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Three Things Under the Radar This Week

Published 03/27/2020, 06:41 PM
Updated 03/27/2020, 06:42 PM
© Reuters.

By Yasin Ebrahim and Kim Khan

Investing.com - The Covid-19 pandemic is pushing and pulling the markets into all kinds of uncharted territory.

Even those just looking at the major equity indexes would have a tough time looking away from the screens this week, where big moves on small amounts of information were common.

While bulls cheered this week’s action, there were already questions about whether the bears could really be gone. The consumer was predictably downbeat, but how did that compare historically? And is even looking at current economic data an antiquated idea?

Here are three things that flew under the radar this week.

1. Wall Street Debates Bottom as Wild Swings Continue

The wild ride on Wall Street continued this week as the Dow's slump on Friday, did little to take the shine off its best week since 1938. The milestone arrived after a three-day rally through Thursday saw the index end its three-week bear market, its shortest on record, stoking hopes that the bottom may be in.

But some on Wall Street remain wary of calling a bottom.

Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) identified two conditions that need to be met before any talk of market bottom can be taken seriously: The pace of Covid-19 infections will have to flatten in the U.S. and Europe and visibility will needed on how long the two respective economies will take to recover.

But there is little hope the pace of infection is nearing the end game. The U.S. has seen surge in infections this week, surpassing that of Italy and China.

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Meanwhile, several companies in the U.S. and Europe have recently pulled their guidance, underscoring the lack of visibility on the impact of the virus.

The wave of stimulus rolled out by the federal government and the Federal Reserve, however, has some convinced the market has bottomed.

"I found the rally off the bottom in the few couple days impressive. I think it’s gone as far as it should go," billionaire investor Lee Cooperman told CNBC. "The market is in the zone of fair valuation. Until we get more of a handle on the virus, I would think that one should be very defensive."

2. No Silver Bullet for Sentiment

The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index’s final March reading was the biggest drop since the Great Recession in 2008, down 11.9.

But a more comparable decline was likely the 11.8-point drop after the invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, the survey publishers said.

In that case, sentiment had turned around by March 1991, when the reading posted an all-time gain of 17.3 points. The two readings bookended the 1990-1991 U.S. recession.

The index can be expected to decline further in the months ahead, like in 1990, but any sort of bounce-back is uncertain.

“The extent of additional declines in April will depend on the success in curtailing the spread of the virus and how quickly households receive funds to relieve their financial hardships,” the university said. “Mitigating the negative impacts on health and finances may curb rising pessimism, but it will not produce optimism.”

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“There is no silver bullet that could end the pandemic as suddenly as the military victory that ended the Gulf war.”

3. A Fog Rolls in Over the Data

When it comes to economic data, there is also the possibility that we’re in a new landscape where the old rules don’t apply, and we don’t even know it.

The March U.S. employment report is coming Friday, April 3. Normally this would be a must-see event. But maybe investors would be better served spending the time on something else.

University of Michigan Economics Professor Justin Wolfers speculated on a Twitter thread Thursday that the numbers aren’t going to be reliable for a while.

The jobs report will be on “data on unemployment and payrolls from the 2nd week of March which is before the coronavirus shutdown,” Wolfers tweeted. “So we need to wait six weeks, until May 8, when we'll get numbers on the April labor market.”

GDP won’t capture the major effects until the Q2 release, which is July 30, and managers can reply any time for ISM March numbers, so that won’t be a true picture, he added.

Relying on initial claims? The unemployment insurance landscape will completely change with the fiscal stimulus package, he said.

“Point is, social isolation has so completely changed economic life that the historical relationship of any individual indicator with the state of the economy has likely shifted, perhaps dramatically,” Wolfers said.

“Bottom line: We're sailing into an economic data fog.”

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Latest comments

So, the monitors blocked my comment because I challenged the hateful Dutch Donkey's comment below. His reference to U.S. citizens as "Amrici" instead of Americans is classic J I H A D I terminology. How about removing his comment!
only ones making real money is shorts 🤔
Everyone think that way, Little tip for you.If want win on short make sure you got enough money to cover the margin. If you play small like micro lot, no meaning to short.
Crisis what?the world turn 360 degree good or bad. Treat the Market like the weather?Sunnyday or Storms
we will have to see. technically we all saw the daily chart. nice V. but I'm afraid that calling any sort of bottom is interesting to say the least. I'm not bear or Bull and just trade the charts up or down. but if I were to give an opinion my bias is another corrective move to the downside. if we are not careful there could be a capitulation and a serious drop as people liquidate shares. so I'm interested to see the price action after the gap down Monday. good luck all
How'd you know if it's going tho gap down Monday? Futures can flip it overnight or start the market opening at same levels it was on Friday close.
April will see surge in stock markets bears will be active
This is an optimistic path when there are too many unknowns.  The rally so far is a bull trap where longs feel they are in control again.  The 35% drop is the fastest in history and is a warning sign that a recession/depression lies ahead for years.  The inverted yield curve and extreme bond prices are also warnings.  Everyone is ignoring the warnings.  We have completed just 1 month into possibly the greatest economic downturn in our history and analyst say buy?   That is a recipe for disaster.   Study the charts from 2020 to 1929.  The markets are saying something very bad is about to happen.
Agreed. I would also like to add that the 20% rule that people use to define bull/bear markets is totally meaningless. In a high volatility regime, 20% means a lot less than it does in a low volatility regime. And if you look at a different asset like bitcoin, for example, a 20% move from highs to lows would mean that it enters a bear market almost every other week. It's all relative to the volatity regime. When I see media outlets talking about bull markets returning right now, it reeks of hopium and sentiment manipulation. Which makes the case for a bull trap even stronger.
Everything is not just 3
I can never figure out who a why writes those articles unless they are needed to make up for a lack or a good and relevant content - totally useless.... also, No one should seriously consider GS statements... not after Mortgage Meltdown :)
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