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Recession Indicators Say the Fed Already Broke Something

Published 03/25/2023, 04:30 AM
Updated 02/15/2024, 03:10 AM

Recession indicators are ringing loudly.

Yet, the Fed remains focused on its inflation fight, as repeatedly noted by Jerome Powell following this week’s FOMC meeting. He specifically made two critical comments during his press conference.

The first was that inflation remains too high and is well above the Fed’s two-percent goal. The second was that the bank crisis would tighten lending standards which would have a 'policy tightening' effect on the economy and inflation.

As shown, lending conditions have tightened markedly, and such tightening always precedes recessionary slowdowns.

Banks With Tighter Lending Standards

While the market is starting to price in just one additional rate hike by the Fed, the 'lag effect' of rate hikes remains the most significant risk.

The problem for the Fed is that the economy still shows plenty of strength, from recent employment numbers to retail sales. However, much of this “strength” is an illusion from the “pull forward” of consumption following the massive fiscal and monetary injections into the economy.

As shown, M2, a measure of monetary liquidity, is still highly elevated as a percentage of GDP. This “pig in the python” is still processing through the economic system.

Still, the massive deviation from previous growth trends will require an extended time frame for reversion. Such is why calls for a recession have been early, and the data continues to surprise economists.

M2 as Percentage of GDP vs. GDP Growth

Given that economic growth is comprised of roughly 70% consumer spending, the ramp-up in debt to “make ends meet” as that liquidity impulse fades is not surprising.

You will note that each time there is a liquidity impulse following some crisis, consumer debt temporarily declines. However, as we said previously, the inability to sustain the current standard of living without debt increases is impossible.

Therefore, as those liquidity impulses fade, the consumer must take on increasing debt levels.

M2 as Percentage of Total Consumer Credit

Monetary and Fiscal Policy Is Deflationary

The problem is that the Federal Reserve and the Government fail to grasp that monetary and fiscal policy is 'deflationary' when debt is required to fund it.

How do we know this? Monetary velocity tells the story.

What is 'monetary velocity?'

“The velocity of money is important for measuring the rate at which money in circulation is used for purchasing goods and services. Velocity is useful in gauging the health and vitality of the economy. High money velocity is usually associated with a healthy, expanding economy. Low money velocity is usually associated with recessions and contractions.” – Investopedia

Velocity of Money vs. Household Debt

With each monetary policy intervention, the velocity of money has slowed along with the breadth and strength of economic activity. While, in theory, printing money should lead to increased economic activity and inflation, such has not been the case.

With each monetary policy intervention, the velocity of money has slowed along with the breadth and strength of economic activity. While, in theory, printing money should lead to increased economic activity and inflation, such has not been the case.

Beginning in 2000, the 'money supply as a percentage of GDP' exploded higher. The surge in economic activity is due to reopening from an artificial shutdown. Therefore, the growth is only returning to the long-term downtrend.

The attendant trendlines show that increasing the money supply has not led to more sustainable economic growth. It has been quite the opposite.

M2 as Percentage of GDP vs. GDP Growth

Moreover, it isn’t just the expansion of M2 and debt undermining the economy’s strength. It is also the ongoing suppression of interest rates to try and stimulate economic activity.

In 2000, the Fed “crossed the Rubicon,” whereby lowering interest rates did not stimulate economic activity. Therefore, the continued increase in the debt burden detracted from it.

Fed Funds vs. Monetary Velocity

It is also worth noting that monetary velocity improves when the Fed is hiking interest rates. Interestingly, much like the recession indicators we will discuss next, monetary velocity tends to improve just before the Fed “breaks something.”

Recession Indicators Ringing Alarm Bells

Many 'recession indicators' are ringing alarm bells, from inverted yield curves to various manufacturing and production indexes. However, this post will focus on two related to economic expansions and recessions.

The first is our composite economic index comprising over 100 data points, including leading and lagging indicators. Historically, when that indicator has declined below 30, the economy was either in a significant slowdown or recession.

Just as inverted yield curves suggest that economic activity is slowing, the composite economic index confirms the same.

