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Recession Odds Jump as the Fed Crushes Consumers

Published 04/15/2023, 04:18 AM
Updated 02/15/2024, 03:10 AM

Recession odds have climbed considerably since Jerome Powell’s testimony before Congress and the latest FOMC meeting. However, the recent failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse, as higher rates impact regional bank liquidity, also added to the risks.

This isn’t the first time we have warned the aggressive rate hiking campaign would either cause a recession or “break something.”

You get the idea. We have been warning of the risk for quite some time. However, the financial markets continue to ignore the warnings.

The Fed remains abundantly clear that it still sees inflation as a “persistent and pernicious” economic threat that must be defeated. As we noted previously, the problem is that in an economy dependent on debt for economic growth, higher rates eventually lead to an “event” as borrowing costs and payments increase.

Treasury Rates

As debt service increases, it diverts money from consumption which fuels economic growth. Such is why consumer delinquencies are now rising due to the massive amount of consumer credit at substantially higher rates. Notice that when the Fed begins cutting rates, delinquencies decline sharply. This is because the Fed has “broken something” economically, and debt is discharged through foreclosures, bankruptcies, and loan modifications.

Fed-Rates Vs Loan Delinquency

Of course, given that consumption is roughly 70% of the economic growth calculation, the consumer is the lynchpin.

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Ringing {{0|Alarm (NASDAQ:ALRM)}} Bells

While the percentage of delinquent consumer loans is not problematic, the sharply rising trend is. Further, Heather Long of the Washington Post notes:

Many households are also behind on their utility bills: 20.5 million homes had overdue balances in January, according to the National Energy Assistance Directors Association.

Per the article, the bottom 60% of earners contribute about 40% of GDP growth. People delinquent on loans are likely getting financially squeezed due to falling real wages and will be forced to reduce their consumption. If the unemployment rate rises, the problem will worsen. The article ends as follows:

The flares are going off. If the economy does fall into a recession, it will only get more perilous for those at the bottom.

The deep yield curve inversions are a sign that recession odds are increasing.

10-2-Yield Curve Inverstion History

The current inversion of the 10-year interest rate and the 2-year interest rate is now at the deepest level since Paul Volcker was engineering hikes that broke the back of double-digit inflation at the cost of two back-to-back recessions.

However, there is a significant difference between now and the 1970s, which is the dependency on debt. As shown, household net worth has far outstripped gains in disposable income. Such was a function of a continuous decline in borrowing costs and massive increases in leverage.

Household Networth As Pct of DPI vs Debt

Not surprisingly, as repeated throughout history, sharp spikes in net worth as a percentage of disposable incomes are a function of asset bubbles or other economic or financial distortions. As recession odds increase, the result is the reversion of those distortions.

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While often villanized by the media and by politicians, recessions are a “good thing,” economically speaking. If allowed to complete its full cycle, it removes the excesses built up in the system from the preceding expansion. This “reset” enables the economy to grow organically in the future.

The problem today is that the Federal Reserve has repeatedly cut short the “recessionary cleansing” needed to reset the economy to a healthier status.

The Fed may be tapped between two potentially harmful outcomes.

Mr. Powell Meets Rock

Mr. Powell, and the Federal Reserve, are caught between the proverbial “rock and a hard place.” In this case, the “rock” is the Fed continuing to fight inflation by hiking interest rates and slowing economic growth. However, the “hard place” is that each rate hike further increases the strain on consumers and, as seen with Silicon Valley Bank, the financial system.

If Silicon Valley Bank was the warning shot of more bank failures, the Federal Reserve will have to pivot on monetary policy to bail out more banks. However, such will not be bullish for investors as the bailouts will occur during a deepening recession and falling earnings. This is not the environment you want to own overvalued instruments based on falling earning estimates.

Furthermore, if the Fed abandons its inflation fight and begins to bail out the economy, it will cause a resurgence of inflation. Such will either immediately Fed back into a rate hiking campaign, causing another crisis, or they will have to let inflation ravage the economy.

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Critically, the Federal Reserve had never faced needing to provide liquidity to the financial system when inflation was high. Since 2008, inflation has been “well contained,” allowing the Fed to lower rates and provide “quantitative easing” to stabilize markets and financial systems. That is not the case today.

Fed-Funds Vs Inflation

There seem to be no good choices for the Fed as the inflation-fighting credibility Powell has earned with the markets comes with a cost.

“The issue is the tighter you keep borrowing conditions for the private sector, the higher you keep mortgage rates, the higher you keep corporate borrowing rates, the higher the chances you’re going to freeze these credit markets and basically sleepwalk into an accident or, in general, accelerate a recession later on.” – Alfonso Peccatiello.

The M2 Connection

Alfonso is correct, and the contraction in nominal M2 is ringing alarm bells. Such was a point Thorsten Polleit via The Mises Institute recently noted.

