Virus Outbreaks Harm Stocks, Just Not on Tuesday

S&P 500, aside from yesterday’s rally, has dipped up to 13% due to epidemics, Citi says.

Despite Tuesday’s market turnaround, history shows that virus scares have hurt stocks badly over the past two decades, with the S&P 500 dropping between 6.9% and 12.9%, depending on the epidemic.

That’s the conclusion of a Citigroup research note, which found the worst market pullback stemmed from the Zika virus, which raged from late 2015 through early 2016. Each time, the five virus-related panics this century had a short-term impact on equities, which bounced back afterward after the danger passed.

The current epidemic, called the coronavirus, chopped 2.6% off the index, from January 21 through Monday, with more than 4,500 people infected in China and at least 125 dead. Beijing has quarantined large sections of the country. Travel-related stocks, such as airlines and casinos (gambling mecca, Macau, offshore from China, is shuttering some of its facilities) are down.

The market turned around on the epidemic Tuesday as investors seemed to believe it could be contained, with the index jumping 1%. The big fear about such outbreaks is that they will develop into Black Plague-like scourges that will kill millions and upend the world economy. The Zika virus began in Brazil, infecting up to 1.5 million people, and threw the S&P 500 for a 12.9% loss.

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Before that, the worst problem resulted from SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, which originated in southern China in 2003. It sickened almost 90,000 and killed 774 in 17 nations. SARS led to a 12.8% S&P 500 slide, a hair beneath the Zika toll, by Citi’s tally, according to a CNBC report. In index sector terms, the biggest Zika losers were communications services (off 26.7%), financials (16.3%), materials (15%), and information technology (14%).

Other mass contagions were less harmful to stocks. Avian flu in 2004, MERS in 2012, and Ebola from December 2013 to February 2014 cost the index 6.9%, 7.3%, and 5.8% respectively, Citi stated.

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MetLife Secures $1.9 Billion Pension Deal with Lockheed Martin

The aerospace giant will transfer liabilities to the insurer, roughly 20,000 retirees and current workers.

Lockheed Martin will shed roughly $1.9 billion in liabilities after MetLife takes on pension benefit payments for roughly 20,000 retirees and current employees under the defense contractor.

The aerospace company in December purchased a group annuity contract from Metropolitan Tower Life Insurance, a subsidiary of the insurance giant. The transaction, announced Tuesday, will not cut the amount of pension benefits for the Lockheed Martin’s affected retirees.

The transfer constitutes 14% of Lockheed’s $13.2 billion in pension liabilities as of year-end 2019, according to the company’s filings.

The agreement will allow the company to “focus on its core mission and mitigate financial risk associated with market volatility,” while ensuring a “seamless transition” for retirees, said Ken Possenriede, executive vice president and chief financial officer at Lockheed Martin, in a statement.

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This is not the first pension transfer for Lockheed, which last January moved $2.6 billion in pension liabilities that covered a total of 41,000 workers to Prudential Insurance and Athene.

It’s also part of a broader movement of US employers paying insurers to take on pension liabilities, as plan expenses grow, and more companies move towards 401(k) plans. Roughly one-third of defined benefit sponsors plan to offload their liabilities sometime in the next five years, MetLife said in a study.

Last year, MetLife secured a $6 billion pension deal with FedEx, which was the largest U.S. pension transfer in years. In 2012, telecommunications giant Verizon transferred $7.5 billion in liabilities to Prudential.

Earlier this month, MetLife agreed to pay a $10 million fine to the Securities and Exchange Commission for pension accounting violations. Lockheed, thanks to the military buildup under the Trump Administration, had an earnings surge of 23% last year, to $6.2 billion.

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