In February and March, North American and global stocks experienced a huge correction on fears that the coronavirus (COVID-19) would wreak havoc on the global economy. Those fears have come true, with the Canadian and American economies coming to a standstill. Despite terrible economic data, the stock market has been bullish. But there are growing concerns that stocks have risen too fast, too soon, and could experience another correction, tumbling nearly 20% and testing March lows.
North American stocks have been on a tear since bottoming in late March. The S&P 500 is up more than 25%, the NASDAQ has climbed nearly 30%, and the TSX has rebounded slightly more than 30%.
These gains come on the back of some pretty miserable coronavirus-fuelled economic data. Most notably, U.S. gross domestic product shrank 4.8% in the first quarter, far worse than estimates calling for a 3.5% retraction. On top of that, 36.5 million Americans have applied for unemployment benefits in just two months.
Canada’s economic data is just as bleak, with the country entering a recession in the first quarter. Keep in mind, most places only shut their doors in the closing weeks of March, which suggests the Canadian economy wasn’t doing that well to begin with. And second quarter GDP will be abysmal.
March GDP was down 9% which resulted in a quarterly GDP decline of 2.6%; the largest one quarter drop in GDP ever recorded. In April, a record 1.99 million Canadians lost their jobs as a result of the coronavirus. This comes after more than one million jobs vanished in March. As a result, the April unemployment rate soared to an eyewatering 13.0%, versus 7.8% in March.
It’s hard to imagine that stocks could continue to soar supported by this kind of economic data. According to Goldman Sachs Group Inc., investor fatigue and pessimism will take hold and send the S&P 500 down almost 20% over the next three months.
It appears as though investors have gotten ahead of themselves, with the fear of missing out trumping all of the negative economic news coming out of Ottawa and Washington. But why are investors ignoring what seems to be pretty obvious indicators that things are not going well?
There are a number of reasons why investors are, for now, optimistic about stocks.
Instead of waiting for the markets to truly recover, the professional traders at Learn-To-Trade.com can help you make money when the markets are going up, sideways, or crashing.
As Canada’s oldest and leading provider of stock market trading courses, the expert instructors are Learn-To-Trade.com have taught investors of every skill level how to trade more confidently and profit more consistently.
To learn more about Learn-To-Trade.com’s stock market trading course, contact us at 416-510-5560 or by e-mail at info@learn-to-trade.com.
The odds of the Bank of Canada making an oversized, 50-basis-point interest rate cut when…
The Canadian dollar has not exactly been having a good year against its American counterpart.…
Earlier this year Energy was one of the better-performing sectors, rising 17% from January to…
The U.S. Federal Reserve made a big splash, announcing an oversized interest rate cut; a…
September is living up to its reputation as being one of the worst months for…
The Bank of Canada cut its overnight lending rate, which impacts interest rates charged for…