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: 12 MAY 2020

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  • As Countries Ease Coronavirus Lockdowns, New Cases Crop Up New clusters of coronavirus infections are cropping up in some countries that have already loosened lockdowns, as more governors across the U.S. detailed plans to reopen their states’ economies.
  • The coronavirus pandemic likely killed thousands more people in New York City than official tallies show, according to a federal report.
  • In China, seven provinces have reported new locally transmitted cases over the past two weeks, said Mi Feng, spokesman for China’s National Health Commission. “Clustered cases continued to rise,” he said. Shulan, a city close to the Russian border, has reported an untraced outbreak that has sickened 15 people since last Friday. The city’s mayor said Monday that Shulan is entering a “wartime state” and has placed 290 people who had been in close contact with infected individuals in monitored quarantine centers.
  • Wuhan will test its entire population of 11 million after the Chinese city where the pandemic began reported new infections for the first time since its lockdown was lifted.
  • Russia reported more than 10,000 cases for the 10th straight day, taking it past Spain to second place for confirmed infections behind the U.S. The country added 10,899 infections over past day, up 4.9%, taking the total to 232,243. Fatalities rose to 2,116 after 107 people died in past the day.
  • The White House directed officials to wear masks at all times inside the building except when sitting at their own desks. The president and vice president are not expected to do so.
  • Sweden Revises Covid Strategy After Deaths of Elderly Spiral The nation’s controversial approach is coming under intense scrutiny.
  • a group of experts including Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious-disease official, wrote in Science magazine that the search for a vaccine requires more than one approach. “No single vaccine or vaccine platform alone is likely to meet the global need,” the authors wrote.
  • Twitter said it would start adding labels to tweets that have disputed information about the coronavirus.
CONSUMER WATCH
New York Fed Finds Big Deterioration in Consumer Views in April
  • Of those polled, 31.6% foresaw being worse off financially a year from now, up from the 27.8% the prior month.
  • The bank said that 21.9% of respondents project their incomes will outright fall over the coming year.
  • Households are also getting more worried about their ability to borrow, with 48% of respondents reporting credit access was harder to get in April, up from the 32% who held that view in March.
America Loosens Up as COVID-19 Continues to Expand

The ninth week of the Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index finds social distancing continues to decline as fewer people see visiting friends and family as a major risk. However, about one in eight report knowing someone in their community who tested positive and over three-quarters report wearing a mask when leaving the home.

  • 32% of Americans report visiting friends or relatives in the last week, up from 26% last week and 19% in mid-April.
  • Additionally, the number who report ‘self-quarantining’ is down to 36% from a high of 55% in early April.
  • Two-thirds (64%) of Americans say returning to their pre-coronavirus lives right now would be a large or moderate risk to their health and well-being, down from 72% in mid-April.
  • Fewer Americans are also seeing in-person gatherings (81%->68%), going to the grocery store (70%->54%), or doing their job (39%->33%) as a large or moderate risk compared to mid-April. 
  • Only about a third of Americans say they are likely to opt-in to cell phone based contact tracing systems established by the federal government (31%), major tech companies (33%), or cell phone companies (35%).
  • A bare majority (51%) would join a CDC sponsored cell phone-based system.
PANDENOMICS
  • Many policy makers and corporate executives expect a “swoosh” economic recovery–a large drop followed by a painfully slow recovery.
  • China’s producer-price index dropped by 3.1% from a year earlier in April, compared with a 1.5% fall recorded in March, the National Bureau of Statistics said Tuesday. Prices for crude oil and other commodities collapsed, contributing to the decline in wholesale prices. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had expected the industrial-price gauge to drop by 2.5% year-over-year.
  • FIBER: Industrial Commodity Price Declines Stabilize

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How Did China’s COVID-19 Shutdown Affect U.S. Supply Chains?

