Global daily COVID-19 cases hit record, but does it really matter?

News

Global daily COVID-19 cases hit a new record on Monday, with more than 1.44 million infections recorded. This comes amid a surge in omicron infections and that is no surprise with the variant being the most transmissible one yet.

Of note, the 7-day rolling average of cases also jumped to roughly 841,000 – a 49% spike from a month ago.

Putting the numbers aside, the key question is does this all matter?

Well, not really. Once upon a time, the market may be spooked by the sheer magnitude of the figures. But not anymore.

The world has come to learn to live with COVID-19 and the fact that omicron appears to be less severe is allowing people, and investors too, to look past the variant’s high transmissibility.

A positive takeaway to the numbers above is that daily COVID-19 deaths has not seen as dramatic a surge as cases. Sure, there is a lag period but surely this is also a result of worldwide vaccinations.

The 7-day rolling average of deaths has stuck around 7,000 since October despite omicron’s emergence.

As such, this will be a key measure to watch in the weeks ahead (since there might be a lag) to reaffirm that omicron isn’t as fearful as anticipated when bursting onto the scene.

If anything, the market has already appeared to have made up its mind on that. The S&P 500 hit a fresh record high yesterday and in FX, AUD/JPY – a key risk barometer – has also erased its omicron losses.

Adding to that, 2-year Treasury yields jumped to its highest March 2020, nearing 0.75%.

Sure, thinner liquidity conditions are a considerable factor. So, we’ll see of any follow through next week onwards.

But for now, the numbers above are merely what they represent – just numbers. Unless of course when it comes to China, which remains the biggest wildcard to the global outlook next year at this point.

Articles You May Like

Singapore Airlines shares fall 6% as profit nearly halves amid intensifying competition
Dollar Gains Capped by 10-Year Yield’s Struggle with Critical Resistance Level
Gold pullback might prove to be timely for dip buyers
Gold prices fall by Rs 4,750/10 gms after Trump’s victory. Where is the bullion market headed?
Cisco reports fourth straight quarter of declining revenue