Select date

May 2024
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

“Don’t Fight the Narrative”

22-7-2020 < SGT Report 26 388 words
 

by Jim Rickards, Daily Reckoning:



It’s widely believed that the stock market looks ahead and discounts the future. But consider this November’s presidential election…


Joe Biden has a substantial lead over President Trump in the polls. But Biden’s platform is not what you would call market friendly. For example, it calls for a 39.6% tax rate on dividends and capital gains.


But the stock market is near all-time highs again, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average nearing 27,000, the S&P over 3,200 and the Nasdaq actually at record highs.



What more proof do you need that stock markets are clueless when it comes to discounting future outcomes?


Now, it’s true you can’t always trust the polls. I know it well since I was one of very few analysts who predicted a Trump victory in 2016, even though he was behind in the polls.


But the same analytical tools that led me to predict a Trump win last time are showing me his chances are poorer this time.


OK, a true believer might say, but maybe the market’s anticipating a robust economic recovery. That’s why it’s rebounded so strongly.


But that argument just doesn’t hold much water.


Yes, unemployment dropped from over 13% to just over 11% last month, but that’s still the highest level since the end of World War II.


And there’s good reason to believe the unemployment rate will surge again heading into August as Payroll Protection Plan loans run out, lockdowns resume and states catch up with a backlog of claims that have not been processed yet.


Big business may be doing fine because it’s crowded into technology, finance and telecommunications, which are relatively unaffected by the pandemic.


But almost half the economy and half of all jobs are the domain of small-and-medium sized enterprises that have been decimated.


These restaurants, salons, dry cleaners, boutiques and other mainstays of neighborhoods across America are operating at half-capacity (at best) or have shut their doors permanently (at worst).


Meanwhile, a wave of bankruptcies is sweeping across the nation.


In other words, the V-shaped recovery that many analysts have been touting simply isn’t in the cards.


My own estimate is that this year may be even worse than the Great Depression.


Read More @ DailyReckoning.com



Print