COVID Is Messing With Texas And Investors

COVID-19 is threatening Texans' proud history of First Amendment expression. After more than 2 months of social distancing and thousands of shuttered businesses, Texas partially opened its economy in May and June. Thus it was not a surprise that COVID cases began rising in the Lone Star state in late May and went parabolic in mid-June. The jump in cases in Texas, Arizona and Florida, in particular, have had medical authorities sounding the alarm and the nation holding its collective breath. The dense populations of Houston, Phoenix and Miami have been hard hit as young people went back to socializing up close and personal.

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While more testing and yuppies being carefree have greatly contributed to the expected uptrend in COVID infections, there has been a less severe move up in corresponding fatalities. These hotspots are alarming to some, while others feel it’s an acceptable risk that warrants less severe social restrictions than in the first wave in March and April. Should more hotspots appear and deaths rise as dramatically, then investors will increasingly price in reduced economic growth for the rest of the year.

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Most economic reports still show the economy responding better than expected to the gradual business reopening process. With consumers unable to consume and most businesses closed, producers sold down inventories and halted production in March and April as the economy contracted at Depression-era rates. New orders from China, who remain ahead of our COVID curve, and the partial normalization of work in the US in May have led to inventory restocking. While year over year numbers are still deeply negative, there has been a sharp rebound in the activity that has helped boost equity market sentiment.

The Coronavirus hotspots, led by Texas, Florida and Arizona are moving the national level of COVID infections to new record daily highs. Apple has re-closed stores in 4 states, Texas and Florida are reinstating more social and business restrictions, Disney has postponed its Disneyland opening, and travel restrictions between States and countries are increasing. 

However, our collective breaths may need a couple more weeks to understand if the sharp rise in COVID cases will reverse the amazing downtrend in deaths. With at-risk seniors keeping their distance and treatments improving, its unlikely death rates will correlate as strongly as the first wave in March. Infections are also rising around the world though, so it’s logical that economic growth expectations everywhere have moved from better than forecast in April and May to worse than expected in June. Any reversal higher in Covid morbidity would impact stocks even more over the short term than the current 6% pullback over the past 3 weeks. After a 45% market rally in just over 10 weeks, a 6 to 8% correction is very modest.

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 Stock markets here and around the globe have been falling modestly in lockstep with the reversal higher in COVID fear perceptions. These trends typically remain in force for weeks, perpetrated by Government actions to slow opening the economy or even reversing back to a selective lockdown mode. The medical influence upon stocks can begin to reflect more Bullishly again when the rise in COVID cases flattens out and if it becomes confirmed that fatalities are not spiking in the current hotspots around the nation. Should the 2nd wave COVID fears continue higher, the path of least resistance will be lower for stock markets.

The fact that national daily deaths continue to fall and most hotspot infection locations are not showing a corresponding spike in fatalities, are major reasons equity markets haven’t collapsed after such a record-breaking rally the past 3 months. Our primary stock market technical oscillators remain mixed with option trader sentiment coming off near-record overbought levels in early June that coincided with the current Bull market top. However, investor survey pessimism keeps diving back to oversold readings every time stocks fall hard for a few days (light blue line below). Technically the late June to the first half of July period could be yet another buying opportunity. 

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Disclaimer: This report may contain information on investments that are high risk and have substantial risk of principal loss. It is for informational purposes only. Statements in this communication ...

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Jack S. Chen 3 years ago Member's comment

Many countries have been able to successfully open up again without such a large increase in infections. To the rest of the world it's pretty obvious what the US is doing wrong.

Michele Grant 3 years ago Member's comment

Yes, and the answer is Trump - he likes to pretend Covid-19 isn't a danger and we can will it away by ignoring it. But not every state is as bad as Texas. I heard on the news this morning that Illinois has mandatory face mask wearing and as a result, they have been able to open up again without an increase in infections.

Kurt Kallaus 3 years ago Contributor's comment

While the rise in infections among US hotspot States and Cities appear alarming and 17 States are halting or reversing their economic and social reopenings, States like Texas actually have fewer Covid fatalities per capita than Germany and all Western countries that are deemed to have been successful in fighting the pandemic. This perspective will not boost stocks as the short term is about Covid Case trends and eventually it will come back to being about death rate trends that guide politicians and consumer behavior and thus investors.

Barry Glassman 3 years ago Member's comment

I've read some doctors are claiming that Covid-19, while still highly infections, isn't as fatal as it used to me

Angry Old Lady 3 years ago Member's comment

More likely, as we test more people, we are just realizing a lot more people are infected than we realized. Meaning the mortality rate isn't nearly as high as we once thought. Keep in mind, that's little consolation if you or a loved one end up dead.

Michele Grant 3 years ago Member's comment

What a lot of people forget is that a large number of people who are infected, but don't die, never fully recover. Some stay sick for months, or have permanent damage. A recent report out of Israel said that 40% of those hospitalized and discharged had permanent damage to the right side of their hearts.

Alpha Stockman 3 years ago Member's comment

I saw this as well. I've also read that many have permanent scarring to their lungs, severely impacting their quality of life. Other have had blood clots which lead to strokes, paralysis and amputations. None of these people are counted in the death toll. But many which consider such debilitating problems to be a death sentence.