While success in suppressing new infections here has prompted talk of lifting economically crippling lockdown restrictions sooner rather than later, it’s now clear that the US economy is being smashed, in a way that will slow the entire global economy for some time to come.
Successive weeks of astonishing levels of unemployment claims has illustrated how the US jobs market has collapsed under the weight of lockdown and tens of thousands of deaths.
Now further data overnight has revealed the cost of the pandemic: a record 8.7% slump in retail sales across the US in March (that’s worth US$46 billion) and a 5.4% slide in industrial production — the biggest fall since 1946, when the US was winding down wartime production.
The retail collapse was led by a 27% sales slump at auto dealers and 17% at service stations and fuel outlets, two of biggest segments of the US retailing. Sales fell a smaller but still nasty 3.1% outside those two categories. Individual sub-sectors saw horrific falls: a staggering 50% at clothing stores, 26.5% at restaurants and 20% at department stores.
That explains why iconic but already troubled major retailers are now facing collapse. JCPenney is missing debt payments and contemplating bankruptcy; Macy’s, the country’s largest department store group, is struggling to remain afloat and has stopped paying suppliers.
As in Australia, supermarkets and pharmacies saw rises in sales on panic buying surges, and internet-based companies such as Amazon did well.
Amazon shares hit a record this week on Wall Street, and Donald Trump, who has spent much of his presidency vilifying Jeff Bezos, is now phoning him to ask for help in reopening the US economy. Shares in Netflix, the streaming video giant, are also performing strongly.
As retail goes, so goes the US: consumer spending accounts for more than two-thirds of American economic activity. Spending rose at an annual 1.8% pace in the fourth quarter of 2019, compared to the overall economy expanding at a 2.1% rate.
US economists’ estimates for the current June quarter put the annual rate of fall in retail sales as high as 41%, pointing the way to a truly frightening contraction underway.
The Federal Reserve said on Wednesday in its April “Beige Book” report of anecdotal information on business activity collected nationwide (ahead of the next policy meeting of the central bank) that “economic activity contracted sharply and abruptly across all regions in the United States as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic”.
Another fed survey showed manufacturing activity in New York state, the hardest hit region, plunged in April to its lowest level in the series’ history. New York state by itself accounts for around 8% of all US economic activity.
All that’s despite an historic US$2.3 trillion fiscal package, which made provisions for cash payments to some families and boosted unemployment benefit payments.
Economists say the April retail sales and industrial production figures will be worse than those for March because the lockdown and other control measures for the COVID-19 pandemic didn’t kick in until the last half of March.
Meanwhile US banking giants such as Bank of America and Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and several smaller lenders have put aside US$25 billion in extra reserves to handle an expected surge in bad debts in housing, businesses or all sizes and credit cards. JPMorgan, the biggest and arguably the best-run global bank, this week added US$6.8 billion to its loan loss reserves, helping send earnings down 69% for the quarter. Wells Fargo added US$3.1 billion to its reserves.
The caution of the major banks, and the explicit commitment of the Federal Reserve to do whatever it takes to support the financial system means that what might have been a systemically disruptive level of default will be accommodated without inflicting major damage on credit markets of the kind we saw in 2008.
But it indicates the level of carnage banks are expecting to come at them in the current quarter and, likely, for the rest of the year.
We’re still waiting to see what Australia’s banks are setting aside — though remember that the government’s JobKeeper program will keep many businesses going that would otherwise shut. Westpac this week warned its March 31 half year profit wold take a hit, mostly from the costs associated its money laundering breaches.
There are no numbers for costs from the pandemic yet, but Westpac has promised to make that public before its May 4 profit release date. It warned the figure would be “substantial”. We can expect NAB and ANZ to follow suit in coming days.
Today’s March jobless data has provided us with the state of the jobs market on the eve of the lockdown. Unemployment rose just 0.1% points to 5.2% seasonally adjusted, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. But it’s still a snapshot from a world before the virus.
“The trend and seasonally adjusted estimates for March have not been impacted as a result of COVID-19,” the ABS said, “primarily due to the reference weeks falling in the first half of March.”
In fact, the statisticians expect the pandemic impact to be so large and so volatile that it is going to change its methodology to accommodate large scale changes in employment right across the month being surveyed, and it may even ditch its trend series until a new “trend” for the pandemic and its aftermath is clear. It’s a small map market for the new economic world we’re entering.
