The 10-Year Treasury Yield: A Barometer of the Economy

When confidence is high, the ten-year treasury bond’s price drops and yields go higher because investors feel they can find higher returning investments and do not feel they need to play it safe.

The 10-year treasury bond is a debt instrument issued by the government of the United States. As its name implies, it matures in ten years. Over the course of that time, investors holding 10-year treasury notes, earn yields. The 10-year T-notes are issued at a face value of $1,000, and a coupon specifying a certain amount of interest to be paid every six months.

The importance of the ten-year treasury bond yield goes beyond just understanding the return on investment for the security. When confidence is high, the ten-year treasury bond’s price drops and yields go higher because investors feel they can find higher returning investments and do not feel they need to play it safe.

Like other types of investments, commercial property investors follow the,10-year treasury bond yield trends because it serves as a proxy indicator for things like mortgage rates. Put another way, as the 10-year treasury bond goes, so goes mortgage rates.

The 10-year treasury bond is important to commercial property investors because it acts as a strong indicator of how the macroeconomy will move in the short-term. The 10-year note price is determined by four factors: the face value, the dollar price, interest rate, and yield, writes Forbes.

  1. Face value, also referred to as “par,” is the price the government agrees to pay out at maturity.
  2. The dollar price is the amount paid for the bond, relative to its face value.
  3. The interest rate is the amount of interest paid over the life of the note.
  4. And, the yield, is a combination of the dollar price and the interest rate.

The 10-year treasury bond’s performance, as mentioned above, is a strong indicator of how the U.S. economy is currently performing and is forecast to perform in the future. Which means, since the 10-year note is a proxy for mortgage interest rates, that’s a very important metric to commercial property investors.

After all, if mortgage interests rates rise, the long-term cost of buying commercial property goes up. Meaning the ROI might shrink. However, if the forecast is for mortgage rates to fall, then commercial property investments become more lucrative over the long-term.

Changes in the 10-year Treasury yield tell us a great deal about the economic landscape and global market sentiment, professional investors analyze patterns in 10-year Treasury yields and make predictions about how yields will move over time. Declines in the 10-year Treasury yield generally indicate caution about global economic conditions while gains signal global economic confidence.

It’s the action in the secondary market that determines the yield. This is important to note because it’s this rate that people refer to when they’re talking about Treasuries. The coupon rate, while technically the interest rate you will receive in relation to the Treasury’s face value, will likely be different from the effective yield you end up getting. If you pay less than face value, your effective rate will be higher; more and it will be lower.

Prices (and therefore effective yields) change for bonds almost constantly. That’s because a bond’s price is inversely related to yield: When demand is high and Treasury prices rise, yields fall—conversely, when demand is low Treasury prices fall and yields rise. This ebb and flow ultimately creates the Treasury pricing market as people flock to (and then from) Treasuries based on the economic environment they find themselves in.

The 10-year Treasury yield serves as a vital economic benchmark, and it influences many other interest rates. When the 10-year yield goes up, so do mortgage rates and other borrowing rates. When the 10-year yield declines and mortgage rates fall, the housing market strengthens, which in turn has a positive impact on economic growth and the economy.

Bond market volatility is usually a sign of a weakening economy. The recent U.S. Treasury yield fluctuations have given market strategists reasons to be concerned about looming economic issues. Studies and empirical evidence show a volatile U.S. Treasury note market is not good for foreign countries holding U.S. T-notes and dealing with significant debt issues, writes Bitcoin.com. That’s because when U.S. T-notes are leveraged for restructuring purposes and a resolution tool, “sudden and sweeping daily swings” can punish countries trying to use these financial vehicles for debt restructuring.

The 10-year Treasury yield also impacts the rate at which companies can borrow money. When the 10-year yield is high, companies will face more expensive borrowing costs that may reduce their ability to engage in the types of projects that lead to growth and innovation.

Higher 10-year Treasury yields should help cool down the economy and bring down decade high inflation in the long run.

The 10-year Treasury yield can also impact the stock market, with movements in yield creating volatility.

  • Rising yields may signal that investors are looking for higher return investments but could also spook investors who fear that the rising rates could draw capital away from the stock market. It can also means that borrowing is getting more expensive.
  • Falling yields suggest that corporate borrowing rates will also decline, making it easier for companies to borrow and expand, thus giving equities a boost.

All U.S. Treasury securities are regarded as relatively risk free—since they’re backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government, which has never defaulted on its debts. When investors get worried about the economy and market risk, they look for safe investments that preserve capital, and Treasuries are among the safest investments globally.


