Goldman
Sachs’ economists declared the U.S. economy all but recession-proof at
the dawning of 2020, but now it appears a coronavirus-induced recession
may have begun just a few months later.
The analysis didn’t
account for a “Black Swan,” a term for an improbable and unforeseen
event. Instead, it explored the idea of a “Great Moderation,” which is
characterized by low volatility, sustainable growth and muted inflation.
“Overall,
the changes underlying the Great Moderation appear intact, and we see
the economy as structurally less recession-prone today,” Goldman
economists
Jan Hatzius and David Mericle wrote.
The economy, they argued, would settle gently after 11 years of growth.
“While
new risks could emerge, none of the main sources of recent recessions —
oil shocks, inflationary overheating, and financial Imbalances — seem
too concerning for now. As a result, the prospects for a soft landing
look better than widely thought.”
All the risk assessment and
economic modeling in the world is futile if it can’t anticipate the one
variable that matters most — particularly if it’s a pandemic.
People waiting on a line to enter Trader Joe’s in New York, March 12, 2020.
Valerie Block | CNBC
Pioneering economist
Burton Malkiel, who is also chief investment office at Wealthfront,
was also bullish on the U.S. economy as the year began. Appearing on
CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street,” he said he could not spot a recession on
the horizon. He also qualified his remarks by saying that predicting a
recession is a very difficult task.
“My guess is, if we have a
recession, what’s going to cause it is some shock that we don’t know of
now,” said Malkiel, author of the 1973 book “A Random Walk Down Wall
Street.”
“Some international shock,” he predicted. “It’s going to
be something like that, not something we can see in the immediate
future.”
Has the recession arrived?
Recessions are not officially declared until the economy is already deep into them, or until after they’ve passed.
Economist Alan Blinder
told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” on Wednesday that the U.S. was
probably already in a recession as the coronavirus outbreak cancelled
conferences, events and travel plans.
“I wouldn’t be one bit
surprised if when we look back at the data, it is decided ... that the
recession started in March,” said Blinder, a former Federal Reserve vice
chairman who now serves as a professor at Princeton. “It wouldn’t be a
bit surprising to me.”
By slight contrast,
JPMorgan economists predict the U.S. will skirt the technical definition of a recession.
They’re calling for negative growth in the nation’s gross domestic
product, but they’re calling that a “novel-global recession” since it
will only be temporary, according to their forecast.
In
January, it was easy to make bullish forecasts because stocks were
setting record highs. Coronavirus was just beginning to make headlines,
and it was the furthest worry from most investor’s minds. Many
economists and analysts, in fact, were expecting a slowing economy to
glide to a soft landing.
Unheeded warnings
Still, analysts warned
about flat corporate earnings, weak manufacturing, high corporate debt
loads, a possible resurgence of the U.S.-China trade war, and a
potentially divisive election cycle. And for a brief moment, the top
worry was the prospect of a war with Iran after an air strike that
killed Qasem Soleimani, an
Iranian major general in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
“A
violent escalation of hostilities between the U.S. is nearly certain in
the coming days, a game changer that will obscure everything else,”
declared Greg Valliere, chief U.S. policy strategist at AGF Investments.
“There’s a reason, finally for caution in the stock market.”
Savita
Subramanian, head of U.S. equity and quantitative strategy at Bank of
America Merrill Lynch, had put out a note that said the corporate
earnings outlook was flat and that the market “feels toppy.”
“Weak revisions don’t bode well for early 2020,” she wrote.
Other
market observers warned about lofty price-to-earnings ratios and a high
concentration of investment in just a handful of stocks, such as
Facebook, Apple, Am
azon, Netflix and Google parent Alphabet.
“We
still think the greatest risk in the equity market remains in growth
stocks, where expectations are too high and priced,” Michael Wilson,
chief U.S. equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, wrote in December.
UBS
analysts warned of a coming wave of credit downgrades for U.S. stocks,
which may still be on the way as a pandemic grinds portions of the
economy to a halt.
“It’s no great secret that U.S. companies have
been piling on debt in the past decade,” the analysts wrote. “A mere ten
years after the financial crisis, total non-financial corporate debt
stands just shy of $10 trillion, or about 50% higher than the lows seen
in 2009. Interestingly, debt is NOT a major theme in today’s
marketplace.”
Last summer, recession worries escalated when the
bond market experienced an inversion of the yield curve.
Short-term Treasurys began paying a higher yield than long-term
Treasurys – a phenomenon that portends a downturn is due within the
next 22 months or so.
Michael Darda, chief economist and market
strategist, warned that ignoring the yield curve was a mistake. “We are
somewhat baffled by the gaggle of Wall Street strategists cheerleading
the soft landing based on what we believe is a faulty reading of the
macro indicators,” he wrote. “One frequent refrain is that we now have
an upward sloping yield curve and hence recession risk has evanesced.
Yet, the curve is, on average, 12 months ahead of the cycle, not an
instantaneous indicator of real time recession risk.”
In
the end, most of the things investors were worried about did not
trigger one of the biggest market crashes in Wall Street history or the
economic pain that most assuredly will follow. It was an outbreak of a
new virus that many thought would be contained to foreign lands — and
this was truly a Black Swan.
“We are going into a global recession,”
warns chief economic advisor at Allianz Mohamed El-Erian, who correctly called the bear market as it approached. “The economic damage is going to last.”
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