The Wall Street Journal - 21.03.2020 - 22.03.2020

(Joyce) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Saturday/Sunday, March 21 - 22, 2020 |B


From steelmakers to arts-and-
crafts retailers, companies across the
U.S. are arguing that their operations
are essential, raising questions over
how to preserve as much economic
activity as possible while working to
contain the coronavirus.
Requests from companies to stay
open—for the sake of their workers’
livelihood and the public good—have
continued as more of the country
and many workers retreat to their
homes as the pandemic gains pace.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on
Friday ordered all nonessential busi-
nesses in the state to close as of Sun-
day evening and said residents
should stay home. Illinois Gov. J.B.
Pritzker issued a similar order. Cali-
fornia on Thursday extended a re-
gional lockdown to the state’s entire
population of 40 million. Pennsylva-
nia Gov. Tom Wolf ordered all “non-
life-sustaining” businesses in that
state to close.
The Trump administration on
Thursday identified 16 industries as
critical to the national response to
the pandemic. The Department of
Homeland Security recommended
that states maintain “critical” manu-
facturing operations as well as pro-
duction of food and agriculture. The
agency mentioned sectors including
defense, transportation and energy in
the shutdown-exemption guidelines.
The orders in California and some
other states exempt defense compa-
nies, but some executives said some
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an unprecedented level, in next
Thursday’s report on the U.S. mar-
ket, according to Goldman Sachs.
The bank also said Friday that it
expects U.S. growth to contract 24%
in the second quarter, far outpacing
the largest drop in gross domestic
product on record in the first quar-
ter of 1958, when the economy con-
tracted 10%.
The blue-chip index dropped
913.21 points, or 4.5%, to close Fri-
day at 19173.98 and had been up
2.2% at its high point for the day.
The S&P 500 fell 104.47 points, or
4.3%, to 2304.92. The tech-heavy
Nasdaq Composite dropped 271.
points, or 3.8%, to 6879.52.
All three indexes are down about
30% from their mid-February re-
cords.
The yield on the 10-year U.S.
Treasury note fell back below 1% as
investors sought the safety of gov-
ernment bonds. The yield settled at
0.932%, down from 1.121% Thursday.
Yields move in the opposite direc-
tion from prices. Earlier in the week,
stocks and bonds had tumbled si-
multaneously in a rare lockstep
move.
U.S. oil prices also slid, falling 11%
to $22.43 a barrel to extend their
declines for the week to 29%. Wor-
ries about a price war among the
world’s biggest oil producers and
signs of slowing demand have
sparked the steep fall.
Lawmakers in Washington are
working on a huge stimulus package
to ease the blow from the pandemic;
it encompasses aid to businesses
and individuals and could top $1 tril-
lion. The Federal Reserve has also
taken aggressive steps to ease mar-
ket strains. It has offered to tempo-
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Stocks Finish Worst


Week Since 2008


Dow, S&P lost 4%, with
cumulative declines of

at least 14% for week;
oil sinks 11% to $22.

The coronavirus has un-
leashed a massive economic
shock on the U.S. and the world.
It began with disruptions to
supply chains and restrictions
on travel and is now rapidly ex-
panding via spontaneous and
government-imposed “social dis-
tancing” measures such as clos-
ing schools and confining re-
gional populations to their
homes. Entire industries are
shutting down. It is “a sudden
stop to the global economy,”
said Mohamed El-Erian, an ad-

viser to German insurer Allianz.
There is no clear historical
precedent for the scale and na-
ture of this shock. Some econo-
mists see U.S. output falling by
more in the coming quarter
than in the worst quarter of the
2008-09 recession. Nonethe-
less, previous episodes of pan-
demics, disasters and crises of-
fer clues about what to expect,
how policy makers make mat-
ters better or worse and the
likely long-term consequences.
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A


