Summary of Potential Economic Outcome - Coronavirus
Hope everyone is well,
I am sure that we are all getting lots of coronavirus updates.
In Europe, governments have been introducing lockdown policies of varying degrees of severity to try to prevent the spread of the virus and the consequent enormous strains put on the health services. Italy, Spain and France have introduced the most draconian measures whilst the UK government has ordered people to stay at home with only essential journeys to supermarkets, pharmacies and exercise allowed.
However, for those of you wanting a more in-depth analysis of the potential economic impact of COVID 19, the summary below from a Goldman Sachs investee call is probably the best I have seen to date.
Some key economic takeaways were:
- 50% of Americans will contract the virus (150m people) as it’s very communicable. This is on a par with the common cold (Rhinovirus) of which there are about 200 strains and which most Americans will get 2-4 times per year.
- 70% of Germany will contract it (58M people). This is the next most relevant industrial economy to be affected.
- Peak-virus is expected over the next eight weeks, declining thereafter.
- The virus appears to be concentrated in a band between 30-50 degrees north latitude, meaning that like the common cold and flu, it prefers cold weather. The coming summer in the northern hemisphere should help. This is to say that the virus is likely seasonal.
- Of those impacted, 80% will be early-stage, 15% mid-stage and 5% critical-stage. Early-stage symptoms are like the common cold and mid-stage symptoms are like the flu; these are stay-at-home for two weeks and rest. 5% will be critical and highly weighted towards the elderly.
- The mortality rate, on average of up to 2%, heavily weighs towards the elderly and immunocompromised, meaning up to 3m people (150m*.02). In the US about 3m/year die mostly due to old age and disease, those two being highly correlated (as a per cent very few from accidents). There will be significant overlap, so this does not mean 3m new deaths from the virus, it means elderly people dying sooner due to respiratory issues. This may, however, stress the healthcare system.
- There is a debate as to how to address the virus pre-vaccine. The US is tending towards quarantine. Other nations may tend towards allowing it to spread so that the population can develop natural immunity. Quarantine is likely to be ineffective and result in significant economic damage but will slow the rate of transmission giving the healthcare system more time to deal with the caseload.
- China’s economy has been largely impacted which has affected raw materials and the global supply chain. It may take up to six months for it to recover.
- The global GDP growth rate will be the lowest in 30 years at around 2%.
- S&P 500 will see a negative growth rate of -15% to -20% for 2020 overall.
- There will be economic damage from the virus itself, but the real damage is driven mostly by market psychology. Viruses have been with us forever. Stock markets should fully recover in the 2nd half of the year.
- In the past week, there has been a conflating of the impact of the virus with the developing oil price war between KSA and Russia. While reduced energy prices are generally good for industrial economies, the US is now a large energy exporter, so there has been a negative impact on the valuation of the domestic energy sector. This will continue for some time as the Russians are attempting to economically squeeze the American shale producers and the Saudi’s are caught in the middle and do not want to further cede market share to Russia or the US.
- Technically the market generally has been looking for a reason to reset after the longest bull market in history.
- There is no systemic risk. No-one is even talking about that. Governments are intervening in the markets to stabilize them, and the private banking sector is very well-capitalized. It feels more like 9/11 than it does like 2008
If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact us here at Forth Capital.
Best regards,
Tom Tracy