Sunday, March 20, 2022

So When Will the Next Recession Strike?

Lots of elements of our current economic situation point towards a disruption of the status quo sooner or later. Here is a list:

  • The Federal Reserve has been blowing up the money supply over the past few years, with the result that markets are skewed, e.g., real estate and the stock market, which I will come right out and say are bubbles.
  • Price inflation has raised its ugly head, inspiring Fed actions that may or may not work. (John Williams on his website Shadowstats would show a much higher figure, but he's behind a paywall now. [Congrats to him, but too bad for us.])
  • The Covid responses around the world have disrupted the supply chains and been responsible for a least a part of the price inflation – but which part? Hard to say. Here's a chart giving only the supplies that Russia provides. You can imagine the rest of the world.
  • The world seems to be dipping into a precursor of World War III, or at least a period of daring moves on the part of some globally aggressive players, which makes everyone jittery.
  • The dollar's reserve currency status is undergoing a test as China and Russia pair up to circumvent recent sanctions on Russia's banking system.
  • The yield curve has recently started to invert, which some say is a harbinger of bad times to come.
  • US bonds have been extremely expensive for the past few years (yields are the inverse of the cost of the bond), but loss of reserve currency status could definitely put a wrench in those works, causing a flight from the dollar and from US bonds. (Having said that, the US bond still seems like the tallest reed in the field of bond choices.)

Even from a business cycle point of view, one can be certain that there will be a recession, and probably sooner rather than later. But as I’ve said before, no one has ever consistently (important word there) predicted when a recession will occur. So any effort to do this is really risky. The chances of being right are probably about 50-50, but the resulting damages from being wrong are astronomical. 

On the other hand, I see no reason one can’t try to protect oneself from potential recessions all the time, which is what E.C. Harwood and others at AIER wrote about over the years. (Send me your e-mail in the comments, which I won't publish, for a copy of his last book, The Money Mirage.)

The Money Mirage
by
E.C. Harwood

Will the Federal Reserve governors stop trying to increase interest rates (which increase is supposed to depress price-inflationary pressures) because of the war and its effects on the US? Or will they plow through with their original intent and risk being blamed for any damages that critics might later say (justifiably or not) that they caused? 

A more interesting question is: Do the Fed governors really know what they are doing? If you've read a few of my blog posts, you know my answer to that one.

My guess is this: Should any whiff of recession come around the corner during this war and its consequences, the Fed will soften its interest-rate-raising program. But who knows if we will get that whiff? Only time will tell.

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