Key Takeaways
Our quantitative models are signalling a high risk of
a recession in the medium term (12-24 months).
But these require careful interpretation given the
receding risk in the near-term models, especially
over the three- and six-month horizons. This has
been primarily driven by the repricing of recession
risks in financial markets.
Other typical recession indicators, like the yield
curve and the Conference Board’s Leading
Economic Indicator (LEI), are still flashing red.
The loosening in the US labour market has so far
been benign, with declining vacancies rather than
higher unemployment helping lower inflation
pressures. But this may prove temporary. The final
leg of returning inflation to target could require a
move upward in unemployment.
Corporates may well cut back on hiring amid
increasing pressure on margins due to elevated
wage growth and higher financing costs.
Meanwhile, consumers also face growing
headwinds with depleted savings piles, the
resumption of student loan repayments and higher
debt servicing costs resulting from rates remaining
higher for longer.
Therefore, while the potential for a soft landing has
increased, we continue to see an eventual mild
recession as the most likely eventual outcome for
the US economy.