References:

  1. https://dieselcommercialgroup.com/why-the-10-year-treasury-bond-is-so-important/
  2. https://www.forbes.com/advisor/investing/10-year-treasury-yield/
  3. https://news.bitcoin.com/investors-are-running-out-of-havens-erratic-behavior-in-us-bond-markets-points-to-deep-recession-elevated-sovereign-risk/

How to Protect Your Money from Inflation

Inflation causes your money to be worth less over time. To hedge against inflation, you need to invest your money in assets.

Inflation in the U.S. is at the highest rate in four decades.

Inflation decreases the purchasing power of your dollars over time. Here are steps you can take to protect the purchasing power of your dollars, according to Forbes.

  • Trim your expenses. To minimize the impact of inflation, review your spending and identify areas to reduce or eliminate completely.
  • Wait to pay off low-interest debt. Paying off debt is usually good, but you may want to hold off on making extra payments if you have low-interest debt. Your debt becomes less expensive due to inflation. Use the money for other purposes—like paying off higher-interest loans.
  • Invest your money. Inflation causes your savings to be worth less over time. To hedge against inflation, you need to invest your money. If the prospect of investing is scary, consider a diversified portfolio of broad market index funds to lower your risk levels and costs.

Getting inflation under control

The Federal Reserve is tasked with keeping inflation at a healthy level by adjusting the nation’s money supply and interest rates.

When the economy is expanding too quickly and inflation rises, the Fed will typically raise interest rates or sell assets to reduce the amount of cash in circulation. These actions tend to reduce demand within the economy and can push the economy into recession.


References:

  1. https://www.forbes.com/advisor/investing/is-inflation-good-or-bad/

Federal Reserve Balance Sheet and Inflation

The U.S. Federal Reserve’s balance sheet consists of the Fed’s portfolio of U.S. Treasury and government-guaranteed mortgage-backed securities (MBS).

The balance sheet is one of the Federal Reserve’s main instruments for conducting monetary policy and for fulfilling the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate that requires it to ensure both stable prices and maximum employment.

The traditional tool the Fed used to accomplish these goals was the adjustment of the federal funds rate, the short-term interest rate that determined how much it costs for banks to lend to each other overnight.

The 2007-2008 financial crisis, however, demonstrated that even lowering the interest rate to zero was considered insufficient to shore up economies in freefall, and the Fed turned to more unusual tactics.

One of these measures was what the Fed refers to as “large-scale asset purchases,” which is more commonly known as “quantitative easing.” Just as with any other firm, securities that the Fed purchases through quantitative easing are considered assets and therefore are represented on the Fed’s balance sheet.

The value of the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve increased overall since 2007, when it stood at roughly $0.9 trillion U.S. dollars.

As of September 6, 2022, the Federal Reserve had $8.82 trillion U.S. dollars of assets on its balance sheet.

This dramatic increase can be traced back to two black swan events that had a disastrous impact on the U.S. economy:

  • the 2008 financial crisis and
  • the COVID-19 pandemic,

Both events led to a negative annual growth of the real gross domestic product (GDP) of the United States, writes Thomas Wade is the Director of Financial Services Policy at the American Action Forum. Therefore, the Federal Reserve’s response to these crises was to adopt expansionary monetary policies to stimulate employment and economic growth.

Increasing the money supply — an expansionary monetary policies which intends to increase the amount of money circulating in the economy — tends to increase inflation, states Statista.com, which destabilizes the economy and erodes purchasing power. Currently, the inflation rate in the United States reached 8.5 percent in 2022, the largest value in four decades.

Bottomline is that by expanding its balance sheet—i.e., by buying government bonds and MBS—the Fed expands the nation’s money supply in the hope of lowering interest rates and stimulating the economy; contracting the balance sheet should have the opposite effect.

However, by expanding the money supply too much, the Fed ran the risk of igniting inflation [“Inflation is one form of taxation that can be imposed without legislation.” Milton Friedman], while overly contracting it may stifle economic activity, including increasing unemployment and triggering an economic recession.

Inflation’, quipped Milton Friedman, ‘is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, in the sense that it cannot occur without a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output.

Inflation is a loss of purchasing power over time, meaning your dollar will not go as far tomorrow as it did today.


