable when mainly supported by weak supply. With no help from valuation, equities are very sensitive to any sell trigger. Maybe we just got one from Japan.

ST’s NDX v-chart above is rather scary. Is that it? Are we finally there?

Lowry’s notes that NASDAQ Selling Pressure has been rising since July 6, unlike the NYSE. NASDAQ’s big 5 stocks, which account for 47% of the index, have masked the recent erosion in breadth. While Lowry’s sees no technical similarities with the bubble peak of 2000, it sees many signs for a pullback.

At least, both the NYSE and the NASDAQ Buying Power remain dominant vs Selling Pressure. We shall see if knowledge of the whale changes investor attitude. No doubt that Softbank’s heavy buying fed the Robinhooders and other momentum investors since April. Now realizing that demand was actually pretty narrow and unsustainable, many could simply head for the sidelines, further reducing Buying Power, perhaps taking it below Selling Pressure, itself potentially rising with the same revelation. After all, investing in Masayoshi Son’s footsteps has not been a tranquil, stressless and always financially fulfilling voyage, has it?

Also from SentimenTrader:

(…) Through August, there hasn’t been such a wide chasm between the best and worst sectors in nearly 90 years. The only years in that span when the difference neared or exceeded 50% were 1987 and 2000. That doesn’t seem like a great sign. This is thanks to the money pouring into the big tech stocks while neglecting left-for-dead sectors like energy. (…)

Every time there is a split like this, investors make extrapolations about structural changes in the market that explain the difference between the two sectors. Currently, it’s that big tech stocks are going to keep benefitting from the post-pandemic world while a focus on renewable energy with a possible change in administrations is going to doom the energy sector. Maybe.

More likely is that by the time these themes have been played out to the degree they have in 2020, future returns have already been sacrificed even if the theories play out. Maybe tech will continue to gain on energy in the months ahead, but historically it would be highly unusual for them to continue to outperform by a meaningful degree over a 1-2 year time frame.

Not to advocate buying Energy (I generally avoid investing in commodity-sensitive sectors), but I note that the S&P Energy median stock sells below book value (0.92) and that its P/CF at 2.6x trailing CF is the lowest in 25 years by some margin while the median CF margin, at 18%, is near its high of the last 5 years.

On the other hand, such wide chasm in sector returns has often meant a market peak and a change in regime…

At today’s pre-opening of 3375:

image

FYI:

Insiders Sales in U.S. Listed Companies

(Financial Times)

(Source: Vincent Deluard, StoneX via EvergreenGavekal)

Shares of Tesla tumbled 7% in extended trade on Friday after the electric car maker was excluded from a group of companies being added to the S&P 500, among them Etsy, whose stock market value is less than a 20th of Tesla’s.

«The Market is Vulnerable» Blackstone’s market maven Byron Wien sees a significant correction risk. He warns of rising speculation in the stock market, the vulnerable state of the U.S. economy and possible turmoil in the course of the presidential election. He also shares his views on where he spots opportunities for patient investors.
U.S.-China Chip-War Collateral Damage Will Range Far and Wide New Trump administration rules look likely to choke off equipment sales to China’s leading chip maker—and hit chip-making equipment makers where it hurts

U.S. agencies are discussing whether to add Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. SMICY -0.72% into the Commerce Department’s “entity list,” which would restrict the supply of U.S. technology to the Chinese chip maker. (…)

The potential restrictions will make it almost impossible for SMIC to catch up with leading rivals  like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Korea’s Samsung Electronics. SMIC only has 5% market share in the global foundry business, which entails making chips for other semiconductor companies that don’t have their own plants, according to Credit Suisse. To narrow the technology gap, SMIC had planned $6.7 billion of capital expenditures this year, more than triple the amount in 2019, after raising $7.7 billion on Shanghai’s technology-heavy STAR market in July. But such a cash splurge could be in doubt now. Goldman Sachs estimates that SMIC’s revenue could be halved by 2024 if the company is unable to expand capacity in both advanced and older nodes. SMIC may also have trouble getting maintenance and spare parts from its U.S. suppliers, says brokerage house Bernstein.

That could mean reduced orders for semiconductor equipment makers: But an even bigger worry is that the Trump administration could target other Chinese chip makers too. Demand from China is expected to be a growth spot for equipment makers in the next few years. (…) Jefferies has estimated China could account for around a quarter of global semiconductor equipment procurement this year. Chip makers outside of China may fill part of that demand but are unlikely to fully offset the impact.

