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MARKET FLASH
April, 2, 2020
Economic Outlook - Poison and antidote
Bruno Cavalier, Chief Economist
Virus is a Latin word that means poison... And what we are seeing is a poisoning of the global economy. For around three weeks, to slow the spread of the coronavirus and preserve hospital capacities, European countries and the US have put in place lockdown measures covering their entire territories, or a large part thereof. This means limiting travel and activity to what is strictly necessary, in other words shutting down all or part of the economy. The initial field data gives some idea of the cost of this policy. And it is considerable.
According to initial estimates from the IMF, the OECD and statistics institutes in France and Germany, our economies are now operating at 25% to 35% below their pre-shock level of activity. There is no need to point out that never before has there been such huge upheaval in so short a time! Every week of lockdown reduces GDP by at least half a percentage point.
A six-week lockdown is now at the low-end of assumptions in Europe and the US. If the epidemic peaks in this timeframe then a lifting of the lockdown will be envisaged, but it will also take several weeks. It is hard to see life returning to normal before the start of the summer at the earliest. Based on these assumptions, the shock would amount to around 5-7 points of GDP in developed countries. These are acceptable assumptions, with the alternative being a longer lockdown and a more spread-out return to normal. This could double the cost.
A deep recession is inevitable but, in a sense, it is part of the treatment for the public health crisis. However, a temporary shock must not be allowed to create permanent damage.
The only sensible public policy is to compensate the loss of household revenues, preserve production capacity and make sure that neither the real economy, nor the banks or the markets lack liquidity. This is easier said than done. Economic policymakers have at times fumbled their response, but now the monetary and fiscal measures combined have impressive critical mass.
In the short term, it is less about stimulating demand (this makes little sense as long as supply is constrained) and more about limiting the loss of production potential as much as possible. This is why in most countries, the economic policy measures are aimed at encouraging short-time working rather than carrying out forced redundancies, spreading out the expense borne by companies (tax, rents, loans) rather than pushing them into insolvency, and most importantly avoiding a credit crunch. Supplying liquidity in adequate doses is what will make the difference in this recession. It is now clear that it will be severe, but there is no reason we should be resigned to it being a long one.
To this end, it is important we do not skimp on the antidote, and that it be administered quickly. This is one of the lessons of the financial crisis of 2008. It is not good fantasising about imaginary perils (for example, the inflationary risk following the expansion of central bank balance sheets). Indeed, it is preferable not to restrain the economic policy reaction on account of moral hazard. There may well be free-riders looking to take undue advantage of public aid, but this is not a key problem at present.
The coronavirus shock will severely test the strength of Europe and will open up the wounds of the sovereign debt crisis between 2010 and 2015. Back then, some “virtuous” countries had deemed, with Schadenfreude, that the crisis of the “lax” countries was punishment for their excesses. Some are making similar statements now. However, this time, the shock is purely external and it is taking a toll on all countries. Typically, this is where we would expect Europe to make a unified and coordinated response capable of overcoming the differences between countries (these will always exist). In principle, it makes sense to jointly finance the support measures in the coronavirus crisis (the famous and controversial “coronabonds”) with, at the same time - it goes without saying – a shared management of this expenditure.
We recognise that the political obstacles are tough to overcome. In the short term, we should not fear a fragmentation of the Eurozone as the ECB ensures that all countries can be financed on very favourable terms. Over the long term, the debate is still open and anything is possible. There is a danger this crisis could stoke anti-European sentiment. The example of the UK and Brexit should serve as a reminder that it can lead to divorce.
Market update - Where are the opportunities?
Laurent Denize, Global co-Chief Investment Officer, ODDO BHF Asset Management
Jan Viebig, Chief Investment Officer, ODDO BHF Trust
The world is with no doubt in the midst of a deep recession. But what is more important for investors is the assumption of what is priced in. With all the humility such an exercise requires, here are our major convictions:
As the situation becomes critical, we do expect some output cuts announcements in the coming days. Once the cuts start, prices will rebound. Demand will also start to pick up this summer, which also will help lifting prices. For 2020, we expect Brent prices to recover to a minimum of $30/barrel after falling from 57$/barrel at the beginning of the year, a decent 50% return... Oil prices and high yield bonds have recently lagged somehow in the start of normalization we observed. On a medium to long term basis we do believe they offer a good entry point.
Let us be clear: an all-in bet is not our call as uncertainty remains high but market dislocations have created opportunities.
Take care.
Bruno Cavalier
Chief Economist ODDO BHF | Laurent Denize
Global co-CIO ODDO BHF Asset Management | Jan Viebig
CIO ODDO BHF TRUST |
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