Embedded as a risk, new COVID cycle could challenge Fed, recovery
						
		 
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		 [July 22, 2021]  By 
		Howard Schneider 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Five weeks after 
		dropping its reference to the coronavirus as a weight on the economy, 
		the U.S. Federal Reserve is confronting a challenging new rise in cases 
		that has fueled doubts about the global recovery and is already forcing 
		other central banks to consider retooling their policies. 
		 
		The daily pace of new infections has more than doubled since the Fed's 
		June 16 policy meeting, when Chair Jerome Powell said that while it was 
		"premature to declare victory" given the appearance of the more 
		infectious coronavirus Delta variant, a decline in infections, 
		hospitalizations and deaths "should continue." 
		 
		It hasn't, and while the worst current outbreaks have been localized, 
		news of rising case loads once again straining hospital capacity spilled 
		into financial markets with a sharp Monday sell-off. 
		 
		U.S. Treasury yields have tumbled in a sign investors may be losing 
		confidence in both the U.S. growth outlook and the Fed's ability to 
		navigate between the shoals of a resurgent pandemic that may require 
		more help from the central bank and high inflation that may demand a 
		more restrictive approach. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		Analysts still expect economic growth in 2021 to be the strongest since 
		1984, but are now again mining real-time data for signs the Delta 
		variant is changing behavior. 
		 
		"Do vaccinated people stay off airplanes? That is the downside risk," 
		said Wells Fargo Corporate and Investment Bank Chief Economist Jay 
		Bryson, who is so far maintaining a forecast of 7% economic growth this 
		year. "I don't think any of us are expecting lockdowns like we saw a 
		year ago. The population is not going to stand for that. But you don't 
		have to have lockdowns. You just have to have people saying, 'I am 
		staying home.'" 
		 
		No obvious evidence has emerged yet of that happening. Air travel has 
		remained steady at around 80% of its pre-pandemic level, according to 
		Transportation Security Administration statistics, and there's been no 
		dip in diners returning to restaurants, according to data from 
		restaurant site OpenTable. 
		 
		Attendance at Major League Baseball games over the seven days through 
		Monday had climbed back to the 2019 average for the first time this 
		year, with stadiums now open to capacity crowds https://tinyurl.com/ymes2ax7. 
		 
		Yet the Fed's scheduled meeting next week will be newly complicated, 
		overshadowed by something epidemiologists have warned even as 
		vaccinations rolled out: Coronavirus will not fade easily, and is likely 
		to remain a cyclical risk to people's health and the economy for years 
		to come. 
		 
		The Fed in June signaled it had begun planning a shift to post-pandemic 
		monetary policy, with the risk of rising inflation seen as paramount and 
		some policymakers ready to reduce the Fed's $120 billion in monthly bond 
		purchases and accelerate eventual interest rate hikes. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		The Reserve Bank of Australia may offer a note of caution. The bank 
		began its own bond "taper," only to see the country impose new lockdowns 
		that economist feel will force the RBA to reverse course. 
		 
		Meanwhile, the Delta variant "could tap the brakes" on the U.S. 
		recovery, Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari told 
		National Public Radio over the weekend, "which would be a really big 
		setback for us." 
		 
		'HEIGHTENED SENSE OF RISK' 
		 
		The health policy response to the Delta variant spread has been modest. 
		Los Angeles reinstated an indoor mask mandate. On Monday the American 
		Academy of Pediatrics said schools should open in-person in the fall, 
		but recommended universal masking for staff and children over 2 years 
		old. 
						
		
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			People wearing face protective masks walk on Hollywood Blvd during 
			the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Los Angeles, 
			California, U.S., March 29, 2021. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo 
              
            
			  
Infections and fatalities remain well below last winter's trauma. New daily 
cases of around 37,000 are a fraction of the quarter of a million per day in 
January. 
 
Daily deaths of around 200 are "tragic...but not out of proportion to other 
major health problems" such as auto accidents, said Dr. David Dowdy, associate 
professor of epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public 
Health. 
 
With about 60% of U.S. adults fully vaccinated and a portion of the rest likely 
resistant from previous infection, "We should not be panicking," he said. 
 
Graphic: Infections rise again:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/CORONAVIRUS 
/akpezggydvr/chart.png 
 
Yet with many adults still susceptible, a national vaccine drive stalled, and 
children under 12 not yet approved for immunization, the last few weeks suggest 
the handoff to post-pandemic policy may remain bumpy. 
 
Among the core assumptions behind current Fed thinking, for example, is that a 
full reopening of in-person schooling this fall will free parents to resume work 
- a process that could now falter and slow the hoped-for recovery of nearly 6.8 
million missing jobs. 
 
"There will certainly be parents who will push back against in-person 
attendance. Those same parents may be hesitant to return to offices," wrote 
Northern Trust Chief Economist Carl Tannenbaum. "Even if formal restrictions are 
not reintroduced, a heightened sense of risk among populations will create 
complications for commerce." 
  
  
 
A Centers for Disease Control collection of major epidemiological models shows 
forecasts between now and early August of anywhere from a few thousand cases per 
day to a massive outbreak rivaling last winter. 
 
Wells Fargo's Bryson said he is watching the United Kingdom, with vaccination 
rates similar to the United States and a large surge in recent infections, for 
signs of what may be coming. 
 
There remains a large pool of household savings to keep the bills paid, socked 
away during the pandemic from an array of federal programs. Businesses meanwhile 
have adapted to operate more safely around the virus, with touchless QR code 
menus now omnipresent at restaurants, and web-based ordering systems further 
reducing staff interactions with customers. 
 
But the ebb and flow of the disease will still need to be managed, and by the 
fall most of the pandemic support programs set up to help in that process will 
have ended, including additional federal unemployment insurance payments and a 
moratorium on rental evictions. 
 
"This is not going away. It is going to be endemic," with possible implications 
for policy if, for example, the restaurant or other industries end up with 
cyclical coronavirus slowdowns and a new seasonal pattern to employment, said 
Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist with SGH Macro Advisors. "The public health goal 
now is to make it a non-event." 
 
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by 
Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci) 
				 
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