This post has illustrated that the disruptions in China due to COVID-19 had significant effects on U.S. supply chains. Imports from China fell by about 50 percent in March relative to January. The disruption led to a shift of U.S. importers to other Asian countries, driven in particular by firms with already established relationships in these countries. While most large U.S. customers continued trading with their Chinese suppliers, smaller U.S. customers appear to have had more difficulty continuing their relationships during the COVID-19 related shutdown.

Going forward, COVID-19 is likely to give further impetus to trends that already began in previous years. It is likely to lead firms to consider bringing some critical activities back to the United States or to set up backup suppliers to reduce the firms’ exposure to any single supplier or country. While introducing such additional safeguards is going to reduce the efficiency of supply chains in normal times, it may well improve performance in the longer run by mitigating the high costs of supply chain disruptions.

  • Toyota Forecasts 20% Drop in Revenue From Coronavirus but the car maker said its operations would manage to stay in the black.
  • United Airlines will give passengers slated to fly on full flights a chance to rebook, after images of packed planes sparked fears about traveling. Most flights are still relatively empty, as demand for air travel has plunged more than 90% since the coronavirus began to spread. United said 85% of its flights are half full. But the number of passengers has started to climb, according to figures from the Transportation Security Administration. At the same time, those travelers are spread between fewer flights as airlines have slashed their schedules by as much as 90%.
Public Pension-Fund Losses Set Record in First Quarter Public pension plans lost a median 13.2% in the three months ended March 31, according to Wilshire Trust Universe Comparison Service data, slightly more than in the fourth quarter of 2008. March’s stock market plummet led to the biggest one-quarter drop in the 40 years the firm has been tracking.

Stocks bounced back in April, making up a significant chunk of the losses. But absent a full and speedy recovery, pension losses are poised to drive up already-burdensome retirement costs for governments.

“There will be a lot of pressure to cut benefits,” said Don Boyd, co-director of the State and Local Government Finance Project at the University at Albany’s Rockefeller College.

State and local governments “are trying to figure out how to not cut school aid too deeply, not cut Medicaid too deeply, not raise taxes,” Mr. Boyd said. “Pension contributions are pretty far down the list of things they want to pay for.” (…)

Even before the record first-quarter losses, public pension plans were $4.1 trillion short of the $8.9 trillion they will need to cover promised future benefits, according to the Federal Reserve. (…)

Aramco Profit Is Hit Hard by Collapse in Oil Prices Saudi Aramco said its first-quarter profit fell and it would cut spending this year, underscoring the twin impact of an oil-price rout and the coronavirus pandemic on the kingdom’s worsening finances.

Saudi Arabian Oil Co., as the state-controlled company is formally known, said Tuesday that net profit fell 25% to 62.5 billion riyals ($16.7 billion), from $22.2 billion in the first quarter a year earlier. Its revenue fell 16% to $60 billion.

The company expects capital spending between $25 billion and $30 billion this year, down from $32.8 billion a year earlier. (…)

Aramco declared a dividend of $18.75 billion in the first quarter, in line with a pledge made when it listed shares in December to pay dividends to minority shareholders of $75 billion this year. (…)

  • Saudi Arabia Imposes Austerity Measures as Its Economy Founders The kingdom said it would triple its value-added tax rate and eliminate allowances for state workers, adopting austerity measures aimed at boosting state finances battered by the coronavirus and lower oil prices.
  • BP chief sees risk of oil demand passing peak as pandemic hits Sustained consumption crunch beyond coronavirus crisis cannot be ruled out, says Bernard Looney
  • Thyssenkrupp AG said Tuesday that its net loss for the second quarter widened amid the coronavirus pandemic, and warned of a hit to its results next quarter. The German industrial conglomerate reported a net loss of €948 million euros ($1.03 billion) for the quarter ended March 31 compared with a loss of €173 million the same period a year earlier. Quarterly net sales fell to €10.11 billion from €10.64 billion, while orders declined 8% to €9.54 billion for the period.
  • BOC Aviation says lessors may have to take back planes later this year Aircraft lessors may need to start taking back some planes in the second half of the year, the CEO of BOC Aviation Ltd (2588.HK) said, adding that the pandemic-hit aviation market could take until 2023 to fully rebound.
PANDEMONIUM
Trump ‘not interested’ in reopening U.S.-China trade deal after report of Beijing discontent

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday he opposed renegotiating the U.S.-China “Phase 1” trade deal after a Chinese state-run newspaper reported some government advisers in Beijing were urging fresh talks and possibly invalidating the agreement.

