Help the Fight Against COVID-19

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At this point the economy is screwed. There are two options:
1. Do what is required to contain the virus. Shut everything down, stop all travel, etc. This will trash the economy.
2. Do what we've been doing (which isn't nearly enough) and millions will die and the economy will be trashed.

This is a key point. We're not going to avoid the economic fallout... and in fact, it will likely be even worse in the second scenario. We'll just end up closing everything after its too late, and the economic damage of closing things down will just be compounded with further economic damage due to deaths, medical expenses, supply chain issues and real panic.

If you look at how China handled this, with draconian type shut downs, and then look at the their numbers, you can see that worked. Meanwhile, the rest of the world is now experiencing logarithmic growth of cases and deaths.

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/coronavirus-cases/ (scroll down to Cases Outside China)

covid-19-cases-outside-usa.jpg

Unfortunately, we don't have competent leadership at the top, so state and local officials are questioning doing what's right and closing things down before its too late. Fortunately, we do have many business leaders are making the right moves now (although probably a week or two late). All public schools should probably be shut down at this point. We took our daughters out on Monday after looking at the numbers.
 

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And if decisive action would have been taken initially, the economy would have suffered for sure but it would have shortened the duration - far less damage would have been done.

The US has done a total of somewhere between 5,000 and 8,000 COVID-19 tests. Nobody knows for sure because nobody is keeping track. South Korea did 10,000 tests yesterday .
 
And if decisive action would have been taken initially, the economy would have suffered for sure but it would have shortened the duration - far less damage would have been done.
THIS is correct. The WHO dropped the ball on this due to geopolitical/economical considerations. THEY had all the information needed to declare this a pandemic based on their definition and guidelines well over a month ago. Instead we bled the market a few rounds last week and now this week the bleeding really started. Next week will be a continued decline with massive layoffs and unemployment reported.
We should have had the balls to quarantine and influence social policy as fascist or extreme as it may have appeared, but no.. Too much fear of political backlash and popularity contests.
 
There's already talk of a stimulus package to help the f**king oil companies out due to lost revenue. The damage that will be done to many local businesses is going to be unrecoverable. That will translate into more corporate replacements in time. Bye bye local Irish pub, welcome some tacky chain like the Tilted Kilt.

Won't happen. No one in Congress is interested & even at least one oil industry group has expressed opposition. But remember: there are orders of magnitude more mom & pop oil and gas producers in the US than there are large companies. Same thing will happen bailout or no, lots of little guys will go broke and their assets will be rolled into much larger corporate interests. Without even the decent scenery the Tilted Kilt will provide as compensation for the loss of your local Irish pub.
 
If we applied the general policy making/attitudes/feelings/raw local resource availability of 2020 to WWs I and II we'd be EFF'd. These are the fears materializing of a once truly independent, dare I say Great, country who now can't even produce basic testing kits for a virus that is being successfully identified by the 1000s daily in far less "advanced" countries. Everyone is to blame for this gradual inclination to complacency and dependency on cheap oil and goods produced outside of the continuous 48. I loved me some Sony Walkman in 1988 and several iterations of the iPhone.. And, let us not forget why we have all gathered here to this very 1s and 0s gathering.
 
From the moment that the general character of this virus became known (high inclination to spread, bad-cold/flu-like symptoms for 90% of persons, risk of mortality focused on those whose 5-year survival rate was already under 50% due to either chronic illness or advanced age), it was clear that...
1. we were facing a crisis caused by a Transition To A New Normal;
2. that damage and suffering would be either caused or avoided, according to whether the transition was Abrupt or Gradual;

...and we're currently trying to make it more gradual simultaneously in two areas, which unfortunately conflict:
(a.) We want a more gradual slide into the new, lower rate of business growth (that it's gonna level out at over the next 12 months)
(b.) We want a more gradual infection rate, to reduce the hospitalization and death rate (that threatens to overwhelm health care workers)

The solution to (a.) is to tell people not to panic so that the markets slide slowly not quickly.

