Much of the S&P 500's <.SPX> almost 27% advance above its March 23
low has been due to hopes that massive U.S. fiscal and monetary
support would dampen the economic blow from stay-at-home orders
designed to contain the coronavirus pandemic.
But recently, the index has reacted to reports about trials and in
particular Gilead Science's <GILD.O> remdesivir experimental
treatment for COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the new
coronavirus. Remdesivir, which previously failed as a treatment for
Ebola, is designed to keep a virus from replicating and overwhelming
a patient's immune system.
This volatility highlights investor impatience for indications of
when state and Federal authorities might start to ease stay-at-home
orders and get people back to work.
So far there are no approved treatments or vaccines for the disease
which has killed over 190,000 people globally, according to a
Reuters tally. The disease has infected more than 928,000 people and
killed more than 52,000 in the United States alone, according to the
latest data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
"Any sentiment around a therapy is really moving markets because it
shapes expectations for a return to normalcy which would be needed
to get an economic recovery started," said Shawn Cruz, manager of
trader strategy at TD Ameritrade in Jersey City, New Jersey.
The S&P added to gains on Friday after the lead investigator in a
U.S. government trial of remdesivir told Reuters the trial may yield
results as early as mid-May.
But on Thursday the index temporarily pared gains after a report
Gilead's drug failed a trial the drugmaker itself deemed
inconclusive because the study was ended early. On April 17
investors were encouraged after medical news publication STAT
reported rapid improvements in COVID-19 patients in one hospital
studying the drug.
While Michael O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading in
Stamford, Connecticut is encouraged by the number of researchers
working on coronavirus treatments, he is cautious about the stock
market's near-term prospects.
"The only thing that pushes us above this range in a sustainable way
is a therapeutic solution or a vaccine that allows us to return to
the pre-crisis level of business," he said. "I think we'll get a
medical solution. The big question is the time frame. The longer it
takes it becomes harder (for the economy) to snap back and rebound."
While there are more than 70 vaccines in development for coronavirus,
Manulife Investment Management's Steven Slaughter, who manages a
roughly $3.5 billion dedicated healthcare fund said he expects
development of a successful vaccine to take at least 12-18 months
compared to the average vaccine development time of 5-7 years.
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Then it could be years before pharmaceutical companies can produce enough to
vaccinate the world's entire population.
But Slaughter is optimistic at least some treatment will be validated in trials
in the next three to six months, and said this would give officials "more
latitude to restart the economy."
He said there are four main types of treatments being tested by companies
including Gilead, Takeda Pharmaceutical <4502.T>, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals <REGN.O>
and Alexion Pharmaceuticals <ALXN.O> that all hold some promise.
While treatments may not necessarily slow transmission of the disease, they
could help doctors control the severity of infections, easing pressure on
intensive care units (ICU).
"If we can take a patient that otherwise would've spend 2-3 weeks in an ICU bed
out of that ICU bed in 2-3 days that has an enormous beneficial impact on our
ability to handle outbreaks or to handle a potential second wave of infections,"
he said.
In the meantime officials should at least look for greater availability of tests
that can detect virus infections and for ways to track and trace people who
might have been exposed, before easing lockdowns, some strategists said.
"What will be more critical will be the testing capacity and the efficacy of
track and trace programmes," said Salman Ahmed, chief investment strategist at
Lombard Odier Investment Management. Test developers include Abbott Laboratories
<ABT.N> and Roche Holding <ROG.S>.
Since much of the U.S. population has been told to stay at home and many
businesses have been on pause since the middle of March, investors have already
accounted for dismal earnings and a massive U.S. economic decline in the second
quarter.
But recent S&P gains seem to imply a huge improvement in the economy in the
third quarter, according to Peter Tuz, president of Chase Investment Counsel in
Charlottesville, Virginia.
"There will be a vaccine and treatments for COVID-19 but people are
underestimating the amount of time it takes for them to reach the market," said
Tuz. "If there are disappointments in three areas - vaccine, treatment and
testing - we could back track some in the market."
(Reporting by Sinéad Carew in New York; Additional reporting by Sujata
Rao-Coverly and Tommy Reggiori Wilkes in London; Editing by Alden Bentley)
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