USA TODAY US Edition

Threat to economy doesn’t measure up to calamity of 2008

- Paul Davidson, Nathan Bomey and Jessica Menton

A plunging stock market. The widening shadow of recession.

It’s beginning to feel a lot like 2008 again.

For many Americans, the stomachchu­rning market drops and growing recession talk of the past few weeks – triggered by the global spread of the coronaviru­s – are reviving memories of the 2008 financial crisis and Great Recession.

Take a breath. While the toll the infection ultimately takes on the nation isn’t clear, the economic upheaval caused by the outbreak will likely not be nearly as damaging or long-lasting as the historic downturn of 2007-09.

“A recession is not inevitable,” says Gus Faucher, chief economist of PNC Financial Services Group. “If we do get a recession, it is likely to be brief and much less severe than the Great Recession.”

For one thing, the 2008 financial crisis and recession resulted from years of deeply rooted weak spots in the economy. That’s not the case now.

“What we’re seeing is caused by something external to the economy,”

Faucher says.

“It’s closer to a natural disaster,” says Kathy Bostjancic, director of U.S. Macro Investors Services at Oxford Economics.

Partly as a result, the economy’s major players – consumers, businesses and lenders – are much better positioned to withstand the blows and bounce back.

Here’s a look at how today’s crisis compares with the meltdown more than a decade ago.

The cause

The Great Recession. The bruising downturn was set off by an overheated housing market. Banks and other lenders approved mortgages – including many to buyers who weren’t qualified – driving up home prices to stratosphe­ric levels. The banks bundled the mortgages into securities and sold them to other financial institutio­ns.

When home prices began spiraling down, millions of Americans stopped making mortgage payments and lost their homes while the banks that held the securities were pushed to the brink of bankruptcy.

Widespread layoffs in real estate, constructi­on and banking hammered consumer spending and led to deeper job losses throughout the economy. Bank lending was virtually frozen, grinding the gears of the economy to a near halt. The problems had been simmering in the housing market and banking system for years.

Now. The coronaviru­s, which originated in China late last year, has sparked today’s economic hazard. There are now more than 100,000 cases worldwide, most of them in China, and the death toll has topped 4,000. In the U.S., more than 800 people have been infected and at least 28 have died.

Because far fewer people are affected than in 2007-2009, the economic toll has been limited so far. The travel and tourism industry has suffered the most, with businesses canceling conference­s and trade shows and consumers scrapping vacation plans. Disruption­s to deliveries of manufactur­ing parts and retail goods from China could temporaril­y shut down American factories and leave store shelves empty.

As Americans avoid more public places, the virus is likely to hurt sales at restaurant­s, malls and other venues. There are some signs retailers are already taking a hit.

Household debt

Great Recession. Since banks freely doled out credit for mortgages, auto loans and credit cards, household debt climbed to a record 134% of gross domestic product, according to Oxford Economics and the Federal Reserve. Americans had been saving just 3.6% of their income at the end of 2007. As Americans worked down that debt, spending fell sharply.

Now. Household debt is at a historical­ly low 96% of GDP. Households are saving about 8% of their income. All of that means they can handle a brief slump and continue spending at a reduced level.

“Consumers are in good shape,”

Faucher says.

Job losses

Great Recession. Nearly 9 million Americans lost their jobs in the downturn. Unemployme­nt more than doubled to 10%.

Now. Losses are likely to total in the thousands, with travel and tourism and manufactur­ing enduring much of them, Bostjancic says. The 3.5% unemployme­nt rate, a 50-year low, could rise to 3.8% to 4.1%, says Diane Swonk, chief economist of Grant Thornton.

How long it lasts

Great Recession. With millions out of work and household and business spending decimated, the downturn lasted 18 months.

Now. Assuming the number of cases peak in the next few months and abates by summer, Swonk says any downturn is likely to last six months or so.

The economy

Great Recession. The economy contracted in five of six quarters during the slump, falling as much as 8.4% in late 2008.

Now. Most economists expect the virus to shave growth by 1 or 2 percentage points over the next couple of quarters.

The stock market

Great Recession: The stock market plummeted 57% during the crisis.

Now. The stock market hasn’t seen the same sizable drop that the broader market suffered in the depths of the financial crisis. The Standard & Poor’s 500 slid 14.9% from its Feb. 19 record through Tuesday, teetering on the brink of a bear market, or a drop of 20% from a peak.

Corporate financial health

Great Recession. Corporatio­ns had $5.8 trillion in rated debt as of March 31, 2009, according to S&P Global Ratings. Less than two-thirds, or about 65%, was investment grade, which ratings agencies determined was highly likely to be repaid.

A wide variety of companies, including financial institutio­ns, automakers and retailers, collapsed as their revenue plunged. In the automotive sector, for example, manufactur­ers cut about 278,400 jobs, or about 29% of their collective workforce from January 2008 to January 2010, automakers and suppliers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Now. Corporatio­ns had $9.3 trillion in rated debt in 2019, according to S&P Global Ratings.

But a higher percentage of corporate debt today is considered to be investment grade at 72%.

That said, conditions for repayment are clearly deteriorat­ing. “The stress has been very, very quickly accelerati­ng,” said Sudeep Kesh, head of credit markets research for S&P Global Ratings.

The major sector most likely to fail to make payments on time, as of 2019, was the automotive industry.

Another sector facing significan­t risk is the retail industry, where department stores, mall-based retailers and many other shops have already been struggling.

Though the oil-and-gas sector is expected to be hit hard by the sharp decline in oil prices, the industry is heading into this crisis in decent shape.

Banking regulation­s

Great Recession. The global financial crisis ushered in sweeping changes to how the U.S. government regulates the banking industry. The new era, which included the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010, required banks to have more cash in reserves to provide a cushion in case the financial system faced economic shocks.

In the U.S., banks with more than $100 billion in assets are required to take the Federal Reserve’s “stress tests,” a move that ensures financial firms have the capital necessary to continue operating during times of economic duress.

“We take comfort in the fact that the U.S. banking sector is very strong and healthy right now,” says Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth Management.

To be sure, banks’ profitabil­ity could be threatened in the near term if they are forced to tighten lending standards. A historic drop in bond yields recently could pressure banks further because it tends to hurt their profitabil­ity.

Now. The magnitude of the challenges the economy faces aren’t as dire as the obstacles during the Great Recession, experts say.

Stocks have weathered the storm during past epidemics. Experts say, however, that it is hard to draw parallels between the markets’ swift downturn now to past crashes.

“This isn’t a financial crisis,” says Jonathan Corpina, senior managing partner at broker-dealer Meridian Equity Partners. “This is a global epidemic. This isn’t a flaw in the system that we’re uncovering like the subprime mortgage debacle.”

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