Week Ahead: Equities Under Pressure As COVID 2nd Wave Threatens Open Economies

 | Jun 14, 2020 07:19AM ET

  • After weeks of ignoring second wave warnings, investors late last week suddenly decided to pay attention
  • Potential second wave activity accelerates in US, China
  • Gold sees best week in the past ten
  • Though US equity indices bounced back on Friday after their worst selloff in 12 weeks, fears continue to build that the hoped for, rapid recovery following months of US economic inactivity won't be as quick as some anticipate. As well, a second wave of COVID-19 cases seems to be accelerating.

    Over the past few days, Oklahoma and Arizona were among US states to report record increases in new COVID-19 cases, a month after loosening their lockdowns. On Saturday, Florida reported its own record increase of confirmed cases, 2,581.

    Also on Saturday, China closed the largest wholesale food market in Beijing and placed the surrounding neighborhood in a fresh lockdown after 50 new coronavirus cases were reported in the country’s capital.

    Officials at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have said that states and cities will return to shutdowns if the number of cases rise significantly, which paints an uncertain picture for both the economy and upcoming trading week.

    h2 Equities Moved Higher On Friday, But Lost For The Week/h2

    As the trade came to a close this past week, bargain hunters took advantage of discounts on stocks that were the hardest hit in Thursday’s plunge. Sectors including Real Estate, (+3.2%), and beleaguered shares of Financials (+3%) and Energy, (+2.5%), outperformed the broader S&P 500 Index.

    Cruise companies and airlines shot up. But the moves weren’t one-sided. After opening 2.1% higher, the benchmark index retraced Thursday’s lows and notched a new low as the World Health Organization warned of the risk of a second wave of the pandemic for countries ending lockdowns. However the index later reversed and closed into gains.

    Even with Friday’s rebound, all four major indexes—the Dow Jones, NASDAQ Composite, Russell 2000 as well as the S&P 500—dropped for the week. Investors appear to be surprised about both the lingering economic damage and the appearance of a second COVID-19 wave, but there have been ample warnings of both possibilities, including in some of our previous posts.

    We have also discussed at length that the economy has no sustainable upward growth path without a medical solution to COVID-19, whether a vaccine or other form of treatment. We've also referred to the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic which lasted until 1920. The first winter in which it appeared was just an introduction; the second wave, during the following winter, was much deadlier. At that time, there were four waves, infecting 500 million people, a third of the world’s population. It's still considered to be one of the deadliest pandemics in human history.

    Get The News You Want
    Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
    Get The App

    Though we're more than 100-years on from the Spanish Flu outbreak, the current similarities in terms of world-wide infection make the previous pandemic instructive. As such, we expect market volatility to be with us for some time as investors waver between hope and immediate reality.