Recession Risk Remains Low

Summary: The macro data from the past month continues to mostly point to positive growth. On balance, the evidence suggests the imminent onset of a recession is unlikely.

The bond market agrees with the macro data. The yield curve has 'inverted' (10 year yields less than 2-year yields) ahead of every recession in the past 40 years (arrows). The lag between inversion and the start of the next recession has been long: at least a year and in several instances as long as 2-3 years. On this basis, the current expansion will last well into 2018 at a minimum. Enlarge any image by clicking on it.

Unemployment claims are also in a declining trend; historically, claims have started to rise at least 6 months ahead of the next recession.



That said, there are two watch outs that bear monitoring closely:

The first is employment growth, which has been decelerating from over 2% last year to 1.6% now. It's not alarming but it is noteworthy that expansions weaken before they end, and slowing employment growth is a sign of some weakening in the current expansion.
The second watch out is demand growth. Real retail sales excluding gas is in a decelerating trend. In May, growth was just 1.7% after having grown at more than 4% in 2015. Personal consumption accounts for about 70% of GDP so weakening retail sales has a notable impact on the economy.


Macro data headlines from the past month:

Employment: Monthly employment gains have averaged 187,000 during the past year, with annual growth of 1.6% yoy. Full-time employment is leading.
Compensation: Compensation growth is among the highest in the past 8 years - 2.6% yoy in 1Q17.
Demand: Real demand growth has been 2-3%. In May, real personal consumption growth was 2.7%. Real retail sales (including gas) grew 1.9% yoy in May, after making a new ATH in April.
Housing: Housing sales made a 9-1/2 year high in March. Sales grew 9% yoy in May. Starts and permits are flat over the past two years due to weakness in multi-family units.
Manufacturing: Core durable goods growth rose 4.8% yoy in May. The manufacturing component of industrial production grew 1.7% yoy in May.
Inflation: The core inflation rate remains near (but under) the Fed's 2% target.

Our key message over the past 5 years has been that (a) growth is positive but slow, in the range of ~2-3% (real), and; (b) current growth is lower than in prior periods of economic expansion and a return to 1980s or 1990s style growth does not appear likely.

This is germane to equity markets in that macro growth drives corporate revenue, profit expansion and valuation levels. The saying that "the stock market is not the economy" is true on a day to day or even month to month basis, but over time these two move together. When they diverge, it is normally a function of emotion, whether measured in valuation premiums/discounts or sentiment extremes.



Macro data should be better than expected in 2H17. Why? Macro data was ahead of expectations to start the current year. During the current expansion, that has led to underperformance of macro data relative to expectations into mid-year and then outperformance in the second half of the year (green shading). 2009 and 2016 had the opposite pattern: these years began with macro data outperforming expectations into mid-and then underperforming in the second half (yellow shading).