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By Alex Eule
| Monday, March 14 Covid
Reminder. The days of Covid
lockdowns have largely been forgotten in the U.S. Even as the Omicron wave
caused record case counts earlier this year, U.S. investors looked beyond the
headlines. There was little political appetite -- and decreased scientific
support -- for new shutdowns, which meant Covid was no longer a
material market risk. For nearly two years, though, it's been the
tale of two pandemics. As cases surged in the U.S. and Europe, China's
"Zero-Covid" approach seemed to work. Covid waves in the West continued
to crest, while China's numbers were virtually flat. Chinese factories kept
going, one bright spot amid the global supply chain's problems. But on Sunday, China reported 1,800 new
cases of symptomatic Covid, its highest daily total in two years. The country
put Shenzhen and its nearly 18 million residents under a new lockdown that
will last at least a week. Shenzhen is home to key manufacturing facilities,
including Apple iPhone assembler Foxconn. Shanghai
is also dealing with new lockdowns. Traffic congestion in Chinese cities has
fallen sharply in recent days and is back to levels similar to March of 2020,
Tanner Brown reports
for Barron's. It's a troubling sign for a global economy
hoping to move beyond the pandemic. And it's bad news for a still reeling
global supply chain, according to Patrick
Moorhead, founder and chief
analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy: It only takes one missing link in the supply
chain to hold up the shipment of an end product. If there’s any new Covid
challenges out of Shenzhen this will result in global challenges in
manufacturing and supplying end products. The Shanghai
Composite index fell 2.6% on Covid
worries. (More on China below.) In the U.S., Apple could be one of the
companies most
affected by a protracted shutdown in China. Its stock fell 2.7% on
Monday, though that was a fairly unremarkable drop on a bad day for tech
stocks. The Nasdaq
Composite fell 2% on the day, to its lowest closing
value since late 2020. The tech-heavy index is down 22% since its November
peak. Elsewhere in the U.S., shares of Covid
vaccine maker Moderna rose 8.6%, a signal that investors are
beginning to worry about the virus again. Heading into today's trading,
Moderna shares were down 46% this year. "News in recent days, however, could
restore investor confidence that the market for the Covid-19 vaccines won’t
be fading quickly," writes
Barron's healthcare reporter Josh
Nathan-Kazis The S&P
500 slipped 0.7% after beginning the day
in positive territory on hopes for a diplomatic solution to the war. Any
optimism about an end to the tragedy in Ukraine has come and gone in previous
weeks, so it's hard to know if this time will be different. One change from the first days of the war,
though, is that oil prices are now falling. That's possibly on hopes of a
resolution, but more likely because China shutdowns are threatening the
global demand for energy. Crude fell 5.8% on the day, to $103.01 a barrel.
It's down 17% since March 8. Meanwhile, bond yields continue to head
higher, as the Federal Open
Market Committee gets set to hold its policy meeting over the
next two days. Investors are all but assured of a quarter-point rate increase
when the Fed wraps up the meeting on Wednesday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note was
up 14 basis points on the day, to 2.139%, its highest level since June 11,
2019 -- a full six months before anyone had even heard of Covid. |
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DJIA: +0.003% to 32,945.24 The Hot Stock: Nielsen
Holdings +30.5% Best Sector: Financials +1.3%
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