This article should be of particular interest to all you techies out there for it describes in detail 12 technical indicators to watch as a preview to a correction or recession. It should be very instructive and may even provide some valuable tips for how to personally avoid any coming downturn. It's nice to know we may be on the verge. It is much nicer to know there's something we can do about it. What follows is a concise rendering of the text of the article, but for the very instructive charts themselves you will need to access the link provided. Enjoy it and enjoy the rest of this pleasantly cool weekend.
Wed 7-25-18 Twelve charts to watch for signs of the next U.S. downturn | Reuters
JULY
25, 2018 / 1:24 AM / 4 DAYS AGO
Twelve
charts to watch for signs of the next U.S. downturn
NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Economists and investors are watching for signs they
hope can predict when the wheels will come off a near-record U.S. economic
expansion and equities bull market. Some
are already worried about a flattening Treasuries yield curve and slowing
housing market, even as other economic vital signs remain healthy.
U.S. economic growth will probably slow
gradually over the next two years and the threat of a trade war has made a
recession more likely, a recent Reuters poll predicted.
A majority of bond market experts in a
separate poll now predict a yield curve inversion in the next one to two years,
a red flag for those who believe short-term yields rising above longer-term
yields means an imminent recession.
“Almost every client meeting includes
questions about where the economy and markets sit in the cycle,” JPMorgan head
of cross-asset fundamental strategy John Normand wrote in a recent research
note.
The U.S. economy is a year away from
surpassing the record 120-month 1991-2001 expansion, according to data from the
National Bureau of Economic Research.
The stock market bull run is also nearing a
record. Bull markets are typically measured retroactively, but U.S. equities
could hit their longest bull run in history on Aug. 22, according to
S&P.
The U.S. economy is “late cycle” but a
recession is not imminent, a number of economists and strategists say.
“We believe that the U.S. economic expansion
is entering the final third of its cycle,” wrote analysts at Wells Fargo
Investment Institute, although they said various indicators do not suggest a
recession this year.
1. THE YIELD CURVE
The U.S. yield curve plots Treasury securities
with maturities ranging from 4 weeks to 30 years. The spread between two-year
and 10-year notes is typically used when discussing yield curve inversion. The
gap between long- and short-dated yields turning negative has been a reliable
predictor of recessions. The yield curve has been flattening in recent months.
2. SHORT-TERM BILLS
An alternative yield curve measures the
difference in the current interest rate on 3-month Treasury bills and
expectations for the yields 18 months from now. Federal Reserve officials have
found this measure is a stronger predictor of recession in the coming year. The
measure currently suggests little recession risk.
3. UNEMPLOYMENT
The unemployment rate and initial jobless
claims ticked higher just ahead or in the early days of the last two recessions
before rising sharply. Unemployment hit an 18-year low in May of 3.8 percent
but nudged up to 4 percent in June.
4. OUTPUT GAP
The output gap between
the economy’s actual and potential gross
domestic product has fallen ahead of the last two recessions.
“Currently we estimate that the output gap is
nearly closed, but not yet in the ‘overheating’ territory,” wrote Kathy
Bostjancic, head of U.S. investor services at Oxford Economics, in May.
5. STOCK MARKETS
Falling equity markets can signal a recession
is looming or has already started to take hold. Markets turned down before the
2001 recession and tumbled at the start of the 2008 recession.
On a 12-month rolling basis, the market has
turned down ahead of the last two recessions. The 12-month rolling average
percent move is now below its 2018 peak but higher than recent lows.
6. BOOM-BUST BAROMETER
The Boom-Bust
Barometer devised by Ed Yardeni at Yardeni Research measures spot prices of
industrials inputs like copper, steel and lead scrap, and divides that by
initial unemployment
claims. The measure fell before or during the last two recessions
and is below its 2018 peak.
7. HOUSING MARKET
Housing starts and building permits have
fallen ahead of some recent recessions. Housing starts and permits fell to the
lowest level since September 2017 in June.
8. EARNINGS GROWTH
S&P 500 earnings growth dipped ahead of
the last recession. Earnings growth is expected to slow slightly this year and
more next year, but remain in the high single digits or low double digits in
2019.
9. SOUTH KOREA EXPORTS
South Korean exports fell during the last
recession and before the previous recession.
Those exports, which include cars, phones,
steel and other products, tend to be a leading indicator, said Bank of America
Merrill Lynch chief investment strategist Michael Hartnett. Exports from China
are also increasingly important as weak Asian exports tend to coincide with
weak global and U.S. growth.
South Korea’s export
growth came to a halt in June. China, the world’s largest exporter, reported
exports accelerated in
June.
The United States and China have fired the
first shots in what could become a protracted trade war. The United States and
South Korea agreed in March to revise a trade pact.
10. HIGH-YIELD SPREADS
The gap between high-yield and government bond
yields rose ahead of the 2007-2009 recession and then widened dramatically.
Credit spreads typically widen when perceived risk of default rises. Spreads
have fallen slightly this year.
11. INVESTMENT-GRADE YIELDS
Risk premiums on investment-grade corporate
bonds over comparable Treasuries have topped 2 percent during or just before
six of the seven U.S. recessions since 1970. Spreads on Baa-rated corporate
bonds rose to 2 percent this month based on Moody’s Investors Services data,
according to Leuthold Group’s chief investment strategist Jim Paulsen.
12. MISERY INDEX
The so-called Misery Index adds together the
unemployment rate and the inflation rate. It typically rises during recessions
and sometimes prior to downturns. It has nudged higher in 2018 but is still relatively
low.
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