What the US economic data is telling us right now

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What the US economic data is telling us right now

That the Fed took the decision to enact a further 25 basis point rate hike, after the banking turmoil triggered by SVB, is instructive as to how far inflation remains over what would be considered a ‘comfortable level’ of approximately 2 per cent. 

The Fed’s preferred ‘super core rate’ (PCE services less energy and housing) remains stubbornly high at +4 per cent.

To intensify chairman Jerome Powell’s heartburn, falling borrowing costs combined with sharply rising interest income [on the back of a massive ‘excess savings’ pool, threaten a mini reacceleration of the economy that is set to feed through to the inflation data over the coming months.

Cumulative excess savings have not yet been depleted, which also lends credence to the prevailing market narrative prior to the SVB news, that forward earnings from corporate America would not be as adversely affected as earlier feared.

That is certainly the outcome suggested by the outsized performance of technology and e-commerce stocks during the first quarter. 

Arguably, that message has been reinforced by credit markets, where spreads have been remarkably well-behaved overall.

However, an altogether different signal has emerged from other asset markets including gold and bonds, where the SVB debacle provoked price reactions that; a) indicate the Fed is closer to the end than the beginning of its tightening cycle (or should be) and; b) that a recession in 2023 is all but guaranteed. 

Chief among the harbingers of doom is the relationship between the Fed Funds Rate (FFR) and the two-year Treasury yield curve (2Y) which inverted by 100+ basis points - the deepest inversion ever during a Fed hiking cycle.

It is an unusual occurrence and reflects bond investors’ expectations for a decline in longer-term interest rates, typically due to a recession.

FFR-2Y inversions are typically associated with systemic events and/or recessions and can provide important signals regarding future Fed policy.

The list of dates where an inversion of this magnitude has occurred historically does not make for great reading. Perhaps most importantly, these inversions typically occur before major market tumbles.

Underlying tension in markets year to date has been the result of two opposing forces: inflation data and earnings/economic forces. This has yet to be fully resolved, creating rangebound market conditions.

Difficulty in reading the tea leaves is reflected by the stasis that has gripped forecasters on Wall Street who have failed to reassess their predictions for where markets may finish this year.

Whether the US economy enters recession territory in 2023 is likely to determine the future path of asset prices.

Two of the signals are look at are: 

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