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Guggenheim's Minerd says aggressive Fed moves can delay recession, but not avoid it

Published 09/17/2019, 10:26 PM
Updated 09/17/2019, 10:31 PM
Guggenheim's Minerd says aggressive Fed moves can delay recession, but not avoid it

By Jennifer Ablan

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Guggenheim Partners global chief investment officer Scott Minerd warned on Tuesday the firm's recession forecast model showed a 58% chance of the economy being in a recession by mid-2020, and a 77% chance of one beginning in the next 24 months.

Minerd, who oversees more than $240 billion in assets under management, said history shows that once Guggenheim's Recession Probability Model reaches current levels, "aggressive policy action can delay recession, but not avoid it."

Minerd, in a research note to clients, said Guggenheim expects the Trump administration will continue to use easier monetary policy as a "green light for more aggressive trade policy."

He noted that Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell explicitly cited trade policy as a rationale for cutting rates, which risks the development of a feedback loop between Fed rate cuts and trade war escalation.

Economists widely expect the U.S. central bank to cut its benchmark rate for the second time this year by 25 basis points to a range of 1.75% to 2.00% at a meeting ending Wednesday to counter risks posed by the U.S.-China trade war.

"If core inflation heads back up toward 2%, some Fed officials may more forcefully resist further rate cuts, complicating an already difficult messaging exercise," Minerd said.

"Incoming data support our longstanding baseline of a recession beginning by mid-2020, per our Recession Dashboard. Given that credit spreads are still relatively tight on a historical basis, we continue to believe it is prudent to remain up in quality as we await better opportunities to deploy capital in riskier credit sectors in the coming downturn."

Minerd said investors should keep a close eye on the stock market and the shape of the yield curve.

"Stock market response will be a key indicator of the success of the Fed's move to cut rates, and if the curve stays inverted the market is signaling its skepticism that Fed policy will keep the economy from falling into recession," he said.

Latest comments

Well, there's this. https://www.guggenheiminvestments.com/perspectives/macroeconomic-research/forecasting-the-next-recession
Love these geniuses but not a single one ever lets you know of a big economic drop around the corner. not even when it already started.  We are in the largest economic bubble ever. easy call. World debt, world spending, world relaxed restrictions and rules, world deflationary spiral, demanding a rate cut at these levels after a 10 year mega bull run should give YOU a clue just how dire the situation is.  Add the massive giveaways to the top one percent and political corruption the likes of which hasn't been seen in 90 years. now add accelerating national debt, world recession likely, inability to inflate our way out.  The next debacle will make the mortgage debacle look tame in comparison.  Depression is our next market and it comes 90 years from the last.  Silly assumption that we have a safety net in for of the FED.  Magic mirrors.
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