What is happening is that the Fed is pulling central bank money out of the system. It does this in two ways. The first is not reinvesting the payments it receives into its bond portfolio. The second is by resorting to reverse repo operations, in which it offers “eligible counterparties” (those few privileged to do business with the Fed) the ability to park their cash with the Fed overnight and pay them an interest rate close to the federal funds rate.”

M2 Annual Chg vs Events

As shown, contractions in nominal M2 have coincided with financial and market-related events in the past. Such is because the Fed is draining liquidity out of the financial system, which is ultimately deflationary. The reason that recession odds are increasing is that the drain is deflationary and economic growth is slowing. As Thorsten concludes:

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“The Fed has announced that it intends not only to raise interest rates further but also to reduce its balance sheet and sponge up central bank money.”

This, in turn, implies a real risk that the Fed will overtighten, causing a recession.

Silicon Valley Bank is likely the casualty of the coming economic battle.

Latest comments

S&P is set to hit 3000-3300. It's woke mentality, they don't call it recession anymore. It's "recession fears". Basically something that objectively IS, but let's just pretend it ISN'T or it MIGHT NOT BE. Historic housing bubble fears, historic debt highs fears, fastest rate hikes in history fear, dedollarization fears... keep thinking you are floating in the clouds, the fact that you're in a free fall with no parachute should't hurt that much in the end after all.
Oh, and the market going up is an illusion. Check the S&P equal weight. It's only a handful of stocks going up. Gotta love those share buybacks. The smart money has been selling into the rally all along. Retail has been buying, a behaviour tha tends to mark the top and has marked tops ever since Jan 2022.
The S&P equal weight?  It's been outperforming the S&P 500 since both the pandemic bottom and since the late 2021 all time high.
Food, gas, mortgages, clothing, etc., we’ve been in a recession a few years now
So the "current recession" started under Trump!
The administrations war on oil has caused this, its very simple. People dont want to admit this. There is a simple fix to avoid the recession the US fossil fuel policy is causing world wide. This is why the US is losing respect worldwide other countries know we are causing this misery by crashing our and everone elses economies.
There is no "war on oil".  US oil production is at post-Trump high and US nat gas production is at all time high.
what?
Dude put down tbe crack pipe, turn off Fox News, stop checking 4Chan. Nothing yiu said is remiteky based in reality.
whether a mild to moderate recession hits or not, this is already factored by a 25 % correction in SP 500 from Dec 2021 until Mar 2023. So markets are bound to rally towards 4600-4700 + in coming months. investors will focus on quarterly results and only if a crisis hits will we see markets correcting. else there is nothing negative to stop markets from rallying from now on. rather from 3800 was echoing the fact that SP 500 is on its way towards 4600
... other than "in coming months" which could mean >1 year, which means the market gong up more slowly than it dropped from 4600 to 4137.
Horrible call. On 220 earnings that is a 21 multiple! Many financial institutions are forecasting below this. How is this achieved in an rarnings recession?!? Earnings are not likely to get better in the short term. Heck, even Buffet sees more bank failures before it gets better. Bulls have been spoiled by free money for almost 2 decades. Until the fed turn the spigots back up, there is no reason think such growth will continue…it goes in the very face of what they are trying to achieve!!
what?
SVB was only the result of too much risk taking by their management and inexistant risk management. it's just Fraud at this stage rather than the FED
And a liquidity issue
The Trump admin did deregulated the banks.
one could also think that consumers last month were more busy pulling their savings out of regional Banks rather than shopping in malls. Retails sales very likely to rebound next month as the banking stress has disappeared and customers banked 4% interest on the cash that they can spend.
That made no sense. How would customers make 4% when pulling their money from the banks? Its not like that return is made in 1 month!?! Furthermore, if they were that scare to pull rheir money from the banks, you think they just turned around and went shopping!?!
Very well written and presented. Thank you!
These next 1-2 years will be back to reality years… buckle up for the earthquake :)
Great charts! I conclude that raising rates isn't the real problem. it's too much debt. Now that the party is over the hangover begins.
debt means big turnover.. on savimap.com you can find expert to give you guidance in such turning moments
No rate hike max 0,25% more likely 0,10%.
3.5% unemployment rate w/ 5.6% YoY rising core CPI is a recipe for 0.50% rate hike May 3,
Also, the Fed fund rate is much closer to inflation rate now than when inflation rate was >9% 3/4 yr ago.
Also, the Fed fund rate is much closer to inflation rate now than when inflation rate was >9% about a yr ago.
Also, the Fed fund rate is much closer to inflation rate now than when inflation rate was greater than 9% about a yr ago.
so when do you think recession will hit ?
Market Manipulator. Why not keep this to yourself and make a billion?
So basically SPR releases fudged recession last year to not look like one. which has given time for everyone to blame fed for doing his job. well played
Don't overestimate the SPR releases' significance to the market.  Far more significant is that US oil production is at post-Trump high and US nat gas production is at all time high.
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