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Tuesday, March 3, 2020
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Recent U.S. economic data is measuring a time before coronavirus
Economic data is always reported on a lag.
This is not a new challenge for investors to navigate.
But what is new are questions about how COVID-19 might slow down the global economy.
And the challenge now facing investors will be wading through upcoming rounds of economic data that aren’t likely to offer many insights into how much damage the coronavirus is inflicting on the U.S. economy for another month.
Manufacturing data released Monday from both the Institute for Supply Management and IHS Markit showed the U.S. economy expanded modestly last month. But neither of these reports seemed to capture any of the COVID-19 fears expressed by financial markets last week.
IHS Markit’s PMI reading published Monday came in at 50.7, indicating modest expansion in the manufacturing sector last month. This data was collected between February 12-24, however, a period just before COVID-19 fears began to crescendo.
Chris Williamson, the chief business economist at IHS Markit, said Monday that, “companies have become increasingly concerned that the COVID-19 outbreak will also hit demand, which is reportedly already cooling amid uncertainly leading up to the presidential election.”
Similarly, the ISM’s February manufacturing index published Monday hit 50.1, also indicating a modest expansion in economic activity last month. Several respondents to the ISM’s survey mentioned the coronavirus, but mentioned COVID-19 largely as a potential supply chain risk that will need to be mitigated in the months ahead.
Financial markets, however, have clearly skipped ahead and indicated more serious challenges face global growth.
“The [ISM] survey clearly doesn’t capture the more recent concerns about the coronavirus and already appears to be being dismissed as old news by the markets,” said Andrew Hunter, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics, said Monday.
“Overall, the ISM index broadly supports the other manufacturing surveys in suggesting that while the coronavirus lockdown in China was starting to have a knock-on impact on US firms via supply chain disruption, that hit has so far been relatively modest,” Hunter added.
“But with the virus continuing to spread around the world and a more serious outbreak within the U.S. now looking increasingly likely, the disruption is likely to worsen over the coming weeks.”
And initial looks at how COVID-19 has hampered global economic activity aren’t good.