Hard or Soft?

Let’s Not Forget Helene
New Direction
Recession Brewing?
Broken Windows
A New Longevity Report
Birthdays and Hurricanes

A challenge in writing a weekly letter like this is that the economy never stops. Important data keeps accumulating, whether I write about it or not.

A lot happened in the last four weeks: an FOMC meeting with major policy changes, a surprising jobs report, important shifts in the bond market and yield curve, hurricanes, China, some geopolitical events, and a political race, just to start. I haven’t mentioned them because I was on other, also important topics. Now it’s catch-up time.

One popular narrative right now says the economy is slowly returning to normal following COVID disruptions and then a severe inflation wave. That’s not entirely a fantasy; many long-term trends do appear to be resuming their pre-2020 paths. But it depends heavily on how you define “normal.” Some things change, others don’t. Normality is always a moving target.

Many analysts expect a recession by next year. Then again, those who have been forecasting the US economy to continue on its growth path have been right for some time. With the stock market making all-time highs this week, it does look more than merely Muddle Through.

The real distinction is between the economy we have today vs. the hypothetical, unknowable economy we would have if that virus had stayed where it came from and Russia hadn’t invaded Ukraine. Today’s economy would probably look different. But that’s pure guesswork.

Can we still rely on rules forged in a world that no longer exists? Maybe. I’m more in the camp that we cannot—at least not without extraordinary caution. I believe with the government deficit and debt growing massively and the Fed’s aggressive policies, we have crossed a Rubicon, an “event horizon” where basing predictions on past data relationships is far more difficult. But since past data is all we have, forecasters still use it.

We do know one thing, however. The effects of 2020–2023—the pandemic, the Fed, the inflation, everything else—grow more distant with each passing day. The runway metaphor is overused but it fits: Planes can’t stay in the air forever. This one will land. The question is whether we passengers will feel a hard or soft landing.