Trump, who himself has considered abandoning the pact signed in January, told a White House press briefing he wanted to see if Beijing lived up to the deal to massively increase purchases of U.S. goods.

“No, not at all. Not even a little bit,” Trump said when asked if he would entertain the idea of reworking Phase 1. “I’m not interested. We signed a deal. I had heard that too, they’d like to reopen the trade talk, to make it a better deal for them.” (…)

The Global Times said malicious attacks by the United States have ignited a “tsunami of anger” among Chinese trade insiders after China made compromises in the Phase 1 pact.

“It’s in fact in China’s interests to terminate the current Phase 1 deal,” a trade adviser to the Chinese government told the Global Times, citing the weakening U.S. economy and upcoming U.S. presidential elections. “The U.S. now cannot afford to restart the trade war with China if everything goes back to the starting point.” (…)

The Global Times is published by the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of China’s ruling Communist Party. While not an official party mouthpiece, the Global Times’ views are believed at times to reflect those of its leaders.

From Raymond James’ Washington Policy group:

Growing Risk of Return to Confrontation in U.S.-China Relations

Tensions in the U.S.-China relationship, currently amplified due to the spread of COVID-19, are trending negatively and are likely to see a return to confrontation later this year due to underlying political tensions, in our view. This dynamic threatens the stability of the “Phase One” trade deal and global supply chains in the medium-term, and accelerated disengagement and economic decoupling by the U.S. and China over the long term.

We believe the threat may be under-appreciated by the market given the focus on the immediate economic disruption driven by COVID-19 and the belief that China’s follow through on the phase one deal is ultimately good for President Trump’s economic record as he makes his general election pitch. However, we are seeing a whole of government mobilization to increase pressure on China, which will be politically amplified by an election campaign, and may entrench a new confrontational dynamic between the two nations for a significant period. (…)

RJ points out 2 clauses in the trade agreement that China can use to its advantage:

  • Section 6-2 stipulates that the “purchases will be made at market prices based on commercial consideration and that market conditions, particularly in the case of agricultural goods, may dictate the timing of purchases.”
  • Article 7.6 stipulates that “in the event of a natural disaster or other unforeseeable event outside the control of the Parties delays a Party from timely complying with its obligations under this Agreement, the Parties shall consult with each other.”

Another thing getting messy…

Meanwhile, this is phase one of a campaign to restrict U.S. investments in Chinese equity markets:

Trump orders federal retirement money invested in Chinese equities to be pulled The assets at hand number around $4.5 billion in Chinese stocks

President Trump is moving to cut investment ties between U.S. federal retirement funds and Chinese equities, FOX Business has learned in a move that is tied to the handling of COVID 19.

In the first letter written Monday, obtained exclusively by FOX Business, national security adviser Robert O’Brien and National Economic Council Chair Larry Kudlow write to U.S. Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia stating that the White House does not want the Thrift Savings Plan, which is a federal employee retirement fund, to have money invested in Chinese equities that numbers about $4 billion in assets. (…)

The letter directly links China’s handling of COVID-19 as one of several reasons why investment in Chinese companies should not occur. (…)

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FYI:

The
ten largest stocks now represent 44% of the Nasdaq market cap — together, these companies collectively command a 47x P/E multiple on 2020 earnings estimates. We have this lopsided market on a price sense too, not just valuation — the Nasdaq may be up for the year, but three-quarters of the index is still in negative terrain. (David Rosenberg)

Speaking of negative terrain:

Despite Recent Bets, Fed Isn’t Likely to Consider Negative Interest Rates

Last week, futures markets began pricing in the Fed taking overnight rates into negative territory by the end of this year. With Fed officials pushing back against the idea, those bets have moderated but haven’t gone away, with futures now pointing to rates going negative by June of next year. (…)