In the short term, other Chinese chip makers may also rush to increase inventories of semiconductor equipment in fear of potential sanctions, helping dull the pain. But in the longer run, those sanctions could hurt manufacturers of chipmaking tools everywhere—including those in the U.S., Japan and the Netherlands—if it becomes impossible for most Chinese semiconductor firms to construct complete production lines at all. California-based Lam Research, for example, made a third of its revenue last quarter from China. (…)

Trump Vows to Sharply Scale Back U.S.-China Economic Ties

President Donald Trump said he intends to curb the U.S. economic relationship with China, contrasting himself with Joe Biden by threatening to punish any American companies that create jobs overseas and to forbid those that do business in China from winning federal contracts.

“We’ll manufacture our critical manufacturing supplies in the United States, we’ll create ‘made in America’ tax credits and bring our jobs back to the United States and we’ll impose tariffs on companies that desert America to create jobs in China and other countries,” Trump said at a White House news conference on Monday where he complained at length about his Democratic re-election opponent.

“If they can’t do it here, then let them pay a big tax to build it someplace else and send it into our country,” he said of U.S. corporations. “We’ll prohibit federal contracts from companies that outsource to China and we’ll hold China accountable for allowing the virus to spread around the world.” (…)

“We’re going to end our reliance on China because we can’t rely on China and I don’t want them building a military like they’re building right now and they’re using our money to build it.” (…)

Companies Brace for Profit Hit From Euro Rally The euro’s sharp rally this year is seen as a vote of confidence by investors on the prospects for Europe’s economic recovery. But companies and their shareholders are bracing for pain.

(…) When the euro is strong, it makes exports such as machinery, cars and chemicals from the eurozone more expensive for foreign buyers. It also erodes the value of overseas sales for companies in the 19 member states, and can chip away at profit just as they emerge from the Covid-19 economic crunch. (…)

For every 10% that the euro strengthens against the dollar, eurozone corporates stand to lose about 3% in profits, he estimated. For S&P 500 companies, a 10% appreciation in the dollar costs companies up to 2%. (…)

AND THE U.S. ELECTIONS…

From Axios:

This is the era of misinformation and mistrust, so it’s easy to war game scenarios where the election provokes civil unrest and dispute. So here are the facts you need to know — and share:

  1. Don’t expect a conclusive outcome on election night. Be patient. And go into the night knowing it might take a week to count every vote.
  2. History shows mail-in voting is safe. A Brookings analysis found minuscule numbers of fraud cases, going back many years, in the five Western states that vote almost entirely by mail. Go deeper.
  3. Be extra cautious of your sources of news, especially on social platforms. Don’t share news unless you’re 100% confident in its accuracy and legitimacy. 
  4. Click here to understand how you can vote in your state. 
  5. Vote.

Axios built an interactive tool to show you when and where to apply for an absentee ballot, the deadline for postmarking it, and how soon early voting starts.

  • Why it matters: Voting in a pandemic takes more attention and effort, since your ballot will only count if you understand your state’s rules and deadlines, Axios’ voting expert Stef Kight and visual journalist Naema Ahmed report.

Click into the tool.

The prospect of court fights over COVID-related voting changes, an absentee ballot avalanche, and foreign interference have prompted a nationwide lawyer-hiring binge, Axios’ political reporter Hans Nichols and voting expert Stef Kight write.

  • Why it matters: Election-related lawsuits have been on the rise for the past two decades, but the coronavirus has supercharged them. Both national parties are hiring preemptively so they’ll be ready for challenges and recounts.

THE DAILY EDGE: 20 JULY 2020

Coronavirus Deaths Surpass 140,000 in U.S., as Trump Sees Flare-Ups as ‘Burning Embers’ President Trump said the coronavirus pandemic will be brought under control and he played down the public health threat.

(…) In an interview on Fox News that aired Sunday, Mr. Trump said many recent cases involve young people. “They have the sniffles and we put it down as a test,” he said.

Mr. Trump said some flare-ups of new cases were like “burning embers” and flames that need to be put out. “We have embers and we do have flames. Florida became more flame-like,” he said, adding, “It’s going to be under control.’’

The president also said that the ramp-up in testing in many states was behind the rise in new cases. Public health leaders, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, have said that the rise in positivity rates indicates it isn’t just testing that is behind the surge in infections. (…)

The percent of positive tests on a seven-day average has swelled from about 4.4% in mid-June to almost 9% as of mid-July, according to Johns Hopkins. (…)

In the Fox interview, Mr. Trump said, “Many of those cases are young people that would heal in a day.” He added: “Many of them—don’t forget, I guess it’s like 99.7%, people are going to get better and in many cases they’re going to get better very quickly.”

