Barron\'s - 16.03.2020

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36 BARRON’S March 16, 2020


THE ECONOMY


In The Wall Street Journal’s latest poll of


economists, 49% said they see a recession


in the next year, up from 26% a month ago.


T


his coronavirus is


novel not only for


its first appearance


in humans, but also


for the impact it


stands to have on


the world economy.


The threat is unprecedented and the


ultimate toll uncertain.


The unfolding calamity is at turns


similar to the financial crisis, marked


by market dislocation; the Sept. 11 ter-


rorist attacks, whichaffected consumer


behavior; and adverse weather events


like the polar vortex in 2019 that kept


swaths of people home-bound and


visibly dented economic growth.


Predicting the impact has been a real


bear (pardon the reference). China’s


data aren’t trustworthy. Italy has only


just begun to come to terms with the


impact. Limited testing in the U.S. isn’t


accurately measuring the spread. Just


three weeks ago, the consensus mood


was of modest concern, at least as far as


the domestic economic impact.


“Within a very short period of time,


the world has become obsessed with


the coronavirus,” says David Kelly,


chief global strategist at J.P. Morgan


Funds. “Even since Monday, I’ve be-


come substantially more pessimistic,”


he said on Friday morning, adding


that a recession now seems inevitable.


Yet the piecemeal response across


the U.S. and the still-developing fall-


out mean it’s futile to compare this to


any prior economic shock or other


country’s response. After all, the U.S.


isn’t China, with an authoritarian


government that can seal off cities,


or Italy, with its far-smaller economy.


What we do know is that reported


cases—even if underrepresenting the


problem—are ballooning, prompting


school closures, canceled events, and


social distancing. Such measures,


though they may help limit the spread


of the virus and prevent a protracted


recession or slowdown, will no doubt


hurt the domestic economy in the near


term. Cancelled events mean that con-


sumers aren’t traveling, buying food


and drinks, staying in hotels, or just


generally spending money. They also


mean that companies might not need


to be fully staffed, putting some


Americans’ paychecks in doubt.


Economists, racing to keep up with


developments and adjust their models,


are split on whether the shock pushes


the U.S. economy into recession. In


The Wall Street Journal’s latest poll of


economists, conducted on March 6-10,


49% said they see a recession in the


next year, up from 26% a month ago.


Bond and oil markets are flashing


recession warnings, and betting mar-


kets reflect rising recession odds.


Whether the U.S. tips into recession


depends on whether activity does in


fact turn negative in the second quarter


and whether it snaps back in the third


quarter, since a recession is defined by


two consecutive quarters of negative


growth. For economists at Barclays,


contraction in the second and third


quarters is the worst-case scenario,


followed by a recovery thereafter.


J.P. Morgan’s Kelly, meanwhile,


now sees at least a 25% drop in restau-


rant sales and a 60% to 70% decline


in hotels and airline revenue, which,


added to other declines, will take five


percentage points off second-quarter


gross domestic product and two


points off third-quarter GDP before


growth resumes in the fourth quarter.


Reflecting the wide variance in


GDP predictions, the Federal Reserve


Bank of New York is forecasting 1.1%


second-quarter growth with its real-


timeNowcast as of Friday.


As markets hope for some sort of


fiscal response, some companies have


tried to soften the blow to their work-


ers.Starbucks(ticker: SBUX) says it


would pay its U.S. workers during a


14-day quarantine required by expo-


sure to the virus;McDonald’s(MCD),


that it would pay certain employees if


they need to be quarantined; and


Darden(DRI), owner of Olive Garden


and other restaurant chains, that it’s


working to provide paid sick leave to


some 180,000 hourly workers. It re-


mains to be seen how far responses by


Corporate America will go to help


mitigate the outbreak’s impact.


A hit from the virus hasn’t really


shown up in the data yet; initial job-


less claims, the best high-frequency


gauge for measuring the impact, fell in


the most recent week, a reminder that


it is too soon to predict the extent of


the outbreak’s impact. Consumer con-


fidence as measured by the University


of Michigan through March 11 slipped,


but remains close to record highs.


Another bit of perspective: Half of


the economists in the WSJ survey are


still not predicting a recession. Nancy


Lazar at Cornerstone Macro is one of


them, and she and her team say their


own Recession Risk Index is actually


moving lower, not higher.


“Recession odds are falling, as U.S.


energy prices, mortgage rates, and


global bond yields decline,” Lazar


says. She says some of the index’s in-


puts do call for a recession, including


the yield curve and corporate profit


margins, and she notes that Corner-


stone’s daily consumer confidence


survey shows that sentiment has


fallen to the lowest level since late



  1. But most of the index’s other


factors still suggest otherwise.


Whether the U.S. does fall into


recession this year is less important


than how quickly and robustly the


rebound occurs. Even those with dire


near-term projections see growth


resuming by the end of the year and


into 2021—offering a dose of opti-


mism for investors already hunkering


down and living off hoards of non-


perishables that, coincidentally, will


boost first-quarter GDP and help


support full-year GDP.B


By Lisa Beilfuss


The Virus’ Impact on


Growth Will Be Novel


Your GDP Estimate Is as Good as Ours


Source: Cornerstone Macro

Cornerstone Macro's Recession Risk Index has been moving lower, not higher, as the


coronavirus impact plays out. Other economists' growth predictions are all over the map.


1960 ’70 ’80 ’90 2000 ’10 ’20

0

20

40

60

80

100

Above average


recession risk


Below average


recession risk

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