Published
7 months agoon
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Good morning. Asia and Europe are mostly lower as the global coronavirus case load continues to spike, particularly in parts of Asia and the Americas. U.S. futures have swung decidedly lower, too. That’s despite encouraging economic data and renewed talk of a new round of stimulus goodies.
Let’s check in on the action.
Pandemic forecasting is a fool’s errand. Economists go into the exercise knowing full well their predictions of the future will be wrong—either by a lot, or by a little less than a lot.
As new data come in, they tweak their models, and tweak it again. But, we find, there’s still little consensus on how bad things will get, or, crucially, when a recovery will begin. Does Secretary Mnuchin have any unique insight into the economy when he testified yesterday that the U.S. should emerge from recession by year-end? Or do we listen to the Fed, which, only a week earlier, said, forget about 2020?
In a pandemic, it’s probably wise not to put too much weight into any one forecast. Something like the Citi Economic Surprise index would be a better indicator. What’s the surprise index? It’s a measure of how much the official economic data comes in above or below the aggregate of economists’ forecasts. Here’s what you need to know about the index: a positive reading means the data is surprising to the upside—that is, the actual numbers are better than all those forecasted numbers.
The surprise index has—surprise!—not only turned positive, but it’s at a record high. In fact, we’ve gone from a record-low (the economic warning signs were worse than expected) at the end of April, to a record-high this week. That’s leading analysts at BofA, for one, to conclude the U.S. is on the upward “V” of what will be an “ultra-short” recession, and that corporate earnings will pick up dramatically in the short term. That’s closer to Mnuchin’s optimistic call yesterday than the Fed’s gloomy call last week.
Here’s their longer take:
And this is what the index looks like, courtesy of Raymond James. Cast your eye to the bottom right where you can see the vertiginous drop and then a rocket-launch rebound.
In the past two days, we’ve had some data points that suggest the global economy is undoubtedly beginning to rebound, and rebound strongly. Yesterday, it was PMI numbers. “The big picture is that the economy is now on the road to recovery following the coronavirus lockdowns,” Andrew Hunter, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics, was quoted saying in the WSJ yesterday. Last week, it was surprisingly strong retail sales in the U.S. and Britain.
Taken together, it’s beginning to read: the economy is recovering at a faster rate than predicted.
Not sure if that’s enough to justify these lofty stock prices, but the macro picture is looking better.
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Have a nice day, everyone. I’ll see you here tomorrow.
Bernhard Warner
@BernhardWarner
Bernhard.Warner@Fortune.com
A note from my Fortune colleagues on a timely new initiative:
Many companies are speaking out against racial injustices right now. But how do they fare in their own workplaces? Black employees in the corporate world, we want to hear from you: Please submit your anonymous thoughts and anecdotes here. https://bit.ly/WorkingWhileBlack
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