The solution to (b.) is to tell people to hide in their homes and not come out...which they don't really want to do except when they're panicking!

What we've learned over the last 3 days is that those 2 solutions conflict, and can't both be done at once. Also, the economic damage is largely done. (I don't mean we've seen it all yet; I mean merely that it's no longer avoidable.)

Since avoiding economic damage is now a lost cause, we should put all our eggs in basket (b.): Make the spread of the virus more gradual, even at the expense of economic problems (because we're going to get them anyway).

Re: The Economy:
The economy will not collapse; but stocks have lost value (and will lose a bit more), some businesses will close, and jobs will be lost. Let's look what that means, 12 months out:

If you own shares in a company that closes, that's bad. But there's no reason for most companies to close. Airlines are hurt; cruises are toast; and things related to large-crowd-entertainment are toast. Certain medical stocks will obviously benefit. If you have diversified out your portfolio like they tell you to do in school, then the value you had in November will return, eventually. Also, sometime soon the panic will begin to subside, and that's when you should see UNDERVALUED stocks and buying opportunities.

In another 12 months, we will have arrived at The New Normal in terms of the virus' ubiquity. Most folk alive will have had it once and gotten over it. It will bounce around the population the way that normal cold viruses do (perhaps seasonally, like flu; or perhaps year-round). Like colds, over a 5 year period everyone will have had it.

In fact, the first emergence of one of the viruses that cause "the common cold" probably looked like this. But everyone walks around expecting to get a "cold" now and again: It became the New Normal. To be sure, people occasionally die of the common cold precisely because their bodies were already weak (from some chronic illness) and it turns into pneumonia and other secondary infections, which overwhelm the body, causing organ failure, septic shock, and death. That's how COVID-19 kills (when it does); that's normally how flu kills (when it does); and it's how the common cold viruses kill (when they do). In a decade, COVID-19 will probably be categorized as yet another common cold virus. But for the moment, its newness is the problem.

Right now COVID-19 is more lethal than it ever will be in the future, not only because the virus will mutate over time, but because of its newness, our newness at identifying and fighting it, and because the transition to The New Normal is happening uncomfortably quickly.

In Italy, the "estimated death rate" it's 6-ish percent...but when you normalize by ages, it's really more like 2%. And that's WITH a health care system that's already overwhelmed, in one of the more polluted countries in Europe.

Re: "Normalize by Ages":
The virus is at a stage of general community spread: Everyone is getting it.

But (mostly) only those who show up in ERs on the verge of dying from the viral pneumonia "phase" are getting tested. That's why we see data like this:
"Avg. age of population of Tuscany: 46yrs; Avg. age of those tested for COVID-19: 64yrs."

When we look at the number of persons who died, and divide it by the number of persons who were tested, and tested positive, we get 6%+.

But, seeing the difference of average ages, we realize that the Sample Set of persons being tested is an invalid sample: It isn't reflective of the whole population. To "normalize it" means to weight the younger persons in the sample more heavily, and the older persons in the sample less heavily, until the average weighted age matches the average age of the general population.

When we do this, we find the death rate drops a little under 2%.

Likely U.S. death rates:
So, if the U.S. has 350 million people in it, and if (nearly) everyone is going to get COVID-19 by this time next year, should we assume that the dead will number 6% of 350 million people?

No, because the average age of the U.S. population isn't the same as the average age of persons who tested positive for Wuhan Flu in Tuscany!

Will it be 2%, then?

No, again...because the average age of the U.S. population isn't the same as the average age of the Tuscan population! Tuscany is full of older folk, not a lot of kids. The U.S. mean age is (from a quick Google search) 38 years.

So the only realistic estimates are those under 2%.

Other Factors:
Normalizing for Pre-Virus Healthiness?
Another thing to consider is that there's a difference between the pre-virus-healthiness of people who show up sick enough to get tested (and who then test positive), and the pre-virus-healthiness of the general population.

Above, I have described how we normalize by age. That's easy, because age is a number, and we know what that number is for everyone.

