Collecting Social Security spousal benefits even if your spouse is gone

Fed’s Kashkari decries ‘absurd’ U.S. financial system that needs bailout every 10 years

Stock market is at the start of a selloff, says veteran trader Larry Williams

Dr. Fauci: ‘We may be able to put this coronavirus outbreak behind us’ — but he says Americans must play a critical role

Market Extra

How the stock market has performed during past viral outbreaks, as coronavirus spreads to Italy and Iran

There are now 79,407 cases of COVID-19 in 32 countries and 2,622 deaths

U.S. equity markets have experienced turbulent trade recently as investors keep watch of a deadly viral outbreak of COVID-19 in China. There are now 79,407 cases of COVID-19 in 32 countries and 2,622 deaths, according to the most recent reports.

However, gauged by the market’s performance during the onset of other infectious diseases, including SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, Ebola and avian flu, Wall Street investors may have little to fear that the pathogen will sicken a U.S. stock market that finished 2019 with the best annual return in years and finished Thursday trade at all-time highs.

That said, many investors are recommending caution amid the current bout of coronavirus that was reportedly first identified late last year in Wuhan City, China. The ability of the virus to halt travel and harm consumption, particularly in Beijing, are some of the ways an outbreak is likely to have economic implications that could wash up on U.S. shores.

“Risk velocity – the pace at which major risks and ‘black swan’ events can affect asset prices – is elevated in today’s markets compared to 10 years ago for three key reasons,” said Seema Shah, chief strategist at Principal Global Investors, in a research note, referring to the theory for the impact of unexpected events on markets and economies, popularized by Nassim Nicholas Taleb in his book The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable.

The strategist said a social-media driven news cycle, the interconnectedness of global supply chains and a pricey stock market, make Wall Street more vulnerable to a black swan.

“External shocks can derail economic trends and abruptly alter market sentiment. Not all risk is economic policy or monetary,” wrote David Kotok, chairman and CIO at money manager Cumberland Advisors, in a recent research note.

On Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA-0.88% the S&P 500 index SPX-1.12% and the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP-1.07% all had been trading near records up until Monday.

However, investors have been attuned to updates on the spread of the disease.

Historically, however, Wall Street’s reaction to such epidemics and fast-moving diseases is often short-lived.

According to Dow Jones Market Data, the S&P 500 posted a gain of 14.59% after the first occurrence of SARS back in 2002-03, based on the end of month performance for the index in April, 2003. About 12 months after that point, the broad-market benchmark was up 20.76% (see attached table):

Epidemic Month end 6-month % change of S&P 12-month % change of S&P HIV/AIDS June 1981 -0.3 -16.5 Pneumonic plague September 1994 8.2 26.3 SARS April 2003 14.59 20.76 Avian flu June 2006 11.66 18.36 Dengue Fever September 2006 6.36 14.29 Swine flu April 2009 18.72 35.96 Cholera November 2010 13.95 5.63 MERS May 2013 10.74 17.96 Ebola March 2014 5.34 10.44 Measles/Rubeola December 2014 0.20 -0.73 Zika January 2016 12.03 17.45 Measles/Rubeola June 2019 9.82% N/A —Source: Dow Jones Market Data

SARS resulted in a total of about 8,100 people being sickened during the 2003 outbreak, with 774 people dying, according to data from WHO and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Separately, the S&P 500 rose 11.66% in the roughly six months following reports of the 2006 Avian flu virus — a fast-moving pathogen also known as H5N1. The market gained 18.36% in the following 12-month period.

Data are similar for equity performance across the globe based on data from Charles Schwab, tracking the MSCI All Countries World Index XX:892400-0.55% The index has gained an average 0.4% in the month after an epidemic, 3.1% in the ensuing six-month period and 8.5% a year later (see graphic below):

The severity of the virus, ultimately, will dictate the market’s reaction and just because indexes had managed to shrug off the contagion from outbreaks in the past doesn’t mean that will be the case this time.

For one, coronavirus occurred during the important Lunar New Year, when Asia tends to see peak travel and consumer spending.

“There are concerns that the coronavirus may spread quickly within and beyond China, causing economic and market damage. This is particularly a concern as travel ahead of the Lunar New Year is getting underway,” wrote Jeffrey Kleintop, Charles Schwab’s chief global investment strategist.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the incubation period for the virus is around 14 days, citing health officials. People are most likely not contagious before symptoms develop.

A pandemic couldn’t come at a worse time for China’s sluggish economy, which slowed to 6.1% rate of annual growth last year, according to gross domestic product figures released last Friday, which reflected the lowest reading for Beijing in nearly three decades.

Read: This how far and fast the coronavirus has spread through U.S. stocks

Experts emphasize that it is important not to generalize the potential for unexpected results from epidemics on economies and markets.

Check out: Investors brace for coronavirus shock as China factories poised to reopen Monday

“We cannot draw any fixed conclusions about the effects of pandemics upon stock-market performance. Equity markets react unpredictably to the unknown; nevertheless, such events should not be examined in isolation, but viewed in common with other prevailing market conditions,” according to a 2006 report commissioned by Fidelity Investments and cited by Bloomberg News.

Indeed, potential disruptions to China’s economy and factories could be significant because the country’s share of the world economy by some measures has climbed to 19.3% in 2019, according to data from the International Monetary Fund (see attached chart). That compares with an 8.7% share during the 2002-03 SARS outbreak, according to data from the International Monetary Fund.

Check out: What the 2003 SARS epidemic tells us about the potential impact of China’s coronavirus on oil and metals

See original version of this story