References:

  1. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1121448/fed-balance-sheet-timeline
  2. https://www.americanactionforum.org/insight/tracker-the-federal-reserves-balance-sheet/#ixzz7esb8x4vu
  3. https://www.fxcm.com/markets/insights/federal-reserve-balance-sheet/

Inflation Remains at Four Decade High in August

Inflation, which is a loss of purchasing power, is likely to stay elevated thanks to a variety of structural forces.

The Labor Department reported an 8.3% year-over-year increase in the total Consumer Price Index (CPI) for August. It was a bigger gain in inflation, which is a loss of purchasing power, than expected. Economists and financial strategists agreed that the latest data show inflation is sticky.

Sticky inflation is underlying inflation, or inflation in areas where prices tend to change relatively slowly. Additionally, inflation is structural, meaning the floor is higher than many might assume, and the potential implications go beyond recession.

Vincent Deluard, director of global macro strategy at StoneX Financial, says the current period of inflation is the result of three shortages: labor, energy, and trust.

  • Labor. The U.S. labor market is still about seven million workers short of pre-pandemic levels.
  • Energy. The transition to green energy requires moving down the energy-density ladder for the first time in history, meaning the green transition will consume more resources for similar output. And, when withdraws from the strategic petroleum reserve (SPR) stops, it will remove a downward force on oil prices.
  • Trust. Inflation is inversely proportional to the level of trust between a country’s citizens. “Inflation is a fever that tells you an economy has an underlying ailment of weakening trust, then the fever weakens the body, and it all worsens,” opined Deluard. Inflation is “always and everywhere a psychological phenomenon,” where the problem worsens the longer it persists, Deluard states, as he modifies Milton Friedman’s take on inflation.

Additionally, the August’s CPI report puts the “peak inflation” assumption into question and shows that the labor market and demand -– not supply — problems are driving price increases.

More volatile inflation in categories such as food and energy, which economists and policy makers back out of inflation readings to get to what they call core inflation.

The Fed’s attempt to front-load interest-rate increases is one attempt to regain public trust and restore price stability. The “transitory” inflation argument that has been retired in speeches but not in spirit.

Investors, and central bankers themselves, may therefore be underestimating what the Fed must do to curb inflation, while simultaneously underestimating the odds that inflation remains well above 2% for longer.


References:

  1. https://www.barrons.com/articles/inflation-cpi-labor-shortage-energy-prices-51660265410
  2. https://www.barrons.com/articles/cpi-inflation-report-july-2022-data-51660078098?mod=article_inline

Inflation: Decline of Purchasing Power

Inflation is the decline of purchasing power of a given currency over time and it is a result of central banks printing money (increasing the money supply M2).

In 2022, inflation surged during COVID in large part due to loose money policy by the Federal Reserve, writes Brian Wesbury, Chief Economist, First Trust Advisors. It is the increase in the money supply initiated by the Fed that’s responsible for inflation.

Inflation is based on decisions made by the Federal Reserve and other sovereign central banks. It doesn’t matter whether government spending or the budget deficit is high or low, whether the labor supply is growing or shrinking, whether free trade is waxing or waning.

If the money supply grows too fast, you get more inflation; if the money supply grows too slowly or shrinks, you get deflation. If the central bank does its job right, you get stable prices, opines Wesbury.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

The Federal Reserve kept short-term rates artificially low and the M2 measure of the money supply soared.  Add supply chain bottlenecks and disruptions, U.S. consumers are experiencing near double digit inflation rates. inflation problem that existed before Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine and, we think, will continue even if the invasion (hopefully) ends.

Inflation is measured by the Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index. And, all eyes will be focused on inflation data as CPI is expected to be released Tuesday and PPI expected on Wednesday.

According to Bloomberg’s economists’ survey, expectations are 8.0% year over year growth in CPI and 8.8% year over year growth in PPI, these are important data points for future Fed rate hikes and are likely going to move equity markets as a result.

  • The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a measure that examines the weighted average of prices of a basket of consumer goods and services, such as transportation, food, and medical care. It is calculated by taking price changes for each item in the predetermined basket of goods and averaging them. Changes in the CPI are used to assess price changes associated with the cost of living.
  • Core CPI, which strips out the volatile food and energy components of the report and is closely tracked by the Federal Reserve
  • The Producer Price Index (PPI) is a group of indexes that calculates and represents the average movement in selling prices from domestic production over time. Producer Price Index represents a reading on inflation from the production side of the economy, measures the change in the prices paid to U.S. producers of goods and services,

Despite some signs inflation is abating, Federal Reserve officials have acknowledged continued tightening is likely needed to restore price stability to the central bank’s target rate.

