Markets Are Extraordinarily Uncertain Indeed

 | May 06, 2020 06:34AM ET

On April 29, 2020, Jerome Powell said: “both the depth and duration of the economic downturn are extraordinarily uncertain.”

We are often critical of Federal Reserve policy and contradictory economic jargon coming from Fed presidents and governors.  However, to our amazement, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell surprised us with a moment of clarity.

No truer words were ever spoken.

His statement is so obvious, it is profound. Yet, if you only follow the financial media or much of social media, you might think his statement hyperbolic. The future, according to so many “experts”, is certain.

In case you haven’t heard, the economy will gradually re-open, and, in time, everyone will go back to work and resume the same lives and consumption patterns they were leading in 2019.

This reassuring picture of economic resurgence and a return to normal is simply a matter of harnessing the virus.  We, also hope, the confidence exuding from the experts, being paraded around the clock on CNBC and Bloomberg, turns out to be correct.

h3 Think Outside of the Box/h3

Wealth is not built, accumulated, or retained on hope. Building wealth comes from analytical rigor and a strong knowledge of data, facts, and history. Building wealth comes from avoiding debilitating losses, and it is built by thinking for yourself.

There are no stories in the history of pandemics causing global economic shutdowns at times with extreme debt levels and eye-watering asset valuations. There is no relevant historical guidance for what may happen next.

However, we can evaluate various events throughout history, study their intricacies, and use them to arrive at a range of potential outcomes under current circumstances. What we learn by doing so, and what Chairman Powell reminds us, is that the future is far from certain.

Dare we say, extraordinarily uncertain?

h3 Nth Order Effects/h3

Economic devastation will not heal itself in months or quarters and disappear, even if the virus does. The implications of bankruptcy and joblessness and a host of other financial, psychological, and societal issues dictate the path going forward.

Monetary and fiscal stimulus will ease some of the pain today, but at a cost. The pandemic has scarred people in ways that Wall Street and the media do not understand.

It is hard enough to forecast the first-order effects of the virus and its economic impact. Now consider the impossibility of understanding the myriad of second and third-order effects.

Anticipating these effects is like solving a Rubik’s Cube. If you twist a row to the left, what does that do to the other five sides? But that analogy is too simple. Make the cube an octagon and add ten more rows and columns.  Now add a series of rules, so each square is a chess piece and is limited in how it can be twisted.

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To see a few shifts of the cube and think we can foretell the future is misleading at best and more akin to delusion.

h3 Unforeseen Effects /h3

As we wrote this article, President Trump announced that the China Trade Deal is now secondary to what China did with the virus. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin followed that by warning, there would be “very significant consequences” if China does not make good on the trade agreement. The saber-rattling re-opens the following considerations:

  • Trade War
  • Tariffs
  • De-globalization

We are witnessing a classic second-order effect, and but one example, that no one was planning for a few weeks ago.

The previous trade war happened when the U.S. and global economy were healthy. Despite the economy, trade barbs between Chairman Xi and President Trump took the S&P 500 down 20%.

So now, the U.S. is engaged in a war on two fronts. One with another global power and one with a microscopic enemy. The list of possible second-order effects from these two issues is extremely complicated and unpredictable. Further, second-order effects often create third and fourth-order effects, and so on.