So many people are trying to read the market conditions and restore a sense of certainty in their own minds, despite the current reality. Frankly, it’s hard to make sense of it all.
In an effort to gain greater insight, I’ve been in discussion with family offices, and attending invitation only meetings to get a reading on what some insiders are thinking.
On Tuesday evening I attended an invitation only session with John Stackhouse, Senior Vice President, RBC and Craig Wright, Senior Vice President & Chief Economist, RBC
In their remarks, they shared their perspective on what is happening in the economy. As Canada’s largest bank, they have direct visibility on what is happening since much of the cash in the economy flows through their bank accounts.
Examining the value of transactions for both Visa and Debit cards, the bank has observed that after the initial surge of buying at grocery stores subsided, the current dollar volume of Visa credit card and debit card transactions is down by 60% compared with normal for this time of year.
That’s at the consumer end of the market.
When the economics team at RBC plugged this into their model for the economy, it looks like a 32% drop in economic activity in about a month.
The RBC economics team sees a slow and gradual return to work. They don’t see the flash restart of the major sectors of the economy. Music festivals, crowded restaurants and bars, places of intense social interaction will be among some of the last to open up.
In the month of March, there were a number of notable, albeit predictable patterns in consumer spending.
We expect both buyers and sellers to lay low while extraordinary containment measures are in place. This will maintain a certain balance in most markets and help home prices stay afloat. Inventories have grown in some markets, but not dramatically.
I don’t have the exact comparable data for the United States, but the shelter in place policies between Canada and the US are fairly similar and I would expect to see similar impacts in the US economy.