In June 2022, the Federal Reserve (the “Fed”) raised the Fed Funds Target Rate by 75 basis point (“bps”), the largest increase since 1994. Along with a stunning large hike, there was a reiteration that reigning in of inflation was the top priority no matter the economic costs.

Central bankers, such as the Fed, have the mission and ability to adjust monetary policy so that higher inflation doesn’t result. It is ultimately the increase in the money supply that’s responsible for inflation.

Which is why inflation is going to keep exceeding the Federal Reserve’s supposed 2.0% long-term target for a long time to come until the money supply ceases growing rapidly and the Fed hikes the federal fund rates and tightens the money supply. Currently, the money supply is nowhere close to being tight and tight it will have to get in order to tame the inflation.


References:

  1. https://www.ftportfolios.com/Commentary/EconomicResearch/2022/3/14/its-the-money
  2. https://www.ftportfolios.com/Commentary/Insights/2022/7/25/alternatives-update-2nd-quarter-2022
  3. https://www.ftportfolios.com/retail/blogs/marketcommentary/index.aspx

How to Invest in a Recession

When GDP declines for multiple quarters in a row, it raises concerns over a possible recession.

An unofficial way to measure recessions is two consecutive quarters of negative real gross domestic product (GDP) growth. Real gross domestic product (GDP) is an official inflation-adjusted version of GDP calculated by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Annual percent change in real GDP shows how much higher or lower it is relative to the previous year. The higher that real GDP is, the larger absolute increase required to achieve a certain growth rate, and vice versa.

However, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), this is not an official designation of recession. But determining when the economy is in a recession is more complicated than looking at a single data set such as GDP.

Determining when the economy is in a recession is up to a committee of experts at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). The committee officially designates recessions by monitoring a variety of economic indicators, including GDP. It also uses payroll employment, personal income, industrial production, and retail sales in the effort.

The NBER (National Bureau of Economic Research) defines recession:

A recession is a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales. A recession begins just after the economy reaches a peak of activity and ends as the economy reaches its trough.

The official designation from NBER of when a recession starts or ends doesn’t happen until months after the recession is over. In other words, NBER looks backward, not at the present moment.

  • Two consecutive negative real GDP quarters is commonly believed to be the definition of a recession. This is a misperception.
  • Despite a negative U.S. GDP growth reading in Q1 and Q2 of calendar year 2022, many of the indicators the NBER monitors when evaluating the state of the economy remain healthy.
  • Coming into 2022, inflation was expected to moderate. Partially due to unforeseen events (including a war), inflation is likely to stick around longer.
  • The Fed has fully achieved the maximum employment half of its mandate, resulting in a sole focus on achieving price stability (cooling inflation).
  • Financial conditions have gone from record easy territory to nearly neutral in a matter of months.
  • Although conditions are not yet restrictive, the Federal Reserve’s dramatic move risks tipping the economy into a recession in the coming quarters.

Historically, there are 12 variables that have foreshadowed a looming recession. A few of those variables include retail sales, wage growth, commodities, ISM new orders, credit spreads and money supply.

During a recession, it’s essential for investors to continue to invest.

What recessions have looked like in the past

The US has gone through 34 recessions since 1857. Thirteen of those recessions occurred after World War II.

From 1857 to 2020, recessions lasted an average of 17 months. In the 20th and 21st centuries, the average length of a recession decreased to 14 months.

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)

The longest recession lasted 65 months, from October 1873 to March 1879. The shortest recession was the most recent, lasting two months from February 2020 to April 2020.

Investing during a recession

You, as an investor, should have an investing process and, and once decided, stick with it to improve your returns.


References:

  1. https://cf-store.widencdn.net/franklintempletonprod/6/7/8/678d815d-fe9c-48b4-9dde-056a19f9653f.pdf
  2. https://usafacts.org/data/topics/economy/economic-indicators/gdp/annual-change-real-gdp/
  3. https://usafacts.org/articles/what-is-a-recession-what-have-recessions-looked-like-in-the-past/

Recession and Political Silly Season

The U.S. has entered the official political silly season which is when analysts interpret monthly and quarterly economic reports and data through a highly biased political lens, writes Brian Wesbury, Chief Economist, First Trust. Unfortunately, he submits that the real unbiased analysis of economic reports and data rarely emerges.

Wesbury opined that the silly season started with politicians from the right proclaiming that the country was in a recession because real GDP declined in both of the first and second quarters of calendar year 2022. These individuals purposely overlooked that the unemployment rate has dropped 0.4 percentage points so far this year. And they fail to notice that payrolls are up an average of 471,000 per month, while industrial production is up at a 5.2% annual rate over the first six months of the year. Never mind that “real” (inflation adjusted) gross domestic income was up in the first quarter.

