ALL EYES ON POLITICAL DRAMA
posted December 26, 2020
WuRevue Week Ending 12/25/2020
Top News:
12/21: A new Covid strain with higher transmissibility discovered in the UK, as well as the worsening situation in California, overshadowed a tentative agreement on a $900B fiscal relief bill in US Congress. In a surprising move, the Fed greenlighted the resumption of limited share buybacks by banks, following the conclusion of its latest stress-testing of capital adequacy. With hope dimming for a deal by year-end, Brexit negotiations mired in deadlock compounded investor worries.
12/22: After months of delay wrought by inaction and partisan wrangling, Congress formally passed a second coronavirus relief package. This development could not have happened sooner, given a reading of consumer sentiment in December stumbled unexpectedly to the second lowest level since the pandemic’s onset. Owing to a tight inventory and rising median prices, existing home sales saw a monthly dip in November, after a record October.
12/23: The Administration signaled its dismay with the veto-proof Covid recovery bill, part of a bigger government spending legislation. Meanwhile, US economic data were decidedly mixed: positives in the form of the weekly unemployment claims report and durable goods order are juxtaposed against the erosion of consumer sentiment in December and decline in the latest monthly personal income and spending report. On the vaccine front, AstraZeneca/Oxford’s candidate should be approved in the UK “pretty shortly,” while Merck signed a deal with the US government for its experimental coronavirus therapy.
12/24: With the EU and UK reportedly close to a Brexit deal, all eyes will focus on whether any agreement can be even provisionally ratified, prior to the year-end cliff. China launched an antitrust investigation into Alibaba, prompting concerns of heightened regulatory scrutiny for other tech giants in the near-term.
Heard on the Street:
“We see emerging market equities and U.S. small cap as having additional upside where a lot of those… early economic cycle benefits are not fully priced in… we would encourage our clients to be looking through any short-term volatility because that is, at the end of the day, a normal part of investing.”
— Meghan Shue, head of investment strategy at Wilmington Trust, as quoted by MarketWatch on 12/21/2020
“You’ve got to hold more cash because you don’t have as fulsome a parachute as you had before… A big deal for asset allocation going forward is making sure you’re getting what you need from equities, especially when interest rates are this low.”
— Rick Rieder, CIO of BlackRock’s Global Fixed Income, on the relative risks of bonds vis-à-vis other asset classes
Longer Game:
As families celebrate the holiday season, in however modified fashion, one European observer offered at least five reasons to be hopeful as we head into 2021!
Bonus:
While noting he’s “scientifically confident,” the CEO of BioNTech said it would take about two weeks to confirm whether its already approved joint vaccine with Pfizer is effective against the new UK strain of coronavirus.
HAPPY HOLIDAYS from JACKSON HEIGHTS; MAY the NEW YEAR BE the DAWN of MANY AUSPICIOUS TIDINGS for ALL!