UBS interest-rate strategists contend that hedging strategies banks are employing against the possibility of rates going below zero are behind the move. Essentially, because negative rates could be so costly for a bank, it is willing to pay up to insure against that risk, leading to an outsize effect on futures pricing. (…)

NY Fed Says It Will Start Buying ETFs The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said Monday that starting Tuesday one of its emergency market support facilities will begin buying corporate-bond exchange-traded funds, in a notable expansion of the central bank’s efforts to support the economy and financial system in the coronavirus crisis.

(…) The move will be a historic milestone for the Fed, which hasn’t bought ETFs previously. The central bank, recognizing it would take longer to buy bonds, saw ETFs as a fast way to direct money rapidly into credit markets, said people familiar with the matter. (…)

Red heart Howard Marks on Uncertainty (Oaktree Capital)

Broken heart In the Republican Party establishment, Trump finds tepid support As the coronavirus continues to claim lives in the United States, some Republican governors and members of Congress are beginning to waver on their support of President Trump. Elaine Kamarck writes that if the Trump administration’s response to COVID-19 does not change, more party fractures are likely to surface.

THE DAILY EDGE: 7 AUGUST 2019

World Economy Edges Closer to a Recession as Trade Fears Spread

(…) New Zealand’s central bank on Wednesday stunned investors by dropping its benchmark rate by 50 basis points, double the expected reduction and sending the kiwi tumbling. Thailand also surprised, cutting by 25 basis points. India’s central bank lowered its rate by an unconventional 35 basis points. (…)

Morgan Stanley economists predict that if the U.S. puts 25% tariffs on all Chinese imports for four to six months and the country hits back, a global economic contraction is likely within three quarters. The tensions also extend beyond the U.S and China to include Japan and South Korea as well as Britain’s future relationship with the European Union. (…)

While central banks would likely cut interest rates and perhaps resume quantitative easing, that may no longer be enough to revive animal spirits this time and governments might not be fast enough to loosen fiscal policy.

“With no end in sight, there are significant downside risks to our forecasts for U.S. and global growth,” Bank of America Corp. economists warned clients this week. “If the trade war escalates — this could include a more explicit currency war — uncertainty would be considerably higher and financial conditions much tighter.” (…)

U.S. JOLTS: Job Openings Rate Slips; Hiring Rate Steadies

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the total job openings rate eased to 4.6% during June from 4.7% in May, revised from 4.6%. It remained below the 4.8% record logged early this year. The job openings rate is the job openings level as a percent of total employment plus the job openings level. The ability to find workers to fill openings remained difficult. The hiring rate held steady at 3.8%. It has been below the openings rate since mid-2014. Employers are still reluctant to let people go. The layoff & discharge rate has returned to the record low of 1.1%. Individuals remain ready to find new work. The quits rate in June held steady at a near-record 2.3% where it’s been since last year.

The private-sector job openings rate also held steady m/m at 4.9%. It remained below the 5.2% record reached in November. The rate has increased from 4.6% early last year and from the 2.0% average at the recession low in 2009. (…) The government sector job openings rate improved to a near-record 3.1%, up sharply from the 2009 low of 1.2%.

Job availability fell slightly m/m, but nevertheless remained plentiful. The level of job openings eased a modest 0.5% (-0.6% y/y) to 7.348 million after improving 0.2% to 7.384 million in May. These figures are just below the record high. Private-sector openings fell 1.8% y/y while government sector job openings jumped by one-third y/y.

Hiring activity remained stable. The private-sector hiring rate held at 4.2% and remained below January’s expansion high of 4.4%.(…) The hiring rate in government remained at 1.6%.

Haver Analytics focuses on opening and hiring rates. I prefer to look at the actual number of openings and hires. Openings have dropped 3.6% since peaking at the end of 2018. The decline is worse in the private sector: –4.8%

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The  YoY trends: total non-farm: openings –0.6%, hires –2.2%. Private sector: openings –1.8%, hires –2.0%.

