Barron's - USA (2020-08-03)

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August 3, 2020 BARRON’S 7


UP & DOWN WALL STREET


“Never before has fiscal and monetary stimulus


matched the nation’s nominal output in a single


quarter,”wrote economist Joseph Carson.


Dismal First: Uncle Sam’s Aid


To U.S. Tops Quarterly GDP


Clearly, the second quarter was the


best of times for these behemoths,


while the worst of times for the econ-


omy in the U.S. and abroad. Yet the


situation could have been vastly worse


without the unprecedentedly large and


prompt response by the U.S. fiscal and


monetary authorities.


Joseph Carson, the former chief


economist for AllianceBernstein who


warned of a record second-quarter


GDP drop in this space ahead of his


former Wall Street peers last March,


estimates that the Federal Reserve and


federal government pumped about $


trillion into the U.S. economy in the


three months ended in June, which


compared to nominal GDP of $4.


trillion, measured on a quarterly,


rather than annual, basis. “Never be-


fore has the scale of fiscal and mone-


tary stimulus matched the nation’s


nominal output in a single quarter,”


Carson wrote on his LinkedIn blog.


As the nation’s output suffered


a record decline in the second


quarter—some $500 billion in


current-dollar terms—he calculates


that the market value of domestic


companies increased by $7 trillion.


And the stock market’s capitalization


hit two times nominal GDP, eclipsing


the previous record of 1.87 times at


the peak of the dot-com bubble in


2000’s first quarter. “In other words,


the 2020 equity market is the most


expensive (or overvalued) in our


lifetime,” Carson concluded.


David Rosenberg, who heads Rosen-


berg Research, further points out the


key role that Uncle Sam has played in


supporting American households.


While wages and salaries plunged at a


$680 billion annual rate, personal in-


come soared by $1.386 trillion in the


quarter, owing to $2.419 trillion in


transfer payments. But the 32.6% an-


nual rate of increase in personal in-


come was met with a 34.6% rate of


decline of spending, as households


boosted their savings rate to a record


25.7% from 9.5% in the first quarter.


Some of those stimulus checks


evidently found their way into stock


speculation, especially among bored


sports gamblers who didn’t have


games to bet on, as noted here a


couple of months ago.


The latest darling of Robinhood’s


merry band of day traders isEast-


man Kodak(KODK), which bears


little resemblance to the former pho-


tography giant that once was among


the 30 august Dow Jones industrials.


News of a $765 million government


loan to help the company start mak-


ing generic-drug ingredients sent


Kodak shares soaring over 1,000%


this past week, despite their 20%


drop on Friday.


Kodak was the most popular stock


on Robinhood this past week, our


colleague Al Root says, based on


tracking by Robintrack.net. Curiously,


daily volume in Kodak shares surged


above one million shares—10 times


the usual total—on Monday, the day


before the news of the loan that


excited traders became public.


So, instead of bread and circuses, we


have the stock market to deflect from


the ongoing pandemic, social unrest,


and steep unemployment. The July jobs


report, due out on Friday, should show


another increase in nonfarm payrolls,


which will be bolstered by seasonal


adjustments that will add one million


to the tally, according to RBC Capital


Markets economists.


What remains key is the ongoing


support from fiscal policy, not just the


$600 weekly payments to those out of


work, but also aid to state and local


governments that, Rosenberg points


out, account for 10% of GDP.


So far, Uncle Sam has provided that


support by borrowing at record-low


interest rates. But late on Friday, Fitch


Ratings revised its outlook for the na-


tion’s credit to negative, owing to the


deterioration in its finances evident


before the coronavirus shock. However,


America retained its top AAA credit


rating from Fitch because of the bene-


fits it gets from issuing the world’s pre-


eminent reserve currency. A credit


By Randall W.


Forsyth


Treasury Secretary


Steve Mnuchin has


helped craft the huge


reession-aid bills.


N


ever let a serious


crisis go to waste,


as Rahm Emanuel


famously observed


when he was Presi-


dent Barack


Obama’s chief of


staff. The inverse also appears to be the


rule in Washington: In the absence of a


crisis, not much seems to get done.


Back in the spring, with the U.S.


economy in the midst of its most se-


vere collapse on record, Congress and


the Trump administration came to-


gether to craft the Cares Act. The mea-


sure’s $2.3 trillion total was stunning,


but crucial in preventing an even


worse outcome than the annualized


32.9% contraction in U.S. gross do-


mestic product in the second quarter,


reported this past week.


But as a key provision of the act—


an extra $600 a week for unemploy-


ment insurance recipients—expired


on Friday, the crisis atmosphere had


faded. The apparent complacency in


Washington seems to run counter to


the renewed rise in coronavirus cases


in much of South and West, which in


turn has stalled high-frequency eco-


nomic indicators, notably weekly


unemployment claims, which ticked


up for the second straight week.


The key difference between the


crisis-wracked days of the spring and


the seemingly less anxious ones of


midsummer would appear to be the


stock market.


After Thursday morning’s head-


lines of the second-quarter GDP


plunge came stunningly strong


earnings reports, late in the after-


noon, from the four key leaders of the


technology-stock vanguard,Apple


(ticker: AAPL),Amazon.com


(AMZN),Facebook(FB), and Google


Tasos Katopodis/Getty ImagesparentAlphabet(GOOGL).

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