Depressionary Economy Vs. A Bull Market. Both Can’t Be Right.

 | May 10, 2020 12:00AM ET

h2 The Great Divide

There is currently a “Great Divide” happening between the near “depressionary” economy versus a surging bull market in equities. Given the relationship between the two, they both can’t be right.

h3 Depressionary Economy/h3

As noted by Jay Denton from Thinkwhy:

“April’s job loss was the worst on record, and a continued climb in unemployment is likely over the next few months. ThinkWhy believes the impact on the labor market was very front-loaded, and the month-to-month totals for job loss should begin to moderate in May.”

  • Nonfarm payrolls decreased by 20.5 million in April
  • Labor force participation decreased to 60.2%
  • Leisure and Hospitality jobs took the brunt of job losses at -7.653 million
  • Combined February and March revisions were down by 214,000 jobs
  • 32% of teenagers reported as unemployed
  • 16.7% of Blacks and 18.9% of Hispanics reported as unemployed
  • Persons marginally attached to the labor force – those not in the labor force who currently want a job – numbered 2.3 million in April, up by 855,000 from last month

Here are a couple of charts for context to the magnitude of the decline.

Given the BEA will revise Q1-GDP towards -8%, and Q2 is estimated at nearly -20%, the unemployment rate of 14.7% will rise towards 20% in May’s report. These are numbers not seen since the “Great Depression,” and never seen in the official BEA data going back to 1948.