Featured Story
As governments ease lockdown restrictions, attention is focused on the risk of a second wave of COVID-19 infections. And, as JPMorgan writes, “the message from most people is: so far, so good, although as everyone also recognizes the lags with COVID-19 are long, so that three-to-four weeks need to pass in order to see how easing restrictions will impact new infections.”
Encouragingly, as JPM economist David Mackie points out, we have passed that point for a number of European countries. For example, Denmark started to ease lockdown restrictions 49 days ago without any sign of a second wave of infection. But, in JPM’s view, “this way of counting the days is misleading, and it will take a while longer before we know whether restrictions have been eased too much or not.”
In a report titled “Counting the days: risks of a COVID-19 second wave”, Mackie writes that the collapse in mobility when lockdown restrictions were imposed played a key role in driving the reproduction number (R-naught) below one. But, mobility has not been the only development weighing on the reproduction number, with JPM claiming that a number of other developments, including the buildup of immunity in the population, the reduced susceptibility of young people, the prospect of self-isolation of vulnerable individuals, the impact of weather and the impact of wearing masks and increased hygiene, all exert downward pressure on the reproduction number as mobility increases.
The bank’s analysis suggested that only when mobility increases more than halfway back from full-lockdown levels to pre-lockdown levels is there a risk of the reproduction number moving back above one. This suggests that, in assessing the risk of a second wave (or counting down the days to one), we should start counting the days from the moment that mobility in each country returns to the halfway mark.
This is what the JPM strategist has done in the table below, and it presents a much more cautious picture. As Mackie writes, “if we assume that it takes up to 28 days before we will see clear signs of a second wave, then only Norway and Denmark are close to that point. For the rest of Western Europe, we need to wait a while longer. Indeed, although mobility has increased in the United Kingdom and Italy since the lockdowns were eased, neither country has seen it return to the halfway mark.”
Receive a daily recap featuring a curated list of must-read stories.
The bank’s conclusion: “A second wave of COVID-19 infection may or may not come to Western Europe. But it is much too early to assume that it won’t.”
One final note: we are confident that the largest US bank being one of the biggest beneficiaries of a new round of massive QE to be launched by the Fed if and when a second wave hits, had almost no impact on this analysis.
StevieRay Hansen
Editor, Bankster Crime
Don't Miss
JPMorgan Chase As Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Citigroup Will Be Close Temporary Very Soon, Welcome to Fed Now CBDC
$40,000,000,000 in Unrealized Losses Hits JPMorgan Chase As Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Citigroup Face Exposure to US Treasuries: Report BanksterCrime: According to a…
Read More
Three Wall Street Mega Banks Hold $157.3 Trillion in Derivatives – That’s $56.7 Trillion More than the Entire World’s GDP Last Year
By StevieRay Hansen A consumer spending expert has released a dismal forecast for the US economy in 2024. Harry Dent told Fox Business on Tuesday…
Read More
David Webb Has an Incredible Bio, and Came From a Family Deeply Involved in Freemasonry. He Was a Successful Wall Street Manager for Years, and Now Lives in Switzerland Where He Owns Farmland. He Is Originally From Cleveland
According to Webb, everything is now in place for the Banks to steal our money in the “Great Reset.” Down Load The Free Book Here…
Read More
It Seems We Have Hit A Point Where A Wall Is In The Way Of “Kicking The Can” Much Further
BanksterCrime: by Tyler Durden By Peter Tchir of Academy Securities I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about “kicking the can.” Not because “kicking the…
Read More
The New York Fed Has Extended Its Half Trillion Dollar Bailout Facility to a Sprawling Japanese Bank You’ve Never Heard Of
BanksterCrime: By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: Kazuto Oku, CEO of Norinchukin Bank Quietly, on December 1, the New York Fed published the following statement on…
Read More