Needless to say the US and World citizens will pay an enormous price for the Republicans’ continuous support of this inept President. We can all see that whilst the WHO did not act decisively (advising an International shutdown is a big call) Trump’s inability to take advice from his own experts has led to an increasingly horrendous health crisis in the US- a runaway train. How can they open an economy when there is a New York size tragedy awaiting so many more US cities….
This is a joke, right?
“JPMorgan, the biggest and arguably the best-run global bank…”
This is a chunk of an article from a very insightful and incisive site, ‘WallStreetOnParade’, just a couple of months back;
“..Yesterday, Bloomberg News reporters Tom Schoenberg and Liam Vaughan broke the story that JPMorgan Chase is under a criminal probe by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) over charges of rigging gold, silver and other precious metals markets. Six traders who worked on the precious metals desk at JPMorgan Chase have been indicted thus far but this is the first report that the bank itself is also under a criminal investigation. This marks the fourth criminal probe of the bank in the past 8 years by the U.S. Department of Justice with the bank pleading guilty to three felony counts in two of the prior criminal investigations.
There was a time in America when a criminal probe of the nation’s largest bank, which holds $1.6 trillion in the life savings of moms and pops at more than 5300 bank branches across the country, would have been worthy of a front-page headline. Not today. Crime and fraud are so de rigueur at the bank led by Dimon that not one major newspaper ran the headline on the front page or anywhere else in the paper.
… in August, September and again in November of last year (2019), the Board of Directors of JPMorgan Chase were put on notice that the bank they were overseeing under their designated leader, Jamie Dimon, was accused of running a criminal enterprise out of its precious metals desk. They were also aware that at least two of those indicted are cooperating with the DOJ in the ongoing investigation. And yet, they still awarded Jamie Dimon a pay package of $31.5 million and allowed him to announce that he planned to remain at the bank for another five years.
This is demonstrably a criminal recidivist bank. Dimon and the Board need to be removed. The bank needs to be broken up with the federally-insured bank placed under a sane, ethical, competent Board of Directors…”
You blokes need to cast a wider net!
Ah David, we meet again on a different topic, your grasp of this one in particularly is impressive!
You jolted my memory back to a great read a few years back, “Confidence Men” by Ron Suskind, dealing with the GFC and the Wall Street and the financial lobby that caused it.
Jamie Dimon was head of JP Morgan Chase & Co back then in 2008 when Obama had the 13 heads of the banks in the State Dining Room expecting to be shafted.
Instead he bailed them out with $700b from the Trouble Asset Relief Program(TARP) and asked a shattered Rick Wagoner to fall on his sword, after tasking him with the daunting task of restructuring the US car industry.
Reward the spivs & shaft the productive burghers instead. Says so much about the US, even scarier is that our former Prime Minister Turnbull announced to Trump,”we were joined at the hip” !
The angry & disaffected “rust belt” was tapped into by Trump & the rest is history.
More importantly and incredulously Dimon is still there at the helm of JPMC & Co !!!
Definitely cast that net wider & catch some big fish!
Eternally frustrated, Ian, by the willingness of the likes of Keane and Dyer (and, they’re not the worst) to gulp down vast amounts of this faecal infested bathwater – it’s offensive to people who have a modicum of understanding of real, fair dinkum criminality.
Dimon’s an absolute ‘Barry Crocker’.
These 2 Crikey whizzboys don’t seem to have cottoned to what’s been going on in the Repo market since, ooh, say, last quarter last year.
The Gold ‘market’s’ stuffed. Did you know there are 2 gold ‘markets’? One paper (derivatives), one physical gold? Dimon’s JP Morgan have been refusing to settle ‘out of the money’ trades in the physical market since last year. Why? They don’t have any to settle with!?!
The paper market is a Wall St/City of London invention, the physical market runs out of Canada.
Why haven’t they got any physical gold to settle with? The Russians have bought it all!! (Not all, but enough).
The GFC came down to ‘Mortgage Backed Securities’, but that wasn’t the half of it – Derivatives on derivatives on derivatives – ‘Collaterised Debt Obligations’ that had the same individual mortgages in multiple bundled MBS’s.
One of the most astounding ‘products’ invented by Wall St was also explained by Pam and Russ Mertens at WallStreetOnParade very recently (and Pam’s the brains of the outfit).
