Many millions of Americans are struggling right now, and it's really really sad. The crushing economic toll of COVID-19 is creating huge cracks in the U.S. economy as the U.S. has now become the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic. I am going to cut right to the chase. We believe a recession is imminent.
Initial Jobless Claims just absolutely SHATTERED every record last week, including the Bloomberg Consensus estimate.
The loss of individual livelihood and collective consumption capacity is unprecedented with undeniable critical implications for a consumption-depended economy like the U.S. However, the U.S. economy has already been slowing even before the pandemic started.
The Economic cycle only goes one way from here when Jobless Claims do what they just did. With this much anxiety and tremendous uncertainty across the world today, it is crucial that you understand the key investing implications of this challenging environment and manage the risk you are taking with your investment.
Investors need to take a proactive approach and say goodbye to the old Buy & Hold methods and face risk head on and position your investments to where the economy is heading next. As Wayne Gretzky famously said: "Skate to where the puck is going, not to where it is." That's how smart investors win long term.
This just the beginning—be careful out there.
The United States set some records last week:
First, we became the epicenter of the COVID-19
pandemic. Popular Science explained: “An increase of 15,000 known cases in just one day pushed the United States past Italy and China, making it the new epicenter of the pandemic…Experts suspect the actual number of U.S. cases is much higher than currently reported…the United States has tested a far lower percentage of its large population than other hard-hit countries.”
On Friday, March 27, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reported there were 103,321 confirmed cases and 1,668 deaths in the United States.
Second, as businesses across the country closed, leaving many workers without income, first-time claims for unemployment benefits hit an all-time high of 3.3 million. The previous record of 695,000 was set in 1982, during one of the deepest recessions the United States had experienced to date.
Third, Congress passed the biggest aid package in history. The $2.2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES) was signed into law last week. The CARES Act authorizes financial support for workers and businesses, including:
Relief checks. If you earn less than $75,000, and file taxes singly, you can expect a one-time payment of $1,200. If you’re married, you and your spouse will each receive a check. Children will receive $500 each. Social Security benefit recipients will receive checks, too.
Higher unemployment benefits. CARES raised unemployment benefits by $600 a week for four months.
Tax credits for businesses that keep paying employees. Businesses of all sizes are eligible for a tax credit intended to keep workers on the payroll. The credit is up “to 50 percent of payroll on the first $10,000 of compensation, including health benefits, for each employee,” reported NPR.
U.S. stock markets rallied on the news. Some speculated the shortest bear market in history had ended, but Randall Forsyth of Barron’s cautioned, “To anybody who has been around for a market cycle or more, that pop was the very essence of a bear-market rally, and such rallies are the most violent.”
Major U.S. indices moved higher during the week.
The Washington Post published an article written by Joseph G. Allen, an assistant professor of exposure and assessment science at Harvard’s School of Public Health. Allen explained precautions to take to prevent disease transfer from packages and groceries. (Yes, coronavirus can live on a surface, but the risk of disease transmission is low.)
Here are some of Allen’s suggestions for handling delivery packages:
• Leave packages outside or bring them inside and leave them by the door for several hours.
• Wipe down package exteriors with disinfectant.
• Unwrap packages and leave the packaging in the recycling can.
• Wash your hands after touching a package.
Allen also offered suggestions for grocery shopping:
• Stay six feet from other shoppers.
• Don’t touch your face while shopping.
• Put your groceries away.
• Wipe anything you are using immediately with disinfectant. (Clean all grocery packages before you put them away, if it makes you more comfortable.)
• Wash your hands after putting groceries away.
• Wash fruits and vegetables before using.
So, how many hours is enough hours to wait? Allen explained the findings of an article in the New England Journal of Medicine. “…the virus’s half-life on stainless steel and plastic was 5.6 hours and 6.8 hours, respectively. (Half-life is how long it takes the viral concentration to decrease by half, then half of that half, and so on until it’s gone.)”
In Time’s article, ‘Laughter Helps the Brain Relax. How Humor Can Combat Coronavirus Anxiety,’ William Kole offered some insights into the importance of humor:
“Neil Diamond posts a fireside rendition of ‘Sweet Caroline’ with its familiar lyrics tweaked to say, ‘Hands … washing hands.’ A news anchor asks when social distancing will end because ‘my husband keeps trying to get into the house.’ And, a sign outside a neighborhood church reads: ‘Had not planned on giving up quite this much for Lent.’ Are we allowed to chuckle yet? We’d better, psychologists and humorists say. Laughter can be the best medicine, they argue, so long as it’s within the bounds of good taste.”
When you’re feeling overwhelmed, it can help to spend some time with the work of your favorite comedian, satirist, or cartoonist.
“Apparently there is nothing that cannot happen today.”
--Mark Twain, Humorist