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US economic conditions go from bad to worse

BCA Research paints a bleak picture of the US economy after conditions deteriorate.
Economics

Leading indicators appear to be pointing to a weaking US economy and potential recession, according to the latest BCA Research monthly portfolio update.

“US economic data has continued to deteriorate, with the leading economic indicator pointing to a recession,” the report found. “The situation in Europe and China looks even worse.”

Since releasing the previous quarterly publication, when BCA Research went underweight equities, economic data has deteriorated despite the 5 per cent rally in global equities during July.

  • “A classic bear market rally, we would argue,” the report highlights. “PMIs are starting to dip below 50. The US leading economic indicator has fallen for four months in a row, historically a reliable sign of impending recession.”

    Adding to the pain, inflation isn’t going away anytime soon, with a recession looking more than likely. 

    “Inflation remains sticky, with US wages now rising strongly. Supply-chain repair will bring core PCE inflation down to 4 per cent – but to get to 2 per cent will require a recession,” the report states.

    “The market is betting that the Fed will lose its nerve early next year and start cutting rates. We think this is unlikely: The Fed won’t want to repeat the mistakes it made in the 1970s.”

    Those mistakes include then-chairman Arthur Burns cutting interest rates too quickly in 1974 at the first sign of a slowdown. Inflation never fell below 5 per cent. The report mentions Federal Reserve chair Powell emphasising the battle against inflation being unconditional. Monetary policy will remain tight until inflation clearly heads back to 2 per cent, it states.

    In the report, BCA Research continues to prefer the lower-beta US market, given the greater economic resilience of the US. “The USD will strengthen further, and industrial commodities will fall. Credit looks more attractive for long-term investors than equities,” it continues.

    “Investors should remain defensively positioned on the 12-month investment horizon, stay underweight equities and hold as much cash as mandates allow. Government bonds represent a good hedge; inflation-linked ones are also now more attractively valued.”

    Ishan Dan

    Ishan is an experienced journalist covering The Inside Investor and The Insider Adviser publications.




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