Joshua Sharfstein, a professor of public health at Johns Hopkins, said Mr. Trump “seems to be saying it’s really not that big a deal. You can still agree somebody may have a mild case and be concerned that they could cause someone else to get quite sick and die.” (…) (WSJ)

“I will be right eventually”

Pressed about past statements that the coronavirus would at some point disappear, Trump said “I’ll be right eventually. I will be right eventually,” adding, “It’s going to disappear, and I’ll be right.”0_All Key Metrics (6)

US COVID-19 surge could trigger a double-dip recession – FT

(…) Fulcrum economists have developed a new model. It suggests that the virus’s effective reproduction number, known as R, is now above the critical level of 1 in all but five of the US’s 50 states. Weighted by gross domestic product, this means that 95 per cent of the US economy is affected by a viral reproduction rate high enough to cause an exponential rise in the number of cases — unless something intervenes to prevent this.
This spread of R levels above 1 is the broadest it has been since the epidemic started.

Fulcrum economists have modelled an alternative scenario where full lockdowns are eventually needed in states where the R is currently above 1.5, with partial lockdowns in states where R lies between 1.25 and 1.5, and no lockdowns elsewhere.
This would lead to a large drop in activity — in effect, a double dip — of about 7 percentage points through the whole economy while the lockdowns last. If the situation persisted for three months, it would knock almost 2 percentage points from this year’s growth rate, compared to the latest consensus forecasts. (…)

As Trump Ignores Virus Crisis, Republicans Start to Break Ranks President Trump continues to press for a quick return to life as usual, but Republicans who fear a rampaging disease and angry voters are increasingly going their own way.

(…) And in his home state of Kentucky last week, Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, broke with Mr. Trump on nearly every major issue related to the virus. (…) “The straight talk here that everyone needs to understand is: This is not going away until we get a vaccine,” Mr. McConnell said on Wednesday, contradicting Mr. Trump’s rosy predictions. (…)

“I want more briefings but, more importantly, I want the whole White House to start acting like a team on a mission to tackle a real problem,” Mr. Sasse [R-Nebraska] said. “Navarro’s Larry, Moe and Curly junior-high slap fight this week is yet another way to undermine public confidence that these guys grasp that tens of thousands of Americans have died and tens of millions are out of work.” (…)

A poll published Friday by ABC News and The Washington Post found that a majority of the country strongly disapproved of Mr. Trump’s handling of the coronavirus crisis, and about two-thirds of Americans said they had little or no trust in Mr. Trump’s comments about the disease.

Mr. Trump’s political standing is now so dire that even Republicans who have spent years avoiding direct comment on his behavior are acknowledging his unpopularity in plain terms. (…)

Nearly one-third of children tested for COVID in Florida are positive. Palm Beach County’s health director warns of risk of long-term damage

(…) “They are seeing there is damage to the lungs in these asymptomatic children. … We don’t know how that is going to manifest a year from now or two years from now,” [Dr. Alina Alonso, Palm Beach County’s health department director] said. “Is that child going to have chronic pulmonary problems or not?”

Her comments stand in contrast to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ messaging that children are at low risk, and classrooms need to be reopened in the fall. DeSantis has said he would be comfortable sending his children to school if they were old enough to attend. (…)

State statistics also show the percentage of children testing positive is much higher than the population as a whole. Statewide, about 31% of 54,022 children tested have been positive. The state’s positivity rate for the entire population is about 11%. (…)

Israeli Data Show School Openings Were a Disaster That Wiped Out Lockdown Gains Of 1,400 Israelis diagnosed with COVID-19 last month, 657 (47 percent) were infected in schools. Now 2,026 students, teachers, and staff have it, and 28,147 are quarantined.

Israel’s unchecked resurgence of COVID-19 was propelled by the abrupt May 17 decision to reopen all schools, medical and public-health officials have told The Daily Beast. (…)

Importantly, on May 17 in Israel it appeared the virus not only was under control, but defeated. Israel reported only 10 new cases of COVID-19 in the entire country that day. (…)

On June 3, two weeks after schools opened, more than 244 students and staff were found to test positive for COVID-19.

According to the education ministry, 2,026 students, teachers, and staff have contracted COVID-19, and 28,147 are in quarantine due to possible contagion.

