US Recession: Not Yet, But Possibly Soon

Free photos of Recession

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Indicators of sentiment suggest that the US economy is weak, while macroeconomic indicators such as GDP suggest that the US economy is doing fine. This difference between what most people perceive and the performances of economic aggregates such as GDP has been apparent for years and can be explained as follows.

First, the reality is that people who are asset-rich and/or cash-rich have done extremely well over the past few years and continue to do so due to higher interest income and equity prices. They have increased their spending accordingly, boosting measures such as GDP in the process.

Second, there has been an investment boom associated with AI that has led to massive capital spending on datacentres. Everything that goes into building these new datacentres has added to GDP while doing very little, to date, to improve the lives or the job prospects of the vast majority of people. In fact, the datacentres are increasing the cost of energy and therefore the cost of living for the average person.

Third, the government has spent rapidly over the past few years and continues to do so, ensuring that there is plenty of ‘fiscal stimulus’ to boost the economic aggregates.

A result is that numbers such as economy-wide consumer spending look good, while for most consumers, it feels like the economy is in recession or heading that way. The economy-wide numbers matter for the financial markets and for our analyses, but it’s important to understand why the perceptions of most people don’t align with these aggregates.

Overall, the economic indicators to which we pay attention point to an economy that is far from strong, but at the same time is not yet weak enough to be put into the recession category. For example, the ISM New Orders Index (NOI) continues to be low enough to generate a recession warning signal without doing what it usually does after a recession gets underway in earnest: plunge below 40. This means that the NOI has been generating a recession warning for three years now without the overall economy entering official recession territory, which is something that has never happened before.
 


As we’ve noted many times in the past, something that should happen before a recession gets underway in earnest is a sufficient general widening of credit spreads to push the High Yield Index Option Adjusted Spread (HYIOAS) above its 65-week MA (the blue line on the following chart). HYIOAS generates the occasional false recession warning, which is what happened during the first quarter of this year, but in the past it has never failed to signal an actual recession. In other words, it generates the occasional false positive but no false negatives.

HYIOAS’s current message is that the US economy is not in recession.
 


The US economy therefor,e does not appear to be in recession right now, although it would not take much in the way of additional weakness to tip the scales decisively in that direction. This risk is a reason to hold a larger cash reserve than usual, but it is not a reason to avoid investments/speculations in commodities and commodity-related equities. As we’ve noted in the past, commodities and the associated equities performed very well during the bulk of the 1973-1974 inflationary recession (probably the best historical analogue) and also performed well during the first six months of the 2007-2009 deflationary recession.


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