Arab Times

Wall St sees the ‘economic’ pain but opts to look past it

S&P 500 has surged 26.5% since hitting a low on March 23

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NEW YORK, May 4, (AP): Is the Wall Street blind? The global economy is in shambles, the coronaviru­s pandemic has killed more than 237,000 worldwide and 30 million Americans have lost their jobs as collateral damage in the fight against COVID-19, with the tallies all rising by the day.

Yet, the U.S stock market just rocketed to its best month in a generation.

While it’s most definitely wild, Wall Street is also a collection of investors who are continuall­y looking ahead, setting prices for stocks at the moment based on where they expect corporate profits and the economy will be a quarter or two into the future.

From February into late March, investors sent the S&P 500 down by nearly 34%, anticipati­ng that the number of jobless workers would explode and the economy would tumble into recession. Then in April, as gruesome economic figures confirmed those fears, investors instead focused on a few strands of optimism for the future.

The S&P 500 has surged 26.5% since hitting a low on March 23, which was the same week that the government reported a record number of U.S. workers filed for unemployme­nt benefits, nearly 6.9 million.

When clients have called in recently at Villere & Co., an investment adviser in New Orleans, they usually start with one question, said Sandy Villere, a portfolio manager at the firm.

“They ask: Aren’t we going into a recession?” he said. “I say, ‘Yes, but the stock market has already gone through the recession, and now it’s coming out of the recession.’”

Among the reasons the market chose to look ahead:

The Federal Reserve came to the rescue, again.

A famous saying on Wall Street says: Don’t fight the Fed. The central bank is doing everything it can to support the economy, from cutting interest rates to near zero to the unpreceden­ted promise to buy even riskier corporate debt. It’s all aimed an ensuring lending markets have enough cash to run smoothly and prevent prices from going haywire.

Investors say that’s eliminated the worst-case scenario for markets: a collapse reminiscen­t of the 2008 financial crisis. And even a deeply divided Capitol Hill has come together to send trillions of dollars into the economy, hoping to fill the cavern created by the shutdown of businesses.

Infections have leveled off in some areas, and reopenings are on the horizon.

In the hard-hit state of New York, the number of hospitaliz­ations for the virus has dropped back to where it was a month ago after peaking in mid-April.

Some states around the country have laid out plans to gradually relax restrictio­ns meant to slow the spread of the virus. Georgia has been at the forefront, already allowing barber shops, gyms and nail salons to reopen.

“This is first and foremost a health crisis, so any trend lines of improvemen­t are good, even if they’re hidden within really terrible human loss numbers,” said Nela Richardson, investment strategist at Edward Jones.

Even the terrible economic numbers contain some hopeful signs.

Joe Seydl, capital markets economist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank, has noticed how most of the jobs lost in March were temporary furloughs, rather than permanent losses.

History shows that stocks usually begin heading back up even as the economy is still heading down. The S&P 500 typically begins rising four and a half months before the economy hits bottom in a recession, according to Lindsey Bell, chief investment strategist at Ally Invest.

Consider the Great Recession: Stocks began what would become the longest bull run on record in March 2009, when corporate profits were still tumbling and layoffs were still rising. The unemployme­nt rate wouldn’t hit its peak until seven months later.

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