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Is the Worst of the Economic Damage Behind Us?

Written by Brad McMillan, CFA®, CFP® | Jan 29, 2021 6:11:07 PM

For the moment at least, the big picture continues to be positive. On the medical front, all three major data series—new cases, positive testing rates, and hospitalizations—have continued to trend down, while vaccinations continue to scale up. If current trends continue, we are through the worst of the pandemic and should see continued improvement.

While the trends are positive, the remaining significant risk is that a more contagious variant of the virus could accelerate infection growth, as it has in other countries. Offsetting that risk is the progress in vaccinations. We are now at almost 8 percent of the population having had at least their first shot, up from just under 6 percent last week, and the pace is increasing. While the risk of a new variant is real, as of right now, we do appear to be through the worst of it, and there is a real possibility of continued rapid improvement.

The economic news is still quite weak, but here too we saw positive signs. The federal stimulus bill has improved both confidence and spending, and medical improvements are allowing reopenings in many states around the country. While most of the backward-looking data is weak, the more current data looks better and suggests a recovery is underway. Between the medical improvements and the federal stimulus program, the economy also looks likely to be past the worst of the pandemic damage.

Overall, while the current headlines continue to be bad and real risks remain, there are signs of improvement and reasons to believe we may be past the worst of the pandemic. That continues to be what markets are thinking, as they have stayed close to all-time highs despite some turbulence. Let’s take a look at the details.

Case Growth Continues to Decline

New cases per day. The most obvious metric for tracking the virus is daily new cases. After holiday surges, we have now seen case growth drop back to levels last seen in November before Thanksgiving. The trend continues to be downward, although there is still a risk that a more infectious variant of the virus could push infection rates up again, as seen in other countries. While we need to keep an eye on that risk, so far at least the trend remains positive. Absent that risk, it looks like we are likely past the crest of the third wave.

Looking at the numbers, the improvement is clear. New daily infection rates were 162,633 on January 28, down from 195,394 a week earlier. The seven-day average number of new cases per day was 162,863, down from 192,053 a week ago. While case growth remains high, the good news is that the trend is now downward. If this trend holds, we are past the peak of the third wave.

Source: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/

Hospitalizations. We also see the same trend with hospitalizations, which is even more encouraging. While case reporting has weaknesses in how the data is reported, hospitalizations are much better as a real-time indicator. Here, too, we can see a peak and decline. On January 28, there were 104,303 people hospitalized, down from 119,949 a week earlier. As a coincident indicator and as a better indicator of the stress on the health care system, this supports the idea that the trend has turned.

Source: https://covidtracking.com/data/charts/us-currently-hospitalized

Testing news. We also see that the testing news is showing improvement. Daily testing remains high, and positive rates have substantially declined. This is more supporting evidence for the change in trend and could be a leading indicator of further improvements.

Source: Johns Hopkins University

Vaccinations. Finally, we are now well into the vaccination process. Almost 8 percent of the U.S. population has had at least the first shot of the vaccine, starting with the most vulnerable. This improvement has very likely contributed to the positive change in trend in the other data series. Vaccinations are also likely to accelerate in the coming weeks, which should drive further improvements.

Source: https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations

The bottom line is that while infection growth is still high and some geographic areas are still at risk, the data suggests that we are through the worst of it. Absent a sudden appearance of a more infectious strain of the virus, we are therefore likely to see more improvement in the next couple of weeks. As vaccine deployment accelerates, the downside risks will drop quickly. While the headlines may well continue to look worrying, the progress is very real and will continue.

Economic Damage May Be Moderating

Jobs and consumers. While the backward-looking economic data remains soft, we are seeing improvement in more current indicators as a combination of medical improvement, slow reopening, and the federal stimulus act helps employment and confidence. While the data is preliminary, the increase in spending (as shown in the chart above) shows that impact has already started. Layoffs have also started to trend down again, and job growth is expected to start improving again as economies reopen. With all of this, the data is showing we are likely through the worst of the economic impact of the pandemic.

Source: https://tracktherecovery.org/

Business sector. This improvement is also what the business sector is expecting. Despite the slowing in the consumer economy, business confidence and investment remain at pre-pandemic levels and even have increased a bit in December.

The real question, going forward, is how durable this recovery is. Much of the data has remained solid despite the third wave, suggesting substantial resilience even under substantial stress. As the stress lifts, with the existing and prospective fiscal stimulus package, the medical improvements, and the acceleration in vaccine deployment, the economy now looks like it will keep growing until we start to see consumer confidence and spending bounce back, as we saw after previous waves. While the risks are real, we now see most of the economic risks are moving behind us as well.

Financial Markets Hold Gains on Vaccine and Stimulus News

Markets continued to hold near all-time highs again. We did see some volatility, largely attributed to turbulence within the financial markets themselves. But this too represents progress, as the pandemic is no longer the determinative factor. Despite that turbulence, between the ongoing medical and economic improvements, markets continue to expect a much better 2021 and that has supported prices. Analysts’ earnings estimates also continue to be adjusted upwards, which suggests this positive trend might continue as well.

The Long View

While risks remain, the data says we are moving beyond the third wave of the pandemic and that medical risks are dropping. Similarly, while the economic damage continues, the federal stimulus is limiting the damage until the medical risks decline. The most likely case for the next couple of weeks appears to be continued improvement of the medical news and economic improvement as the stimulus package takes effect. Markets will likely keep bouncing around on new developments, so expect more volatility in the short term.

In the longer term, the good news is that vaccines are now rolling out increasingly quickly. In a couple of months, we should be approaching the end of the pandemic, when the economy can normalize and start to really grow again. The stimulus package should help the economy bridge the gap to that point. Despite the real risks that still remain, we are making progress—and at an accelerating rate.