RIA Economic Composite Index vs. GDP Growth Rate

The 6-month rate of change of the Leading Economic Index (LEI) also confirms the composite economic index. As a recession indicator, the 6-month rate of change of the LEI has a perfect traffic record.

Economic Output Composite Index vs. LEI 6-Month ROC

Of course, today’s debate is whether these recession indicators are wrong for the first time since 1974. As stated above, the massive surge in monetary stimulus (as a percentage of GDP) remains highly elevated, which gives the illusion the economy is more robust than it likely is.

As the lag effect of monetary tightening takes hold later this year, the reversion in economic strength will probably surprise most economists.

For investors, the implications of reversing monetary stimulus on prices are not bullish. As shown, the contraction in liquidity, measured by subtracting GDP from M2, correlates to changes in asset prices.

Given there is significantly more reversion in monetary stimulus to come, such suggests that lower asset prices will likely follow.

S&P 500 Annual Percentage Change vs. Liquidity Measure

Of course, such a reversion in asset prices will occur as the Fed “breaks something” by over-tightening monetary policy.

The Fed Broke Something

As the Fed continues to hike rates to fight an inflationary “boogeyman,” the more considerable threat remains deflation from an economic or credit crisis caused by overtightening monetary policy.

History is clear that the Fed’s current actions are once again behind the curve. While the Fed wants to slow the economy, not have it come crashing down, the real risk is “something breaks.”

Each rate hike puts the Fed closer to the unwanted event horizon. When the lag effect of monetary policy collides with accelerating economic weakness, the Fed’s inflationary problem will transform into a more destructive deflationary recession.

If we overlay periods of Federal Reserve tightening on our economic composite recession indicator, the risk becomes quite clear.

Fed Funds vs. EOCI

While the Fed is hiking rates due to inflationary concerns, the real risk becomes deflation when something breaks.

“Such is because high inflationary periods also correspond with higher interest rates. In highly indebted economies, as in the U.S. today, such creates faster demand destruction as prices and debt servicing costs rise, thereby consuming more of available disposable income. The chart below shows “real interest rates,” which include inflation, going back to 1795.”

Interest Rates & Crisis Events

Not surprisingly, each period of high inflation is followed by very low or negative inflationary (deflation) periods. For investors, these recessionary indicators confirm that earnings will decline further as tighter monetary policy slows economic growth.

Fed Funds vs. S&P 500 Earnings Growth Rate

Historically, periods of Fed tightening have never had a positive outcome on earnings, and it likely won’t this time either. That is particularly the case when the Fed “breaks” something.

While this time could be different, from an investing standpoint, I wouldn’t bet my retirement on that view.