To get an estimate of the death rate of the general population we should also normalize by pre-virus-healthiness, since we know that the population as a whole is not only younger than the population showing up to be tested in Tuscany, but also less full of chronic illness than the persons tested for COVID-19.

But normalizing our sample set by pre-virus-healthiness is impossible: We lack the data, and have no way to condense that data into simple numbers which we could use as a basis for weighting the sample set. But you can't get an accurate general-population death projection without doing that.

So we know that 2% is overstating it. We just don't know by how much.

Normalizing for Already-Collapsed Healthcare System?
The Italian system is already in rationing mode. The U.S. system will probably get there at some point in the most seriously-impacted locations (e.g. outbreak area in Seattle) but may never get there nationwide. If you're living on a farm in Nebraska, your local hospital may not see more than one confirmed case a week.

Now, rationed care in an exhausted, overburdened system is surely worse than that in a system that's more or less normal. So, again, we know that 2% is an overstated death rate for the U.S. population, for that reason...but by how much? We can't know.

Best Guess:
I suspect that, at worst, we'll see a 1% death rate of the general population over the next 12 months, from COVID-19. The slower that it happens, the less economic shock. The faster that it happens, the more economic shock (and general distress).

Best Plan:
Stay home, except to get groceries.

Buy stocks -- IF you're into that; but this is not investment advice and I hereby declare that you should never take investment advice from some guy posting logorrhea in a web-forum! -- as soon as you think the panic has lowered the prices sufficiently...but don't buy cruise lines, or businesses that try to entertain or transport large numbers of people at once. Maybe look at stocks related to work-at-home technologies? A lot of people are going to get a lot of remote-work experience over the next year, I suspect.

Oh, and DON'T PANIC, unless somehow, perversely, panicking makes you do something helpful that you wouldn't otherwise be inclined to do. (Not sure what that'd be.)

But if panicking just elevates your heart rate and suppresses your immune system and makes you irritating to others, why bother?
 
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Covid-19 vs seasonal flu in Italy
1583605433-grafico-coronavirus.jpeg

The horizontal axis is weeks (end of 2019, beginning of 2020).
Cyan lines are number of flu cases needing ICU (weekly peak: 93)
Blue lines are deaths caused by flu (weekly peak: 29)
Yellow lines are Covid-19 cases needing ICU
Red lines are deaths caused by Covid-19

The peaks shown for Covid-19 are updated to last week and those are already higher than those of the flu.
Deaths today are 1016 in total, that means almost 800 in 3-4 days.
And this happened with only 15113 infected people which correspond to ~0.025% of the population.

Yeah, it's like a flu.. sure..
 
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Covid-19 vs seasonal flu in Italy
View attachment 64976

The horizontal axis is weeks (end of 2019, beginning of 2020).
Cyan lines are number of flu cases needing ICU (weekly peak: 93)
Blue lines are deaths caused by flu (weekly peak: 29)
Yellow lines are Covid-19 cases needing ICU
Red lines are deaths caused by Covid-19

The peaks shown for Covid-19 are updated to last week and those are already higher than those of the flu.
Deaths today are 1016 in total, that means almost 800 in 3-4 days.
And this happened with only 15113 infected people which correspond to ~0.0002% of the population.

Yeah, it's like a flu.. sure..
the yellow line is higher than the cyan ones. i thought there's nothing to worry about?
 
Ontario just closed down all publicly funded schools for two weeks after next weeks March break...

..Looks as-if that is just beginning to occur, here, in Arizona, too. My daughter is on spring break for another week. Wouldn’t surprise me to see them extend that break ...But, we’ll see.

It would be nice to have a concerted action here regarding schools. Especially since my daughter (and many other’s), are just a few months away from graduating.
 
the yellow line is higher than the cyan ones. i thought there's nothing to worry about?
No, nothing to worry about..
The yellow line would be at 1.153 as of today, by the end of the week it'll be even higher.
Everything's fine..
 
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