Just in the first two weeks of July, 393 kindergartens and schools open for summer programs have been shuttered due to cases of COVID-19. (…)

On Tuesday, Israel reported 1,681 new cases of COVID-19 infection, its worst result since the outbreak began.

The source of the infection explosion can be seen clearly in the numbers from June. As Kliner told the Knesset, 1,400 Israelis were diagnosed with the disease last month. Of those, 185 caught it at events such as weddings, 128 in hospitals, 113 in workplaces, 108 in restaurants, bars, or nightclubs, and 116 in synagogues, according to Kliner, while 657—which is to say 47 percent of the total—were infected by the coronavirus in schools. (…)

“The reopening happened too fast. It was undertaken so quickly that it triggered a very sharp spike, and the return to more conservative measures came too little, much too late,” Khatib says, summing up Israel’s dilemma.

(…) the ministry of education indicated it “intends to open schools as usual” on Sept. 1, even though the numbers from June would seem to provide conclusive data about the risks. In any case, no strategy is in place to prevent a second round of school epidemics.

Galia Rahav, who chairs the department of infectious diseases at the Sheba Medical Center in Tel Aviv, said in an interview that “what happened in schools is just too much gathering, day after day, and kids come home and infect mom and dad. The top numbers of new infections were in kids.”

Due to the large number of infections among children, she noted, “the average age of an Israeli with COVID-19 has gone down to between 20 and 39,” while infections in citizens over 65 have held steady. In Jerusalem, the Israeli city with the highest rate of infection, most of the people with COVID-19 are under the age of 35. (…)

‘The pandemic is gaining momentum’: Africa prepares for surge in infections
Trump Campaign Turns to Tele-Rallies as Coronavirus Cases Surge
PANDENOMICS
What Banks Tell Us About Business: Everybody Is Struggling When they reported earnings this past week, the biggest U.S. lenders said they don’t expect America’s economy to pull out of its slump soon.

When they reported second-quarter earnings this past week, big U.S. lenders said they don’t expect the U.S. economy to pull out of its slump soon. A protracted downturn, bank executives said, bodes poorly for all manner of American businesses, even those not directly affected by the travel bans and social-distancing measures put in place to curb the virus.

From the first quarter to the second, the four biggest American banks nearly doubled the amount of money they set aside to cover soured corporate loans. It was different in the first quarter, when banks increased provisions for consumer loans far more. (…) (Bank of America set aside less for loan losses than the other banks. Chief Executive Brian Moynihan said early signs of a rebound are encouraging.) (..)

“Everybody is, bluntly, struggling,” Bill Demchak, chief executive officer of PNC Financial Services Group PNC -1.88% Inc., said on an earnings call Wednesday. “The generic corporate client we talk to, who’s otherwise open and doing business, is almost without exception down from what they would have expected going into the year and down from where they were last year.” (…)

One by one, bank executives warned that the worst of the coronavirus recession has yet to come. They said they no longer expect a quick snapback in economic activity or employment. (…) “I don’t want to be pessimistic…I want to be a realist.” (…)

“In the first quarter, when we were really looking at a deep but short-lived downturn, we were really very much focused on most impacted sectors,” said JPMorgan Chief Financial Officer Jennifer Piepszak. “Now that we’re looking at a more protracted downturn, we’re reserved for a much more broad-based impact across sectors.” (…)

U.S. Companies Gear Up for Longer Road to a Rebound Business executives who were bracing for a monthslong disruption due to the coronavirus are now thinking in terms of years. Their job has changed from riding it out to reinventing roles and strategies.

The fierce resurgence of Covid-19 cases and related business shutdowns are dashing hopes of a quick recovery, prompting businesses from airlines to restaurant chains to again shift their strategies and staffing or ramp up previous plans to do so. They are turning furloughs into permanent layoffs, de-emphasizing their core businesses and downsizing production indefinitely. (…)

“We’re seeing stalling demand growth at this point,” Delta Chief Executive Ed Bastian said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. The company opened the airline earnings-reporting season with a loss that Mr. Bastian called a staggering illustration of the pandemic’s impact, and he told analysts he didn’t expect the level of business flying to ever recover to its pre-pandemic level as companies rethink the need for putting employees on the road. Leisure traffic could take two years or more to recover, assuming a vaccine or treatment becomes widely available, he said.