Although, two quarters of negative real (inflation-adjusted) gross domestic product (GDP) growth is commonly viewed as a strong sign that a recession is underway, it is not the official definition.

***Recession are foremost and always a “broad based decline in economic activity”.***

The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), a private non-profit research organization that focuses on understanding the U.S. economy, views a recession as a monthly concept that takes account of a number of monthly indicators—such as employment, personal income, and industrial production—as well as quarterly GDP growth. Additionally, “a recession is the period between a peak of economic activity and its subsequent trough, or lowest point,” the NBER says on its website.

Therefore, while negative GDP growth and recessions closely track each other, the consideration by the NBER of the monthly indicators, especially employment, means that the identification of a recession with two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth does not always hold.

Thus, the economy is currently not in a recession since the NBER’s defines officially a recession as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months.”

“Our view is that a recession is coming, that monetary policy will have to get unusually tight for the Federal Reserve to bring inflation back down to its 2.0% target,” states Wesbury. “In turn, tighter money should induce a recession. But that takes time and the recession hasn’t started yet.”


References:

  1. https://www.ftportfolios.com/Commentary/EconomicResearch/2022/8/15/silly-season
  2. https://www.bea.gov/help/glossary/recession

Fears of a Recession

The U.S. economy shrank for a second consecutive quarter, which is a common definition of recession. Additionally, the U.S. economy is enduring a rocky transition from an exceptionally strong post-pandemic recovery to a steep Federal Reserve caused slowdown.

The Commerce Department reported that Gross Domestic Product (GDP) contracted at a 0.9% annual rate in the second quarter of calendar year 2022. With the 1.6% annual rate decline in the first quarter, this means the U.S. economy has declined for two consecutive quarters, a commonly used, but not official definition, of recession. GDP is a broad measure of the goods and services produced across the economy.

Inventories, specifically the pace of restocking, accounted for much of the economic output decline experienced in the second quarter. As an example, Walmart announced that it was cutting prices in its Sam’s Club stores to reduce merchandise levels.

However, the official arbiter of U.S. recessions, the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), has not announced that a downturn has begun because an array of other indicators, such as employment and corporate earnings, do not look as dire. NBER defines a recession as a significant decline in economic activity, spread across the economy for more than a few months. It usually doesn’t make a recession determination until long after the fact.

In fact, within the broader economy, the job market remains strong and if employment stays strong, consumer’s will to spend should remain intact.

Consumer spending continues to grow, but at a slower pace. The housing market has cooled down under rising interest rates and high inflation has taken the steam out of business and consumer spending v

Corporate earnings haven’t been as bad as investors had feared, suggesting that soaring inflation and signs of declining economic growth aren’t weighing too heavily on the economy.

The Federal Reserve raised interest rates from near zero to a range between 2.25% and 2.5%, so far this year, and Chairman Powell hinted that the pace of rate increases would eventually flow.

The economy is slowing down as the Federal Reserve acts to bring down inflation. The challenges facing the economy are high inflation, weakening consumer sentiment and supply chain volatility. Consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of risk U.S. economic output.


References:

  1. https://www.wsj.com/articles/if-this-is-a-recession-we-might-not-know-for-months-11659173402?mod=mhp

The War on Fossil Fuels

“Solar and wind power aren’t reliable sources of energy, simply because there are nights, clouds and windless days.” Bjorn Lomborg

“The developed world’s response to the global energy crisis has put its hypocritical attitude toward fossil fuels on display,” writes Bjorn Lomborg. Wealthy countries continue to admonish developing ones to cut their fossil fuels consumption and increase their use renewable energy, he states.

Last month the Group of Seven went so far as to announce they would no longer fund fossil-fuel development abroad.

Meanwhile, in response to the current energy supply constraints, Europe and the U.S. are begging Arab nations, specifically Saudi Arabia, to expand crude oil production. Germany is reopening coal power plants, and Spain and Italy are spending big on African gas production.

Over the past century, the developed world became economically wealthy through the pervasive use fossil fuels, which still overwhelmingly powers most of their economies. Fossil fuels still provide three fourths of wealthy countries’ energy consumption, while solar and wind provide less than 3% combined.

