A lot can change in less than two months: back on October 18, when the initial market drop seemed like just another dip-buying opportunity, JPM predicted that the odds of a recession in 1 year were a modest 27.6%, rising to 60% if the forecast period is extended to two years.
Well not anymore, because according to JPM’s latest “real-time quant monitor”, the risk of a recession has since spiked to a no longer trivial 35%, the highest in series history (and up from 16% back in March)…
… while the probability that the next presidential recession will take place during a recession (i.e., recession odds in two years) has now surged to more than double that, or over 70%.
While in simple regressive quantitative terms, recession risk is expected to grow substantially by 2020 – assuming it does not strike in 2019 – a qualitative explanation for why a recession may strike then is because that’s when Trump’s fiscal stimulus is expected to shift from an economic tailwind to a headwind, all the more now that Democrats have won the House and have made any further fiscal stimulus virtually impossible
Meanwhile, some of JPM’s other near-term forecasts include:
- GDP growth nowcast drops to to 2.22% from 2.27%
- The forecast of average payroll growth over the next 12 months fell to 124k from 146k
- The forecast of core PCE inflation over the next 12 months was little changed at 1.92%
As a reminder, JPM calculates recession probabilities based on regression models, which track such indicators as prime-age male participation, consumer and business sentiment to prime-age male labor participation, compensation growth, and durables and structures as a share of gross domestic product.
Separately, Bank of America is out with its own latest recession forecast, and when looking at blowing out credit spreads and a yield curve which “has flattened like a pancake with part of the curve already inverting (the 2yr-5yr)”, notes that such moves are usually indicative of a weakening economy, prompting recession fears, and notes that its “recession models – which are a function of various market measures – show that the risk of a recession in 2019 is now between 20 and 37%“
To avoid scaring too many clients, BofA is clearly unhappy with its existing model, and in a Friday note writes that it is introducing a new big data recession probability model that accounts for a broader basket of indicators: the 3mo-10yr treasury spread, building permits, commercial & industrial (C&I) loans, S&P 500, real consumption, and corporate spreads. According to this model, the risk of a near term recession is far lower, predicting a 6-mo ahead probability of only 9%.
To underscore its (still) bullish bias, BofA urges clients to keep an eye on jobless claims which are among the five most relevant indicators of a coming slump: “In the last seven recessions, the 6-month growth rate of initial claims has, on average, jumped double digits heading into the recession.”
That said, claims have trended higher recently, with the 4-week moving averaging increasing from 206.5k in late September to 228k as of the latest data. While BofA observes that this is a noticeable upward trend in a short period of time, “it looks less frightening over a longer-period and part of the uptick can be explained by noise around holiday periods.”
Still BofA will continue to monitor claims as it has shown to be one of the best recession indicators and notes that “increasing claims would portend a slowing in hiring and rising unemployment. In our view, sub-125k on nonfarm payrolls would likely be sufficient to push the unemployment rate higher, which is a clear signal that the cycle is turning.”
Bank of America’s other top recession indicators are auto sales, industrial production, the Philadelphia Fed index, and aggregate hours worked. Some of those are weakening, but none are falling off a cliff according to the bank.
Another early indicator of a recession is business sentiment, which has softened recently, and is one reason for the increase in JP Morgan’s recession-predicting index, which is “getting close to the highest levels of the expansion so far,” analyst Jesse Edgerton says. The cycle peak came in 2016 when growth and markets wavered.
“The risks are drifting toward the economy being softer,” Edgerton said, adding that surveys aren’t uniformly weak, and his team still isn’t predicting a 2019 recession.
The third, and most relevant pre-recession indicator is of course the yield curve, for one simple reason: all the past 7 recessions were preceded by a yield curve inversion.
“We hardly have any empirical regularity that’s this regular,” said San Fran Fed President Mary Daly said in a November interview. Curiously, even with the 2s10s just 13 bps away from 0, Fed officials so far don’t sound overly concerned about the curve. They’re monitoring it, but they aren’t willing to focus on it exclusively so long as real economic data hold up as Bloomberg notes.
There is also the question of timing:while a yield curve inversion virtually assures a recession, the timing remains unclear, prompting UBS Global Wealth Management’s Chief Investment Officer Mark Haefele to write in a Dec. 5 note that inversions are a “flawed crystal ball” as the lag between inversion and recession was longer than 24 months on the last two occasions.
* * *
And yet, despite the cautious optimism from the sell side, the Fed’s own Survey of Professional Forecasters is starting to sour on the economy’s prospects four quarters from now: the Survey puts the odds that economy will be shrinking in a year’s time at 23 percent, the highest level since 2008.
Even so, this implies a recession probability of less than 20% according to a Goldman Sachs analysis, with the vampire squid calling forecasts pretty inaccurate that far out, and respondents put a low probability on a recession within the next couple of quarters.
That “supports our view that a 2019 recession is unlikely,” economists Daan Struyven and David Mericle conclude. The wisdom of crowds can work, they say, “but primarily at relatively short horizons.”
In the end, as Bloomberg notes, markets and hard data are clearly diverging in their signals about recession odds as of this moment, with most economists – still stuck in a hopium mood – clearly sticking with the latter until a more decisive shift becomes obvious.
“The incoming data continues to be good,” Deutsche Bank’s perpetually cheerful Torsten Slok wrote last week: “Where is this recession the market is so worried about?”
Well, according to some it has already started… and judging by the market, traders don’t exactly disagree.
via RSS https://ift.tt/2QmVAX2 Tyler Durden