Meanwhile, American Airlines Group Inc. AAL -4.34% told 25,000 workers that their jobs are at risk after federal aid expires Oct. 1 and United said it is exploring shedding 36,000 employees, or nearly half of its U.S. workforce, as both airlines said they expect it to take years for demand to approach normal levels. (…)

“The risk of a relapse in demand is rising,” said Gregory Daco, an economist at Oxford Economics. Mr. Daco’s measure of states’ recovery finds the economic rebound has slowed week-over-week in 14 states and declined in 15, with confirmed infections rising in 39 states that together account for 90% of the U.S. economy. (…)

“It’s becoming increasingly clear that the second half of the year will not rebound anywhere near our pre-Covid forecasts,” Vox Media Chief Executive Jim Bankoff wrote in a memo to staff. “Furthermore, as cases rise tragically across the country and many of our elected leaders avoid decisive action, we have very limited visibility into the timing or strength of a recovery.”

As $600-a-Week Jobless Aid Nears End, Congress Faces a Quandary Lawmakers must decide whether the pandemic-related payments are a vital boost to the economy or are keeping people from going back to work

Some 25 million Americans are set to lose $600 a week each in federal unemployment benefits at the end of the month, one of the thorniest issues Congress faces when it returns to Washington this week to consider another coronavirus relief bill.

Many people view the payments as a lifeline, and analysts say the $15 billion a week in federal spending has provided vital support to an economy staggering from the effects of the pandemic. But critics say the money, paid on top of regular state jobless benefits, discourages some Americans from returning to work as businesses try to reopen, holding back the recovery.

A University of Chicago study found 68% of unemployed workers who are eligible for benefits receive more in jobless payments than their lost earnings—with the median payment 34% more than their former weekly paychecks. (…)

Democrats are pushing to extend them through January, while Trump administration officials and top GOP lawmakers are exploring whether to continue them at a reduced amount. (…)

Three months to the elections…with a Democrat Congress sniffing victory and a trailing GOP President and vulnerable Senate…and a very worried consumer…

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Mnuchin Calls for Forgiving PPP Loans to Smallest Businesses The Treasury secretary told lawmakers that they should consider turning into grants the Paycheck Protection Program loans taken out by the smallest U.S. businesses.

Congress should consider automatically forgiving Paycheck Protection Program loans taken out by the smallest U.S. businesses—and offer a second helping of aid to firms hard hit by the pandemic, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Friday.

The comments came at a House Small Business Committee hearing, where lawmakers in both parties signaled they want to push out more small-business aid as the U.S. continues to grapple with the coronavirus.

Mr. Mnuchin, testifying before the committee, suggested the Trump administration would back a proposal from U.S. banks and others who have said the massive lending program should see loans under $150,000 automatically turned into grants.

That would account for 86% of the roughly 4.9 million PPP loans issued to date, and about 27% of the roughly $520 billion lent. Without a change to the law, all those businesses will have to apply to have their loans forgiven, documenting that they used the money on payroll and other qualified expenses. (…)

To date, the small-business lending program has distributed about $520 billion and has about $130 billion remaining available. (…)

414 Companies, Including GameStop and Wendy’s, Nearing Default
When the U.S. sneezes, the world catches a cold. What happens when it has severe COVID-19?

(…) “The risk ahead is that a large share of the U.S. population will have to contend with an important deterioration of living standards and significant economic hardship for several years. This, in turn, can further weaken demand and exacerbate longer-term headwinds to growth.” (…)

The U.S. economy accounts for about a quarter of world gross domestic product. Though much of that is service-related, and much of the direct impact of the virus is tied up in industries like restaurants with weak links to the global economy, the connections are still there. A lost job leads to lower consumer spending leads to fewer imports; weak business conditions lead to less investment in the equipment or supplies that are often produced elsewhere.

Year-to-date U.S. imports through May are down more than 13%, or roughly $176 billion. (…)

U.S. Housing Starts Strengthen in June; Building Permits Rise

Low mortgage rates are bolstering new home building activity. Residential housing starts strengthened 17.3% last month (-4.0% y/y) to 1.186 million (SAAR) from 1.011 million in May, revised from 974,000. Despite these gains, total starts remain 26.7% below their January peak. The Action Economics Forecast Survey expected 1.174 million starts in June.

Starts of single-family homes rose 17.2% last month (-3.9% y/y) to 831,000 after the 4.4% May improvement to 709,000, revised from 675,000. Multi-family starts increased 17.5% (-4.1% y/y) to 355,000 from 302,000 in May, revised from 299,000.

A 2.1% increase (-2.5% y/y) in building permits to 1.241 million units followed a little-revised 14.1% May improvement. Permits to build single-family homes increased 11.8% (-1.1% y/y) to 834,000 after improving 12.0% in May. Permits to build multi-family homes fell 13.4% (-5.3% y/y) and reversed most of May’s increase.