The reality is that solar and wind power aren’t reliable sources of energy, simply because there are nights, clouds and windless days. And, improving battery storage won’t help much: There are currently enough battery storage in the world today only to power global average electricity consumption for 75 seconds. By 2040, the battery storage capacity would cover less than 11 minutes of average global consumption.

The assault on fossil fuels has shrunk U.S. refining capacity and the refinery shortage is driving up fuel prices. Basic economics should inform politicians that “prices rise when supply doesn’t meet demand”.

With oil and gas prices on the New York Mercantile Exchange are at five-year highs, you would expect that it would be in oil and natural-gas companies interest to ramp up production, given the current high prices,.

But, oil and gas companies expect that as soon as the current energy turmoil subsides, the Biden administration will shift back to hostile rhetoric, anti-energy legislative proposals, and oppositional regulatory policies.

By forcing up the price of fossil fuels, policymakers have put the proverbial cart in front of the horse. Instead of driving up fossil fuel prices higher, policymakers need to make green energy much cheaper and more effective.

Humanity has relied on innovation and technological breakthroughs to solve other big challenges. We didn’t solve air pollution by forcing everyone to stop driving but by inventing the catalytic converter that drastically lowers pollution.


References:

  1. https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/the-rich-worlds-climate-hypocrisy-energy-fossil-fuel-wind-solar-panel-india-poverty-power-battery-storage-11655654331
  2. https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/is-6-a-gallon-gasoline-next-gas-prices-refining-shortage-fossil-fuels-11654806637
  3. https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/why-energy-companies-wont-produce-oil-natural-gas-biden-administration-fossil-fuel-inflation-prices-11654720932
  4. https://nypost.com/2022/06/19/fossil-fuel-price-spikes-are-causing-pain-but-little-climate-payoff/

Recession and the U.S. Economy

There is always a recession in the future. The reality is that the U.S. economy could be in a recession now.

Inflation is too high and interest rate adjustments are required, says Esther George, Kansas City Federal Reserve President. She sees consumers taking actions to combat inflation and those actions, such as not buying appetizers while dining out, are apparent to the Federal Reserve. Thus, the economic data shows that there are already signs of a pullback in consumer spending…just look at Walmart, Target and Dollar Tree sales and earnings.

There is always a chance of a recession in the future, no matter what the current economic data look like or current consumer spending is doing. The question of whether the economy slips into a recession is basically a “not if, but when“ proposition.

It’s become obvious that a recession will come to the United States economy in the future, but the essential question is when. It is important to keep in mind that recessions are a normal and unavoidable part of the economic business cycle.

A recession is a significant decline in economic activity that lasts for months or even years, according to Forbes. Experts declare a recession when a nation’s economy experiences negative gross domestic product (GDP), rising levels of unemployment, falling retail sales, and contracting measures of income and manufacturing for an extended period of time.

The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) generally defines the starting and ending dates of U.S. economic recessions. NBER’s definition of a recession is “a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales.”

The reality is that the U.S. economy could be in a recession now.

The definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative gross domestic product growth. First-quarter GDP decreased at an annual rate of 1.4%. Should that happen in the second quarter, that would technically place the economy in recession.

Recessions usually come from demand weakness, but supply problems can also trigger a downturn.

Consumer demand for goods and services continues to be strong, according to the Federal Reserve. Consumers have plenty of money, thanks to past earnings, fiscal stimulus payments and extra unemployment insurance. They have paid down their credit card balances. Even though they also increased their car loans outstanding as they upgraded their rides, their general condition is good. Employment will increase thanks to the spending, reinforcing the income gains that enable expenditures. Supply restraints are fueling current accelerating inflation.

The economy reacts with a time lag of about one year, plus or minus.

The greatest recession risk in the near term is that the Federal Reserve realizes that much of the recent decades high inflation is long-lasting rather than transitory. They will then ‘hit the brakes’ to control inflation by raising interest rates. Because of the time lag, the Fed may decide to raise interest rates faster, triggering a recession.

“Inflation is worst than a recession, and inflation will take us into a recession,” states Liz Young, SoFi Head of Investment Strategy.


References:

  1. https://www.forbes.com/sites/billconerly/2021/11/02/no-recession-in-2022-but-watch-out-in-2023/https://www.forbes.com/sites/billconerly/2021/11/02/no-recession-in-2022-but-watch-out-in-2023/
  2. https://247wallst.com/investing/2022/05/19/goldman-sachs-has-6-strong-buy-dividend-stocks-that-can-weather-a-certain-coming-recession/
  3. https://www.forbes.com/advisor/investing/what-is-a-recession/