Deaths attributed to the Covid-19 pandemic continue to mount, and data confirms that social distancing and a rigorous system of testing and tracing are necessary to slow the spread of the disease, and are working to mitigate the health crisis. Recent modeling work suggests that the slow adoption of social distancing practices as public policy and the concurrent slow adoption by individuals has increased the death toll in the United States, and will continue to do so until a vaccine or treatment regimen is developed. … READ MORE >
Joe Brusuelas
Fed sets up $2.3 trillion in liquidity commitments, introduces Main Street Lending Program
The Federal Reserve made history on Thursday by moving aggressively to provide up to $2.3 trillion in liquidity commitments to support the economy. This policy intends to bolster households, small and medium-sized firms, and the ability of state and local governments to float debt to ensure critical services during the pandemic. … READ MORE >
Saving small and medium-size business: temporary lending facility needed now
If the fiscal and monetary authority do not act with temporary lending relief for small and midsize companies, soon a disaster will encompass Main Street businesses through no fault of their own—this disaster is entirely preventable. … READ MORE >
Fed and Treasury create Commercial Paper Funding Facility to ease credit stress
The U.S. Treasury on Tuesday granted the Federal Reserve 13(3) authority under Dodd-Frank that permits the central bank to take steps under exigent and unusual circumstances to stabilize financial markets and the economy. … READ MORE >
The RSM Brexit Stress Index shoots up, reflecting coronavirus supply shock concern
Following the U.K.’s departure from the European Union a month ago, markets are bracing for a global health crisis and the accompanying supply shock. The RSM Brexit Stress Index — which measures financial and economic risk surrounding Britain’s departure from Europe’s common market – has shot up in the past two weeks from zero to 1.15 standard deviations above normal levels of implied stress. … READ MORE >
An improved outlook for manufacturing filtered by Boeing and the coronavirus
The RSM US Manufacturing Index implies improvement in national manufacturing sentiment in February, and we expect a similar uptick in the February ISM survey of manufacturing sentiment next month. However, February may be the last month before the coronavirus takes its toll on the global supply chain; at the same time, the Boeing shutdown will adversely impact the domestic supply chain throughout the first quarter of the year–the impact is expected to show up in both hard and soft data. … READ MORE >
Negative yields increase as global coronavirus risk proliferates
With the outbreak of Covid-19 in China in late December, a global safe haven move by investors started in earnest around Jan. 14; as a result, negative-yielding debt has jumped back to $13.96 trillion as of Feb. 26, writes RSM US Chief Economist Joe Brusuelas. … READ MORE >
As coronavirus spreads, what are the fiscal and monetary policy options?
Investors over the past few days have priced in three 25 basis-point cuts in the federal funds rate by the end of the year, with the first cut implied by the markets coming in June. This is somewhat misguided, given the nature of the global public health emergency that is … … READ MORE >
U.S. GDP grew an estimated 1.5% in January; household consumption expected to be strongest segment in Q1
The United States’ gross domestic product grew an estimated 1.5% in January, according to RSM’s Monthly Index of Economic Activity. That bump followed GDP growth of 2.3% in the fourth quarter of 2019. We forecast a 1% GDP growth rate with downside risk for the first quarter of the year, … … READ MORE >
Economics of a global health crisis
Global economic markets’ reaction to China’s coronavirus has been severe, resulting in a significant safe haven move into U.S. government securities by international investors. Whether the virus has a lasting impact on the broader global economy depends largely on the ability of the world’s major governments to effectively deploy resources to contain the outbreak. … READ MORE >