Latest comments

It’s never different
FED broke financial parasites' business
Deflation would be wonderful for the bottom 95 percent of the population… if it destroys pentions , stocks , and housing so be it
You think the "bottom 95 percent of the population" has no pensions, stocks, mortgaged houses, jobs, etc. to lose?
You think the top 5% aren't better positioned to ride out a financial crisis?  That they aren't holding a lot of cash and can buy up the poor's assets at a discount?
Pensions are deteriorating regardless, due to reckless government policies and dysfunction.
ah gee whiz Rick...did ya see 2009 coming with your cute little chart...
Ssxhizo graphing with Lance
This is what Jerome Powell wanted.
hello
Same old story. Capitalize the profits and socialize the losses.
RepiglaCONS RULE and don't forget it
I.d.i.o.t
all speculation. different time, different issues, different decisions, different effects. only three banks that are or were in trouble and everyone ran for their lives. the term 'investing' no longer exists, there are only traders looking for quick opportunities.
More like the Bank broke itself. Investigate their balance sheets and poor management.
…and exactly how were they to manage their deposits given zero interest rates? Give us your wisdom and keep your envy in check.
by not investing in ESG junk.
Got the whole cycle wrong. A generational break. Fed created the 40 year disinflation cycle with easy bailouts and no consequences. I am bot an economist but was absolutely sure a financial debacke would result from a disinfltion mindset. Easy call. Gsme over. Fed can no longer fix this. Easy money greed hubris with no consequences for being wrong. Great Depression Ii. Think it farfetxhed just say debt never mattered and a new paradigm is here.
There will be no soft landing, we'll be lucky to land at all. This recession will be longer and deeper than expected. The Fed is no friend to the average person
In today's time, you can throw out all of the technicalities of the past. Between Covid and supply chain issues,  Putin's war, irresponsible bankers, unprecedented natural disasters--all happening at once is causing cause/effect that does not make sense.  The stock market reflects that.  People that wants a paycheck has one. There are a mountain of money in savings account.  Investors are still flush with liquidity waiting on the sidelines, buying the dips.  Interest rates are still below history and people are adjusting to the rate shock and will continue on with buying.  Auto mfg still offering attractable financing.  Companies have already tightened their belts. Sure people are going to be more spending cautious because of all the negative headline news. Until disposable income cannot support paying bills, recession talks are just that.
You continue to buy the dip, I'll let history be my guide.
Pandemic. Historical charts and known outcome me result 5?weeks of bullish calls and not a strong ngle major calk for a dramatic drop. We see what we want and discard the rest. Fed allowed this massive no consequence market to go hyperbolic. Yet bo one is concerned as disinflation cycke for 40 years covered the problem. Insane no one saw bets on disinflation to cause this debacle i did an average hoe put it in print weeks before bank failure easy call no oversight 1920 here we come.
Could've been avoided if the Feds acted when they should've instead of reacting too late, but that's what we do here in the USA, react too late
Can't expect the Fed, an economic institution, to act way before Russia's military aggression in Ukraine in Feb 2021.  The Fed did start raising rates in Mar 2021.
Ukraine has little to do with inflation, just a political scapegoat claiming it does.
The Fed wouldn't be able to break what it broke if Glass Steagall hadn't been repealed. We are sitting on 1.7 trillion in unrealized bond losses in the banking system and another 895 billion in the insurance markets. We are one National disaster away from illiquid insurance companies. With the way natural disasters have gone recently that's not a good place to be at.
Hello
Glass-Steagall's repeal allowed for the rescue of some institutions after the Great Financial crisis. It enabled JPM to rescue Bear Stearns and Bank of America to rescue Merrill Lynch.  Trump's banking de-regulation is a bigger factor to the current crisis.
false even larry sumners obamas economic advisor say thats false. More political scapegoating. One of the people who wrote the law you are referring too was on the board at SVB bank.
It's nice to read something that's in touch with the truth. Great article Mr. Roberts
Ok that is true Roy JenkinsYou can hit me on my company link
Excellent article.
They broke the system two decades ago when each time they try to paper over the problem they created. And now, here we are once again. This time ITS GAME OVER!
Also Biden needs to stop spending and Congress needs to reduce the deficit. Their Green Energy and Climate Change agenda is killing us with inflation and will harm the economy more to come.
Sorry, an honest qualitative assessment is what I suggest.
As an example, GM is marketing a plugin electric delivery van meant to replace standard delivery vans (picture a typical UPS or FedEx van). 1/3rd the payload, twice the price. STLD’s “green steel” coking fuel has half of the BTU content of standard coal based coking fuel, at 5 times the cost. I would encourage you to do the research…if you do so honestly the economics of the green energy movement will not make sense.
you need to be careful what you wish for
We do need M2 to come down as well and that's why the Fed needs to continue deleveraging.
the Fed Funds rate vs EOCI is the most telling and indicating that the FOMC needs to stop raising rates now.
it's intentional. obviously.
Biden caused it all,with his radical agenda,and his lying democrat party..all of em....
Joe is one of the least radical Democrat potus.
Obviously Trump never lied... Well, around 30,000 times, but they don't count.
Complete lies. Historically the fed has tightened 13 times and only 2 led to negative markets.
Hmmm. Which is true, your false statement or data on a graph we can Google to verify?
How can it be only 2 negative markets only when we've had 3 bear markets (2000, 2008, 2020) in the last 3 cycles alone?
Hopium is one hell of a drug
Welcome to 2 weeks ago
I know, it's a full blown depression now
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