The economic data is unambiguously awful and will get much worse: Morning Brief

In this article:

Friday, March 20, 2020

Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox every Monday to Friday by 6:30 a.m. ET. Subscribe

There may be only one antidote for the market

As the grim numbers tied to the coronavirus crisis continue to climb, economic data has begun to deteriorate at a staggering pace.

On Thursday, we learned weekly initial jobless claims jumped to a two-year high of 281,000. And economists say it’s on track to surge to north of a million when it’s reported again next week.

“State-level anecdotes point to an unprecedented surge in layoffs this week,” Goldman Sachs’ Jan Hatzius wrote in a note to clients on Thursday night. “These anecdotes suggest that the next jobless claims report covering the week of March 15-21 will show that initial claims rose to roughly 2? million, the largest increase in initial jobless claims and the highest level on record.”

We also learned the Philly Fed’s manufacturing activity index crashed to an eight-year low of -12.7 in March from a three-year high of 36.7 in February. This follows the NY Fed’s Empire State Manufacturing index, which also dropped at a record pace to an 11-year low.

In a research report published on Thursday, Bank of America economists predicted the U.S. economy would lose 3.5 million jobs in what’s now looking like an unavoidable recession, which could see GDP plummeting at a 12% pace in the second quarter.

Business graph with arrows tending downwards
All the numbers are going down.

Meanwhile, the information coming from Corporate America continues to be troubling as executives on the front lines of business don’t know where things are heading.

Darden Restaurants (DRI) is the latest in a growing list of companies withdrawing its outlook for earnings amid uncertainty. On the other hand, General Mills (GIS) continues to offer earnings guidance, but notes: “The impact of the recent COVID-19 virus outbreak on the company’s full-year fiscal 2020 results is still uncertain.“

And so markets continue to swing wildly.

‘The only acceptable antidote’

What could help appease markets?

“A less negative and hopefully POSITIVE stream of headlines on coronavirus (COVID- 19 virus) is most likely the only acceptable antidote the stock market is yearning for right now,” BMO’s Brian Belski said on Wednesday.

Unfortunately, there doesn’t seem to be a good credible forecast for when that will happen.

“So what happens next?” JPMorgan’s Marko Kolanovic asked rhetorically on Thursday. “On the virus side we and likely no one knows, but we are not expecting a significant improvement and macroeconomic fundamentals have significantly deteriorated.”

It really is that simple (or complicated). Once health officials can really wrap their heads around COVID-19 and the curve flattens, we will move from the crisis phase of this event to the phase where we begin to fix things in the economy so it can grow again. It’s at that point we’ll also probably see the market finally bottom.

By Sam Ro, managing editor. Follow him at @SamRo

What to watch today

Economy

  • 10 a.m. ET: Existing home sales (expected seasonally adjusted total of 5.55 million units in February; 5.46 million units in January)

READ MORE

Top News

BERKELEY, CA - NOVEMBER 16: General view of the Golden Gate Bridge and downtown San Francisco skyline engulfed in fog which sets the scene prior to a college football game between the California Golden Bears and USC Trojans at California Memorial Stadium on November 16, 2019 in Berkeley, California. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)
General view of the Golden Gate Bridge and downtown San Francisco skyline engulfed in fog. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)

40 million Californians ordered to stay home to halt virus [AP]

European stocks rise amid investor optimism about stimulus measures [Yahoo Finance UK]

Walmart to hire 150,000 people amid coronavirus, to give $550 million in cash bonuses [Yahoo Finance]

Carnival Cruises pitches to Trump to turn its ships into floating hospitals as it posts $781M loss [Yahoo Finance UK]

YAHOO FINANCE HIGHLIGHTS

Mike Pence's office abruptly cancels CDC official's interview on coronavirus

Why businesses might ‘walk away’ from Trump’s coronavirus aid

How companies are stepping up to ease coronavirus hardships

Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, SmartNews, LinkedIn, YouTube, and reddit.

Find live stock market quotes and the latest business and finance news

For tutorials and information on investing and trading stocks, check out Cashay

Advertisement