By region, last month’s improvement in housing starts reflected a 114.3% increase (-5.4% y/y) in the Northeast to 105,000. It followed declines in each of the prior four months and starts remained 51.6% below January. In the Midwest, housing starts rose 29.3% (-0.5% y/y) to 181,000 after rising 3.7% in May. In the South, starts increased 20.2% (-4.6% y/y) to 606,000 after three months of sharp decline. Starts in the West fell 7.5% to 294,000 after a 76.7% May strengthening.

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(…) “The coronavirus hasn’t dragged home prices down; in fact we’ve seen just the opposite—prices are rising in spite of the pandemic,” Brian Walsh, a Redfin agent in Tampa, Florida, said in the report. The median home price there was up 8% last month, compared to June 2019.

Mr. Walsh noted that move-in ready homes are getting “multiple offers—some up to 10 or 15. The winning offers are almost always all-cash with zero contingencies.” (…)

“Nearly a quarter of a million fewer households have bought a home in the first half of the year compared with the same period last year,” according to Mr. Marr.

Earlier this week, a separate Redfin report found that home sales were up 2% on a seasonally adjusted basis for the week ending July 5, surpassing pre-pandemic levels for the first time.

Record number of NYC landlords dole out discounts as demand falls Remote working opportunities may lead to future price cuts in Big Apple

Rent prices were discounted across 34.7 percent of properties in the Big Apple during the second quarter, according to new data from real estate website StreetEasy. The median asking price fell by 6.7 percent, which is about $221 per month or $2,652 per year, due to reduced demand. Higher-end apartments saw the largest price cuts – as wealthy buyers have flocked to the suburbs since March.

“Demand will remain low as new hires, interns and students begin jobs and school remotely, and as many New Yorkers escape the city temporarily or permanently,” Nancy Wu, StreetEasy Economist, told FOX Business. “As inventory piles up due to this lack in demand, even more landlords will need to make rent cuts, and rents will likely drop even further.” (…)

While some people were headed to suburbs in the near vicinity, others were picking up and heading to states in the south, like Florida and the Carolinas. (…)

WORTH YOUR TIME

During my 45-year investment career, I have met, read and worked with very many economists, particularly during the earlier part. With experience, I found that their added value, for me, generally was not worth the time. A few, however, proved helpful. One of them is Lacy Hunt at Hoisington Management. What is particular about Hoisington is that they only invest in U.S. Treasury securities and are thus totally focused on the economy and on its main drivers. Their quarterly review is always informative, particularly since they have generally been right.

From their latest review (my emphasis):

Four economic considerations suggest that years will pass before the economy returns to its prior cyclical 2019 peak performance. These four influences on future economic growth will mean that an extended period of low inflation or deflation will be concurrent with high unemployment rates and sub-par economic performance.

First, with over 90% of the world’s economies contracting, the present global recession has no precedent in terms of synchronization. Therefore, no region or country is available to support or offset contracting economies, nor lead a powerful sustained expansion.

Second, a major slump in world trade volume is taking place. This means that one of the historical contributions to advancing global economic performance will be in the highly atypical position of detracting from economic advance as continued disagreements arise over trade barriers and competitive advantages.

Third, additional debt incurred by all countries, and many private entities, to mitigate the worst consequences of the pandemic, while humane, politically popular and in many cases essential, has moved debt to GDP ratios to uncharted territory. This insures that a persistent misallocation of resources will be reinforced, constraining growth as productive resources needed for sustained growth will be unavailable.

Fourth, 2020 global per capita GDP is in the process of registering one of the largest yearly declines in the last century and a half and the largest 2020 decline since 1945. The lasting destruction of wealth and income will take time to repair.

Each of these points is well explained in only 5 very readable pages.

There is a particular focus on debt:

Total domestic nonfinancial debt, excluding off balance sheet liabilities such as leases and unfunded pension liabilities, surged to a record 259.7% of GDP in the first quarter of this year, 11.4 percentage points higher than the 2009 level when Lehman Brothers failed. Confirming economic research regarding diminishing returns of the overuse of debt, each dollar of debt generated only 38.5 cents of GDP in the first quarter of this year. This result is defined as the marginal revenue product of debt (MRPD), which is down from 40 cents at the end of 2019 (Chart 3). Each dollar of debt has generated only 13 cents of GDP growth for the past four quarters, less than one-half of the 26.5 cents generated during the final four quarters immediately before the recession that started in late 2008.