Go to their site, and find a piece headed; “Wall Street’s Banks Could Profit by Millions on Coronavirus Deaths of Employees”
They’re describing what’s called; “Bank-Owned Life Insurance”
I thought I knew a bit about this caper, but even I was gobsmacked by that!
And, when I went to find that, what did I find as they’re latest expose?
This!
“A Strange Timeline at JPMorgan Chase Includes a Meeting with Fed Chair Jay Powell”
“This begs the question: did the U.S. have a Wall Street banking crisis similar to 2008 long before there was a pandemic crisis?”
I’ll let you take a guess at the answer to that question.
I’m about at the end of my tether with Crikey’s less than ‘critically thought out analysis’.
The new honcho, Fray, who keeps sending me pleas for assistance to keep the ship afloat is not even close to impressive, and his CV fails to encourage me to continue tipping in – Dep Ed of the freakin’ Australian??!
On track to be my last rodeo round these parts.
And, the killer? Ignoring the plight of Julian Assange.
F*** them all!!
Yeah, in a time of mass redundancies Crikey seems to be amassing lots of deadwood.
If it wasn’t for Rundle I would have left ages ago.
The increasingly censorious moderation policy (cranks like AR, often impolite but rarely irrelevant, seem to have disappeared, possibly out of frustration) is another sign of capture by the rigid thinkers of the dead tree media …
Disagree with his politics, but he’s a visionary … bring back Mayne!
David I see we have a lot in common.
However I see and feel a sense of frustration and anger in you that is not helpful or constructive.
I share your frustration, however looking at the alternatives with the MSM and with Murdoch in particular, you would not be allowed to express your views or even get off first base!
At least with Crikey we have that ability to communicate effectively, whilst not always in agreement with the authors , Crikey gives us that ability to constructively criticise and offer corrections where necessary, which in a democracy we should treasure.
Hang in there David, we need you more than ever!
I’m intrigued by how the IMF, or whoever it was, forecasts 3 per cent world GDP reduction in 2020, while all the major economies look likely to got 10 to 15 per cent losses. The math just doesn’t add up.
As I mentioned recently, Dog’s, the world’s greatest ‘economic historian, Dr Michael Hudson, nails the IMF by explaining their HQ is ‘in a basement at the Pentagon’.
A rubbish outfit, who stumped a US$4B loan to Lenin Moreno in Ecuador, as long as he shopped Julian Assange to the Limeys. Course, the ‘loan’ came with ‘austerity clauses’.
Which have resulted in Ecuadorians being left dead in the streets as a result of thuh VIRUS!!
They’re even short of cardboard coffins and, if the surviving loved ones can even get one, by the time they get to try and bury the dead loved one, the leaking bodily fluids – or the rain, have turned the cardboard coffin to mush.
But, you won’t read or hear about it in the Oz media cos, you know, Ecuador are a ‘friend’.
The media here in Oz, bar a couple of smallies, can die a ‘horrible death’ as far as I’m concerned – they are not ‘honorable’, they are not ‘ethical’, they are not ‘trustworthy’, they are not ‘credible’, they are not ‘professional’, they are not ‘fair dinkum’ – they are appalling.
If Julian Assange succumbs to this virus, almost every last one of the gutless Australian media cabal will have f***ing blood on their stinking hands, and can go f*** themselves.
David, me again !
I thought this link to this article in The Conversation, my comment & the predictable response by the joint author on the predicament of Julian Assange would be of interest? –
https://theconversation.com/we-need-to-consider-granting-bail-to-unsentenced-prisoners-to-stop-the-spread-of-coronavirus-134526
The U.S has been sliding into a deep dark hole since Ronald Reagan introduced his trickle-down ideology, it’s just accelerating under Trump and the virus, a nation of brain dead redneck lemming looking for the nearest cliff to jump off, nothing can save them after 40 years of dumbing down under repeated redneck republican administrations, the last one out turn off the lights should be their motto
If you believe that Australian unemployment is 5/2% then like the iron Duke said ,you,will come to believe anything . Well before the virus crisis,some polls were saying the unemployment rate was 9-10 % just because somebody works 1-5 hours week classed as employed,with massive casualisation of the workforce in Australia,it hides the real unemployment. During a trip around Australia,2019 I found lots of stores with for lease on the windows ,talking to locals in pubs ,they said things where grim ,those towns had between them 5000- 30,000