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Hmmm…how tight is this labor market?

China Keeps Official Yuan Rate Just Stronger Than 7 Per Dollar China set a daily anchor for trading in its currency at the weakest since 2008 but again avoided moving that official rate beyond the symbolic 7-yuan-per-dollar level.
China Deals ‘Body Blow’ to Struggling U.S. Farm Belt Farmers, agricultural groups decry retaliatory move to stop buying U.S. crops and livestock

China’s move will affect farmers raising fuzzy green soybean pods in Illinois, milking cows in California and feeding hogs in North Carolina, all of whom have seen business suffer as a result of tariffs that Chinese officials implemented last year. (…)

Feeding China’s growing appetite has meant big business for the U.S. farm economy. China was one of the biggest export destinations for U.S. agricultural commodities from 2009 to 2017 alongside Canada and Mexico, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In 2017, Chinese buyers imported $19.5 billion in farm goods. (…)

That dropped to $9.1 billion last year as China’s tariffs on U.S. soybeans, pork, milk and other products made them more expensive for importers there, prompting some to seek alternatives and scale back imports from the U.S. Over the first six months of this year, China’s agricultural imports from the U.S. were down 20% from the same period last year. (…) Jim Mulhern, chief executive of the National Milk Producers Federation, said dairy exports to China have dropped 54% so far this year.

Given the scale of China’s agricultural imports, it would be hard for U.S. farmers to make up for those sales even with much higher exports to other nations, economists say. (…)

The USDA last week began signing up farmers for a program that will disperse about $14.5 billion to U.S. farms, following a roughly $10 billion program last year. Farmers say the government payments will help but likely won’t make them whole. (…)

Research firm Trade Partnership Worldwide LLC projected in February that tariffs on U.S. exports could cost the country’s agricultural sector 59,000 to 71,000 jobs over the next two years. (…)

Fingers crossed The sheer scale of China’s need for farm commodities including soybeans make it likely that the country would need to turn to the U.S. eventually, said Terry Reilly, senior agriculture futures analyst at brokerage firm Futures International. (…)

High five Archer Daniels Midland Co. , after reporting a 58.5% decline in quarterly earnings last week, warned that China is becoming more comfortable buying food elsewhere, recently approving poultry imports from Russia and pork shipments from Argentina.

“People find alternatives, and eventually, they become a little bit more comfortable with those alternatives,” said Juan Luciano, ADM’s chief executive. “This is not good for the U.S. farmer. This is not good for the percentage of U.S. in the export markets.” (…)

Cautious calm returns as White House softens trade war rhetoric

Confused smile This Reuters’ headline is not supported by any factual “White House rhetoric” in the body of the article. I searched around and really found nothing to support that. Same with this other Reuters’ headline: Trump dismisses fears of long-lasting trade war

Tariff Fears Caused a U.S. Import Surge. Now Warehouses Are Full

A short drive outside Los Angeles lies one of the world’s biggest warehouse complexes. Gene Seroka says its 1.8 billion square feet of capacity — enough room to house 9 million cars — is “bursting at the seams.”

The warehouse district is part of the Inland Empire, serving the port of Long Beach and the twin port of Los Angeles, where Seroka is executive director. Together they handle almost half of American’s maritime trade with China. If you live in the U.S., especially the western half, your toothbrush, television or shoes may well have passed through the Empire. (…)

Now, Seroka says that spare room is down to an unprecedentedly low level of about 1%-2%. Try to squeeze in more stuff, in other words, and it’ll be impossible to drive forklifts around or even walk the aisles. (…)

Reuters’ Exclusive: China warns India of ‘reverse sanctions’ if Huawei is blocked – sources

China has told India not to block its Huawei Technologies [HWT.UL] from doing business in the country, warning there could be consequences for Indian firms operating in China, sources with knowledge of the matter said.

