A Recession in 2018 Looks Increasingly Unlikely

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 likely last through 2018 at a minimum. Enlarge any image by clicking on it.



45 year low



New home sales made a new 10 year high in November and was only marginally lower in March. In the past 50 years, more than a year has lapsed between the expansion's high print in new home sales and the start of the next recession.



Real retail sales made a new all-time high (ATH) in November and was only marginally lower in March. The trend higher is strong, in comparison to the period prior to the past two recessions.



Here are the main macro data headlines from the past month:

Employment: Monthly employment gains have averaged 190,000 during the past year, with annual growth of 1.6% yoy. Employment has been been driven by full-time jobs, which rose to a new all-time high in April.
Compensation: Compensation growth is on an improving trend. Hourly wage growth was 2.6% yoy in April, while the 1Q18 employment cost index grew 2.9% yoy, the highest growth in the past 10 years.
Demand: Real demand growth has been 2-3%. In March, real personal consumption growth was 2.4%. Real retail sales (excluding food) grew 2.3% yoy in March. It made its most recent ATH in November. 1Q18 GDP growth was the highest in 2-1/2 years.
Housing: New home sales grew 9% yoy in March. Housing starts were at the highest level of the past 10 years in January, and rose 11% yoy in March. Multi-family units remain a drag on overall development.
Manufacturing: Core durable goods rose 7.6% yoy in March, close to the best annual growth rate in 4 years. The manufacturing component of industrial production grew 3.3% yoy in March, the highest rate of growth in 6 years.
Inflation: The core inflation rate remains near 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.