Global Weekly Commentary: Virus outbreak turns us cautious
Key points
Growth downshift
We see the spreading coronavirus outbreak and related containment measures causing a downshift in the global growth outlook for 2020.
Risk neutral
We shift our moderate pro-risk stance to a neutral position due to the many uncertainties associated with the outbreak and its impact.
Data weakness
This week’s data may show weakness caused by the outbreak and we may get an early read on the Democratic U.S. presidential candidate.
The spread of the coronavirus beyond China has opened up a new global dimension to the epidemic – and potential for a sharper economic drag from efforts to contain it. We expect the economic expansion to remain intact, albeit on a lower track. We see a sharp rebound once potential disruptions dissipate, yet the unknown depth and duration of the shock add material downside risks. As a result, we have pulled back our moderately pro-risk stance to benchmark weights.
Chart of the week
Market attention to global disease outbreaks, 2003-present
Sources: BlackRock Investment Institute, with data from Refinitiv, February 2020. Notes: We identify specific words related to major disease outbreaks since 2003, then use text analysis to calculate the frequency of their appearance in the Refinitiv Broker Report and Dow Jones Global Newswire databases. We then adjust for whether the language reflects positive or negative sentiment, and assign a score. A zero score represents the average level over its history from 2003 up to that point in time. A score of one means the attention level is one standard deviation above the average. We weigh recent readings more heavily in calculating the average.
Global markets have been gripped by fears over the impact of the epidemic. Market attention to the outbreak has shot up to levels higher than those seen during the SARS epidemic in 2003, according to our text analysis of broker reports and the financial press. See the chart above. We see the drag on economic activity threatening to push some developed economies – such as Japan and the euro area – toward the brink of a technical recession (defined as two consecutive quarters of economic contraction), even though we don’t foresee a recession in the U.S. or globally. A policy pause is no longer our base case. A sustained tightening of financial conditions or impairment to market liquidity could be met with coordinated policy easing by major central banks but many, such as in the euro area and Japan, have limited policy space. Fiscal policy will likely also be an important part of the toolkit, especially in China.
The level of economic activity is likely to step down for 2020 as the outbreak is becoming an increasingly global public health threat, we believe. Disruptions are already spreading across continents – and may further decelerate economic activity. We expect a rapid rebound in activity once disruptions dissipate, but still see a great deal of uncertainty around the extent and pace of the deceleration. These include the outbreak’s eventual geographical reach, the public health measures taken in response, and how long the outbreak and these measures last. One key signpost to watch in the near term: How successful will China’s effort to restart its economic activity be – and can it avoid another round of mass infection as workers return? This may provide insight on the potential duration of the outbreak - and its economic impact – elsewhere.
Our base case: We see the drag on economic activity as temporary, with underlying economic fundamentals still supportive of the global economic expansion. The risk to this view is that the hit to economies from the outbreak and containment measures undermines fundamentals and triggers the end of this cycle. We are on the lookout for any signs of a liquidity crunch or deterioration in financial conditions. Many small-and medium-sized enterprises in Europe and China, among other regions, could be susceptible to a cash flow crunch if the outbreak endures, and easy financial conditions have been crucial in supporting global growth since late last year. We see material risks to global supply chains, concentrated in tech, autos and capital goods. This outbreak may further compel companies to reassess their supply chains, which have already come under pressure from global trade tensions in recent years. Over time, these supply shocks could weigh on growth, increase production costs, and pressure profit margins lower and inflation higher.
We still view the U.S. as in a late-cycle slowdown regime. The impact of broader monetary and fiscal policy responses may be difficult to gauge during the outbreak, but it’s clear that liquidity support and additional public health spending will be necessary. An additional source of financial market uncertainty is the wide divergence between the policy agendas of the parties in the U.S. presidential election. We reduce our overweight equity and credit exposures to benchmark weights, and advocate portfolio resilience through the quality and minimum volatility equity factors, the ballast properties of government bonds – especially U.S. Treasuries – and cash. We are also reviewing our granular regional equity and fixed income views.
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