India is due to hold trials for installing a next-generation 5G cellular network in the next few months, but has not yet taken a call on whether it would invite the Chinese telecoms equipment maker to take part, telecoms minister Ravi Shankar Prasad has said. (…)

A high-level group of officials, led by the Principal Scientific Adviser to the Indian government K Vijay Raghavan and including representatives from the departments of telecoms, information technology and the intelligence services, has been looking into whether to open the 5G trials to Huawei.

The committee has found no evidence to suggest Huawei has used “back-door” programs or malware to collect data in its current operations in India, the first source and another official in the federal telecoms ministry said.

The interior ministry, which is responsible for the security of the infrastructure, had issued no directive to curtail Huawei’s entry, the telecoms official said.

“We can’t simply reject them just because they are Chinese,” said the official. (…)

Global Oil Prices Slide Into Bear Market Brent crude has fallen more than 20% from an April high amid fresh concerns that the U.S.-China trade war will hurt the global economy and curb fuel consumption.

(gasbuddy.com)

Heavy-Duty Truck Orders Hit Lowest Level in Nine Years Decline comes as truckers point to excess capacity and dimming industrial shipping demand

(…) FTR, which tracks equipment purchases by freight transportation carriers, said orders for heavy-duty trucks in North America fell to 9,800 in July, down 82% from a year ago. Separately, ACT Research said it counted 10,200 orders last month, the fewest it has measured in a month since February 2010. Figures for both groups were preliminary, with final reports due later this month. (…)

DAT Solutions LLC, which matches available trucks to companies looking to move goods in trucking’s spot market, said its measure of capacity in that arena was up 22.6% in July from a year ago while demand was down 37.3%. Several trucking companies said in their second-quarter earnings reports that increases in contract rates also have pulled back since the start of the year.

Truckers say a big part of the waning demand comes from weakness in the manufacturing sector. (…) FTR now expects factory output of heavy-duty trucks to decline 22% next year to about 275,000 units, down from the 353,000 units forecast for 2019, Mr. Ake said. (…)

America’s Pension Funds Fell Short in 2019 Public plans with more than $1 billion in assets earned a median return of 6.79% for the year ended June 30, the lowest since 2016

Public pension plans fell short of their projected returns this year, adding to the burden on governments struggling to fund promised benefits to retired workers. (…) Public pension plans project a median long-term return of 7.25%, according to data collected by Wilshire Associates in 2018. (…)

But those returns still haven’t brought pension funding levels close to what is needed to pay for future benefits. State and local pension plans have about $4.4 trillion in assets according to the Federal Reserve, $4.2 trillion less than they need to pay for promised future benefits. Contributing factors include increasing lifespans, overoptimistic return assumptions, and government decisions to skimp on pension payments. (…)

Robots and firms

(…) Figure 1, constructed from the ESEE dataset, provides a clear indication that firm heterogeneity in the adoption of robots matters greatly for the labour market effects of robot technology. It demonstrates that firms that adopted robots between 1990 and 1998 (‘robot adopters’) increased the number of jobs by more than 50% between 1998 and 2016, while firms that did not adopt robots (‘non-adopters’) reduced the number of jobs by more than 20% over the same period. From macro-level information on robot use, as employed in the existing literature, it is impossible to identify and investigate this striking pattern in the data. (…)

Figure 1 Evolution of firm-level employment for robot adopters versus non-adopters

Notes: The figure depicts the evolution of average firm-level employment (measured by the number of workers) in a balanced sample of firms from 1990-2016, separately for robot adopters (solid black line) and non-adopters (dashed grey line). Robot adopters are defined as firms that entered the sample in 1990 and had adopted robots by 1998. Non-adopters are firms that never use robots over the whole sample period.

We provide strong support for a hitherto neglected mechanism, namely, that robot adopters expand their scale of operations and create jobs, while non-adopters experience negative output and employment effects in the face of tougher competition with high-technology firms. Aggregate productivity gains are partly driven by substantial intra-industry reallocation of market shares and resources following a more widespread diffusion of robot technology, and a polarization between high-productivity robot adopters and low-productivity non-adopters.