Here’s global debt after Q1’20. This is a growing global problem, only hidden currently because of low interest rates. But if interest rates rise…

Global Debt as % of GDP

…which is why some say that central banks will keep rates, short and long, very low for a very long time. TINA will be with us for a while.

Hunt also discusses soaring corporate debt:

Except for the very short run, the Federal Reserve’s lending operations for the corporate bond market are a negative for economic growth. The BOJ (Bank of Japan), ECB (European Central Bank) and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) have all been buying corporate debt of failing entities for more than a decade with the BOJ doing so for more than 25 years. These operations have provided a fleeting lift to economic activity, but at the end of the day they resulted in misallocation of credit, poor economic growth and disinflation/deflation. By keeping failing players in the game, this prevents the process Joseph Schumpeter called “creative destruction” as well as “moral hazard”, thereby eliminating these critical factors that make free market economies successful. When central banks sustain failing businesses, resources are tied up in nonproductive firms and therefore unavailable for new firms that can contribute to economic growth.

Automotive’s New Reality: Fewer Trips, Fewer Miles, Fewer Cars?

KPMG dives into the post-Covid-19 automotive world:

More than a quarter of adults purchased items in bulk more often, according to a survey of 2,200 Americans conducted by Bloomberg News and Morning Consult. Brands have also fallen out of favor, as 23% of respondents said they purchased generic or store brands more often. In fact, 16% of Americans plan to buy private-label or bulk items even more frequently once the pandemic ends than they did before lockdowns.

EARNINGS WATCH

We now have 47 reports in, a 77% beat rate and a +11.5% surprise factor. Aggregate earnings of the 47 companies having reported are down 43.5% on a -1.4% decline in revenues. Q2 earnings are still expected down 43.2% on a -10.9% revenue hit.

Trailing EPS are now $140.26.

16% of companies raised guidance, and not one company lowered guidance. 

TECHNICALS WATCH

This is a dangerously overvalued equity market, careless about earnings and most other basic equity drivers, seemingly largely influenced by FOMO, TINA, DFTF (don’t fight the Fed) and Big Mo, as well as by the uninitiated crowd often entering this world of apparent “easy, quick money” near the end of long bull runs.

It always ends in pain but we never know when.

Hence the use of smart technical indicators, not to reduce risk, rather to help those willing to endure high fundamental risk calibrate their risk and try to time their exit. Fingers crossed

The blog sidebar lists the main technical indicators I follow. I chose them because they are primarily medium-long-term trend indicators with proven odds (here), they are simple and they make sense. Lowry’s Research, in particular, has its own sensible methods of measuring some key technical factors, including its unique OCO (Operating Companies Only) indicators and its measure of demand and supply.

For each of them, the sidebar shows my own star rating (5 green is the opposite of 5 red) or whether the indicator is simply green or red.

Use these at your own risk!

Lowry’s remains on the bullish side, seeing that equities are consolidating gains within a narrow range with the “uptrend from
the March low intact as sellers remain quiet”. In effect, buyers have paused but sellers are not actively selling. Another way of looking at it could be to say that investors have become wary about valuations but FOMO still dominates.

  • 13/34–Week EMA Trend (CMG Wealth)

Speaking of FOMO, Jason Zweig in the WSJ:

From 1720 to Tesla, FOMO Never Sleeps The South Sea bubble is the classic story of an investing mania. Are investors today any wiser?

(…) Financial bubbles are often cited as proof of irrationality, but what they prove is that investors are human. As one formerly cautious banker, throwing some of his own money into the South Sea, pointed out on June 18, 1720: “When the rest of the world is mad we must imitate them in some measure.” (…)

As word spreads that “everybody” is doing something, it can be hard for anybody to resist joining. Humans have a profound need to belong to a group. Investing in something popular makes us feel popular.

In 18th-century London, coffee houses and ballrooms became centers of market gossip. One woman wrote: “South Sea is all the talk and fashion. The ladies sell their jewels to buy, and happy are they that are in… Never was such a time to get money as now.” (…)

Today, the online platform Reddit teems with speculators boasting about their biggest trades. (…) Seeing many others invest in something sends a powerful, if often inaccurate, signal that it might be a good idea.

That can quickly coalesce into a narrative, in which our imaginations rapidly transport us to different places and times. (“I’ll become rich, just like they did.”) A good story, as the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote, automatically triggers a “willing suspension of disbelief for the moment.” (…)

The South Sea bubble did have many critics at the time. But conformity is a powerful force that can counteract gravity for longer than skeptics often expect. Bubbles are neither rational nor irrational; they are profoundly human, and they will always be with us.