llie and Chris Lyons, the owners
of a popular farm-to-table restau-
rant called Table 20 in Carters-
ville, Ga., have done the math. In
two weeks, they expect to have
just $6,000 in cash, after cover-
ing payroll, insurance and rent.
The first coronavirus infections in the
Cartersville area were confirmed on March 11.
Amid calls for social distancing and with
sales plummeting, the couple on Monday laid
off all but two of their dozen employees.
They have asked their landlord and lenders
for relief. They have canceled orders on ev-
erything from linens to liquor.
Each of those decisions may be felt far be-
yond Cartersville, a working-class community
of 21,000 an hour outside Atlanta, and helps
show how the troubles of one small business
can ripple through the U.S. economy as the vi-
rus brings commerce and capital to a halt.
Laid-off waitress Casey Brazell is putting
off her dream to buy a new house. A family
farm where Table 20 buys most of its greens
is left without orders. The restaurant’s bank is
losing revenue as it gives breaks to dozens of
businesses. Its credit-card processor in Ari-
zona has frozen its hiring. A tech company in
San Francisco is waiving fees for Table 20 and

scores of other clients.
Confirmed infections in the U.S. surged past
15,000 this week, bringing alarm to both Wall
Street and Main Street. As hospitals scramble to
handle patients, most everything else is shutting
down. Airlines have canceled thousands of
flights. Schools are closed. Malls and auto facto-
ries are dark. Professional sports are suspended.
The crisis from the economic slowdown is
most acute for the smallest businesses, which
tend to operate on thinner profit margins and
with smaller cash reserves. They employ
about 60 million Americans, or nearly half the
private workforce.
With fewer dollars coming in, small busi-
nesses have hard decisions to make about
whether to pay rent, workers or bills from
their supply chain, said William Dunkelberg,
chief economist for the National Federation of
Independent Business. “Somebody is going to
get the short end of it,” he said. “That will
work its way back through the economy.”
Unlike some states, Georgia hasn’t ordered
restaurants closed but Gov. Brian Kemp has
encouraged residents to order takeout or use
the drive-through option to get food and limit
public gatherings to no more than 10 people.
When the Lyonses opened Table 20 in Cart-
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Chain

Reaction

When Table 20 closed its dining room
in Cartersville, Ga., this week, the pain radiated

out to a hydroponic farmer, a tablecloth supplier,
a liquor distributor, a credit-card processor,

a banker and countless others.


The Trade-Off Between


Economy and Health


This isn’t the first time we’ve struggled to
strike the balance. Lessons from past crises.

BYRUTHSIMON


BYBOBTITA
ANDAUSTENHUFFORD

Businesses


PleadtoBe


Deemed


‘Essential’


BYGREGIP,DANNYDOUGHERTY
ANDANTHONYDEBARROS

EXCHANGE

Faulty Memory
Someday, we’ll
all look back on
this and lieB

Alone Time
How Americans
passed the hours
this past weekB

BUSINESS|FINANCE|TECHNOLOGY|MANAGEMENT

DJIA19173.98g913.21 4.5% NASDAQ6879.52g3.8% STOXX 600293.04À1.8% 10-YR. TREAS.À1 26/32 , yield 0.932% OIL$22.43g$2.79 GOLD$1,484.00À$5.40 EURO$1.0697 YEN110.

Table 20, a restaurant outside Atlanta, is only serving takeout now. Its owners have been forced to lay off all but two of their employees and have sharply reduced their own salaries.

U.S. stocks fell Friday as fresh
measures to contain the coronavirus
pandemic spooked investors, cap-
ping off the worst week for the Dow
Jones Industrial Average and S&P
500 since October 2008.
Major indexes opened higher but
pulled back after New York Gov. An-
drew Cuomo ordered the state’s

workforce to stay home. California
and Illinois have issued similar
edicts. Stocks sank further after the
Trump administration said U.S. bor-
ders with Mexico and Canada would
be closed to nonessential travel.
The Dow industrials and S&P 500
lost more than 4%, closing near ses-
sion lows and extending their de-
clines for the week to at least 14%.
The whipsaw moves in markets over
the past month have rattled inves-
tors who even fled traditionally safe
assets like U.S. government bonds
and gold in recent days.
“Unlike in 2008, there’s no place
to hide,” said Scott Martin, chief in-
vestment officer of Kingsview
Wealth Management. “Nobody wants
to own anything except cash.”
The disruption caused by the out-
break in the U.S. and elsewhere is
starting to become apparent: State-
level information suggests jobless
claims could hit more than 2 million,

ByAlexander Osipovich,
Joe Wallace
andChong Koh Ping

DUSTIN CHAMBERS FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


During the 1918 Spanish flu, which killed 675,000 in the U.S., the
federal government did little to help. The economic impact was mild.

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