USA TODAY International Edition

Pfizer vaccine could help bring back the economy

Investors see in- person business, job growth

- Nathan Bomey

The possibilit­y that Pfizer’s COVID- 19 vaccine candidate qualifies as a breakthrou­gh is generating optimism that the economy could rebound swiftly in 2021 and beyond.

While Pfizer’s vaccine still has multiple hurdles to surmount before it receives regulatory approval, hopes are rising for the airline industry, hotels, restaurant­s and retailers.

For effectively any business that has historical­ly been done in person, optimism is surging. That could translate into job growth for millions of Americans who have lost their positions during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Investors appeared positively giddy on Monday, driving the Dow Jones Industrial Average up more than 1,550 points, or about 5.4%, and bolstering the S& P 500 Index by 3.8%.

“This is the news we’ve all been waiting for,” Craig Erlam, a senior market analyst at OANDA, wrote Monday morning in a research note. “This is the light at the end of the tunnel moment and just look at the reaction in the markets. One of incredible relief.”

To be sure, any substantiv­e economic relief is still at least months off, because it will take at least that long for the vaccine to win government approval, accelerate manufactur­ing and ramp up distributi­on.

“It’s clearly good news, as it will lift sentiment and stock prices, which should buoy consumer spending,” Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said in an email. “However, it doesn’t materially change the economy’s tough prospects over the next twothree months.”

What’s more, Pfizer’s initial data – which suggests the vaccine may be more than 90% effective, putting it on par with the chickenpox inoculatio­n – could be off. There’s no guarantee that the vaccine will get across the finish line.

But Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla was ebullient Monday on CNBC.

“I believe this is likely the most significant medical advance in the last hundred years,” he said.

Analysts who study the biotechnol­ogy industry were buoyant Monday.

Raymond James pharmaceut­ical industry analyst Steven Seedhouse pointed out that multiple other vaccines are also likely to work, given technologi­cal similarity with the Pfizer candidate.

“A return to ‘ normalcy’ seems likely within 2021,” Seedhouse wrote in a research note.

After a vaccine begins rolling out, the most immediate economic effects could include:

• Enabling restaurant­s to reopen or increase their seating capacity. Many restaurant­s have pivoted to takeout or delivery, but that hasn’t been enough to replace the lost revenue from diners who have stayed away.

• Boosting foot traffic to struggling retailers. The vaccine won’t arrive in time to help retailers during the critical holiday shopping season. But it could help restore consumer confidence in the economy and in the safety of shopping in person.

Several major retailers have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in recent months. In the early going, the pandemic forced many retailers to shutter stores. Most stores have reopened, but many shoppers haven’t returned.

“Investors are quite optimistic that foot traffic and sales for brick- andmortar stores will quite quickly normalize once a critical mass of the population gets vaccinated,” said Nick Shields, retail analyst at research firm Third Bridge.

But Shields cautioned that some retailers likely will remain hesitant to aggressive­ly return to hiring.

• Encouragin­g travelers to fly, stay in hotels or take cruises again. The airlines have been hobbled as air passengers have stayed away. For the same reason, hotels have been emptied, and cruises have been anchored to shore.

• Reigniting the entertainm­ent industry, including movie theaters, sports stadiums and theatrical performanc­es. The entertainm­ent sector has been hit hard, with Broadway temporaril­y shutting down, movie theaters shutting down or limiting capacity, and sports teams limiting or prohibitin­g fan attendance.

• Resuming office operations. Millions have been working remotely throughout the pandemic. Those arrangemen­ts could end soon after the vaccine gains momentum, although experts expect some companies to maintain remote work permanentl­y.

For landlords facing rising vacancy rates, that could spell relief. But it could lead to a showdown between tenants and real estate companies.

Increasing gas prices. Petroleum companies have been ailing since the pandemic began as a result of declining economic activity and a drop- off in airline and car travel. But oil prices soared nearly 17% in early trading Monday after the Pfizer news, rising to more than $ 41 a barrel.

 ?? DAVID DEE DELGADO/ GETTY IMAGES ?? An electronic billboard in Times Square announces “stocks soar on vaccine hopes” Monday in New York City.
DAVID DEE DELGADO/ GETTY IMAGES An electronic billboard in Times Square announces “stocks soar on vaccine hopes” Monday in New York City.

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