We can debate ad nauseam whether Robinhood users are moving the market or some individual stocks or not. I find it more interesting, and perhaps more revealing, to look at what stocks are mostly attracting this new crowd. The 12 most popular stocks according to robintrack.net are F, GE, AAL, DIS, DAL, AAPL, MSFT, CCL, GPRO, TSLA, ACB and PLUG.

Nine of the top 12 are companies among the most difficult to rationally analyse and value for professional investors. There is clearly a hip-shooting crowd effect.  Bloomberg about TSLA:

Almost 40,000 Robinhood accounts added shares of the automaker during a single four-hour span on Monday, according to website Robintrack.net, which compiles data on the investing platform that’s much beloved by day trading millennials. (…) The frenzy in interest means that as of the end of Monday’s trading session, there are now roughly 457,000 users on the Robinhood app that hold shares of the company in some form.

The number of TSLA holders has grown another 27k last week. Remarkably, the number of holders has multiplied by 2.7 since mid-March and has never declined even though the stock has quadrupled during the period. Long-term investors? More the Big Mo/FOMO types. Greed has taken over.

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Moderna, which just released very preliminary results of an experimental Covid-19 vaccine, was the most popular Robinhood stock last week. If Ford, GE, Disney, American and Delta Airlines and Carnival Cruses were among your top 10 holdings, you sure would hope that Moderna has an effective vaccine…

Amateurs aren’t the only ones chasing returns in momentum stocks. Quant funds and other strategies that trade factors such as momentum and volatility have grown in popularity in recent years. Some of these funds along with individual investors are often quick to buy stocks that are doing well, then can sell just as fast when trading conditions shift. (WSJ)

CBL & Associates Properties Inc., the owner of more than 100 shopping malls across the U.S., is preparing to file for bankruptcy, according to people with knowledge of the plans. (…) Shares of CBL plunged 11% after Bloomberg reported the bankruptcy preparations, and dropped an additional 18% as of 4:40 p.m. in late New York trading. (…)

CBL bonds maturing in 2023 last traded around 25 cents on the dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. (…)

Robinhood bottomfishers have actively bought CBL since March. The stock closed at $0.34 last Thursday, $0.25 Friday and is $0.19 bid this morning, most likely on its way to zero.

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Wall Street Turns Bullish on Biden Those playing the markets see a good chance that Biden will win and Democrats take Congress—and it doesn’t seem to bug them as much as you might think.

(…) It helps that Mr. Biden hasn’t veered left as much as some feared (or some of his primary opponents hoped.) Wall Street sees what generally amounts to a centrist-left economic policy. Mr. Biden is working to make some of the progressives in his party happy, but he hasn’t gone over to them entirely. (…)

Whatever the outcome, UBS sees the election as neutral to positive for the stock market generally. A blue-wave scenario, where Democrats control everything, comes as slightly positive for the economy and neutral for stocks—fiscal expansion is likely to offset tighter regulations and higher taxes. (Only President Biden with a Republican Senate is negative, with increased regulation but limited fiscal stimulus.) (…)

Under a Biden victory, there’s little question that taxes would rise. The 2017 tax law signed by Mr. Trump reduced taxes. Mr. Biden is proposing to erase some of that, which he stands a good chance of doing if Democrats also control the Senate.

Corporate profits would likely take a hit: Moving the corporate tax rate to 28% from 21% would reduce per-share earnings by about 5%, UBS estimates. Goldman puts Mr. Biden’s entire tax program at roughly 12% in 2021—reducing per-share earnings for the S&P 500 to about $150 from about $170.

As a result, you might expect tax-sensitive stocks to be under pressure this summer—but so far, they aren’t, the UBS analysts found.

One interpretation: To Wall Street, the election matters—but the coronavirus is still more important. If the economy continues to struggle in January, as many economists expect, Democrats may not be able to raise taxes by much even if they want to. But if they want to change health care in the midst of a pandemic, or as it’s resolving, they absolutely could do it. (…)

Wall Street self-serving logic in action. The silver lining of a continuously struggling economy would make raising taxes more difficult, at that is positive because it would prevent a 5-15% drop in profits from higher taxes. Never mind the lower aggregate profits resulting from a struggling economy…and the fact that higher taxes would become reality as soon as the economy would finally recover.

FYI:

Some are not so bullish as Barron’s charts:

Insider Transactions Ratio