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August 2021

By August 16, 2021January 17th, 2022Signia Insights

The Canary in the Covid Coal Mine

On 31 January 2020, eighteen months ago, the first case of Covid-19 was reported in the UK. It took just over 7 weeks for the virus to spread and the UK to enter its first national lockdown to contain the initial wave of coronavirus infections. Then followed a series of pandemic mistakes and policy errors such as Prime Minister Boris Johnson announcing on 30 April 2020 that “we are past the peak” of the pandemic, and a premature ‘Eat Out to help Out’ scheme designed to encourage the unvaccinated British public back into restaurants to socialise again, which ultimately induced a second wave of Covid-19 infections across the country. It wasn’t until a more deadly and catastrophic third winter wave of infections hit in January 2021 that saw daily recorded cases and daily hospitalisations peak at 68,183 and 4,583, respectively, and a third national lockdown was imposed.

No wonder then that the UK suffered more Covid-19 deaths than any other country in Europe during this period whilst leaders on the Continent took a more cautious approach to tackling the spread of the virus. Nonetheless, following a very successful vaccination programme that has propelled the percentage of the British population that are now fully vaccinated with two jabs to nearly 60%, it’s these same leaders, and indeed those from all over the world, that are now watching the UK experiment with bated breath as Boris Johnson’s government removed almost all Covid-19 restrictions in the face of elevated infection levels on 19 July 2021 in what has been declared ‘Freedom Day’. This time, however, the outcome might be very different. With over 90% of UK adults estimated to have coronavirus antibodies from either past infection or at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccination, scientists advising the government are confident that herd immunity in the UK has now been achieved. Looking at the most recent data hints this may be the case, as daily infections have so far declined since Freedom Day despite the reopening of bars and nightclubs, whilst hospitalisations have remained low.

Alas, the UK is still the canary in the covid coal mine, but one that is still very much alive, and with the eyes of the world watching it could set a bold new blueprint exit strategy for other countries that have thus far stuck to a strict zero covid policy with rolling social and economic restrictions. With the wonders of science and pharmaceutical proactiveness to thank, there is indeed, seemingly, light at the end of the coal mine.

Daily change in Covid cases

Source: Bloomberg, instituteforgovernment.org.uk, Office for National Statistics, Signia Wealth. Data as at 31/07/2021.

asset allocation

Source: Signia Wealth, Bloomberg. Data as at 31/07/2021. Global Equities: iShares MSCI ACWI ETF; Global Aggregate: Vanguard Global Bond Index GBP Hedged Fund; Global Sovereign: Xtrackers Global Government Bond GBP Hedged ETF; Global IG Corporate: Vanguard Global Corporate Bond Index GBP Hedged Fund; Global HY Corporate: iShares Global High Yield Corporate Bond GBP Hedged ETF; EM$ Sovereign: iShares J.P. Morgan USD EM Bond ETF; EM$ Corporate: iShares J.P. Morgan USD EM Corporate Bond ETF; EM Local Sovereign: iShares J.P. Morgan EM Local Government Bond ETF.

Equities

• US equities outperformed their developed market counterparts in July, with higher-growth stocks performing particularly well due to lower bond yields and renewed concerns around the Delta variant of COVID

• European, UK, and Japanese equity markets were flat to down for the month, as heightened concerns around coronavirus weighed on investor appetite for cyclically-orientated companies

• Chinese equities fell sharply during July, as severe regulatory action by Chinese authorities in certain parts of the market surprised investors and sapped confidence

Jack Rawcliffe

Jack Rawcliffe

Senior Equity Fund Analyst

Fixed Income

• The global treasuries index was up strongly on the month, as concerns surrounding the delta variant coupled with signs that global growth may be moderating caused investors to seek shelter in safe havens.

• Global corporate credit indices rallied on the back of growing risk appetite, improving oil prices and continued loose monetary and fiscal stimulus globally. Global investment grade credit outperformed high yield credit due to its higher positive sensitivity to falling interest rates.

• Emerging market debt benefited from lower US yields combined with strong commodity prices although some EM central banks have raised rates in response to rising inflation which saw EM debt issued in local currency underperform relative to that issued in US dollars or Euros.

Grégoire Sharma

Fixed Income Fund Analyst

Commodities & FX

• Gold gained 2.4% in July in an attempt to bounce back after June’s 7% drop, however, improving economic data and expectations on earlier than expected withdrawal of monetary stimulus from the Federal Reserve are likely to become headwinds for Gold in the second half of the year.

• The US Dollar fell 0.3% after a large rise in June, looking forward however, expectations of rising treasury yields and solid economic growth are likely to assist the US Dollar’s rise in coming months.

Harry Elliman

Harry Elliman

Investment Analyst

World Economic Growth Rates (Real GDP)

World Economic Growth Rates (Real GDP)

*Bloomberg Contributor Composite Forecasts, except IMF WEO for India. **Brazil, Russia, India, Taiwan, South Korea. Source: Signia Wealth, Bloomberg, IMF. Data as at 31/07/2021.

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United States of America

The economy is expected to grow in 2021 at its fastest pace since the 1980s as pent-up consumer demand from record high levels of savings boost consumption, stimulus from Biden’s multiple trillion-dollar fiscal packages are deployed, and as more than 50% of the population are now fully vaccinated. Housing affordability has fallen sharply as house prices reach all-time highs above 2007 levels, whilst the labour force is still nearly 6m workers short of pre-pandemic level.

Eurozone

After a slow start the European COVID-19 vaccination programme has accelerated to broadly in line with the UK, leading to the re-opening of the economic bloc this summer. Member countries will soon benefit from European Recovery Fund stimulus spending, and together with continued ECB stimulus support via the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme, expectations for a stronger economic rebound this year and beyond are growing. However, southern economies are suffering another summer of disappointing tourism activity as international travel restrictions largely remain in place, and higher inflation is beginning to hamper consumer confidence and credit growth.

United Kingdom

British households have used long winter lockdowns and government furlough schemes to strengthen their finances and become net savers in anticipation of the end of all COVID-19 restrictions in July and subsequent summer spending spree following a successful vaccine rollout programme this year. Infections are on the rise as the country unlocks but hospitalisations remain low thanks to effective vaccines. The Bank of England said Britain’s economy would grow by the most since World War Two as it raised its estimate for UK GDP growth in 2021 to 7.25%, above market expectations.

Japan

Japan is struggling to control a third and prolonged coronavirus infection wave as the delta variant spreads across Asia, but the Summer Olympic Games have carried on without any major disruptions. Despite substantial monetary and fiscal policy support, a vaccine-sceptic population may hamper a significant economic rebound in 2021. Inflation levels are rising albeit from a negative base and are still significantly lower than across other G10 economies.

China

Chinese economic growth is expected to rebound above its trend growth rate of around 6%, to between 8-9% this year. However, being the first economy to recover from the pandemic last year means that the Chinese recovery is now ageing and beginning to slow from its peak, whilst headline consumer price inflation remains low and relatively benign, allowing policymakers to easy liquidity conditions. China’s vaccination programme is picking up pace after a slow start.

Emerging Markets

Emerging economies have found themselves lagging the global vaccine rollout programme with most of the poorest EM populations currently largely unvaccinated. Despite the outlook for a buoyant global economy in 2021 as broad economic momentum gathers pace and reflation policies take hold, key economies in Brazil, India, Russia and Turkey are still fighting elevated COVID-19 infection rates, increasing the risk of new and deadlier global virus variants.

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