The Great American Road Trip

Raymond James CIO Larry Adam notes that even as unexpected detours occur, investors can't lose sight of their long-term goals.

For more insights, see the Investment Strategy Quarterly publication linked below.

With fall in the air, it’s a great time for a road trip! There’s something exciting about the American tradition of hitting the road with friends and family in tow. “It’s not the destination, it’s the journey,” Ralph Waldo Emerson said, but he never had to manage portfolios – both are critically important. Why? Because similar to road trips, even as unexpected detours occur, investors cannot lose sight of their long-term goals. Case in point: as we look at today’s economy and financial markets, we are at a crossroads: Will it be a long straight highway to a soft landing, or will it be a bumpy road to recession? Will November’s election results provide a fork in the road on taxes and tariffs? And what road signs should we follow in positioning portfolios? So, fill up the tank, fire up your playlist, grab snacks, and let’s go on a trip to find these answers!

We begin at Raymond James headquarters in sunny St. Petersburg, Florida. Florida is known as the ‘sunshine state’ – and the economy has been shining brightly over the last four years as it recovered from COVID. Admittedly, a slowdown has been anticipated for a while. But each time consumer, business and government spending proved resilient, our economic GPS said: ‘recalculating.’ Even the most aggressive Federal Reserve (Fed) tightening in 40 years, a spike in inflation, and slowing consumer spending have yet to cloud economic vitality.

But as our journey heads north along the Blue Ridge Parkway through the great Appalachian Mountains, we encounter SLOW AHEAD and FALLING ROCKS signs that speak to our economic forecasts. We expect GDP of 2.6% in 2024 and 2.0% in 2025. The important point is that while the economy is slowing and on a narrow path to a soft landing, it is not expected to crash into a recession. Remember, a slower, more consistent speed is better for gas mileage efficiency. Slowing, but not negative, job growth, healthy business spending, and a continuation in government spending – 80% of the Inflation Reduction Act has yet to be spent – to re-industrialize the U.S. should help the economy avert a recession. The ‘falling rocks’ that could jeopardize our outlook are a precipitous decline in consumer spending – either by buyers’ choice or by crushingly high interest rates – dynamics the Fed understands well.

That is why our next stop is Washington, DC, the home of the Fed. Maybe the Fed isn’t a top destination for most road trippers, but it’s certainly the most-watched institution for markets as the long-awaited easing cycle has begun. After cutting 50 basis points at its September meeting, the Fed has more cuts in the tank – at least 50 basis points (bps) more in 2024, and at least 100 bps more in 2025. Fed Chair Powell can answer the question “Are we there yet?” with a resounding “yes!” regarding lower inflation and can now focus on sustaining the health of the economy and employment conditions. Lower interest rates are a significant driver of our hoped-for economic reacceleration in 2025.