Premium Only Content

Is a Recession Coming?
Rumble = https://rumble.com/user/SweetHomeStAugustine
Locals = https://sweethomesa.locals.com/
POPULIST REVOLT = https://populistrevolt.com
Former Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein added to recession talk after telling CBS on Sunday that an economic downturn is “a very, very high risk factor.”
It is not only Blankfein warning about a GDP contraction. Many Wall Street analysts are increasingly becoming worried that a recession could turn into the base case for forecasts over the next 12 to 24 months.
A recent Bloomberg monthly survey of economists found that the probability of a recession over the next 12 months is 30 percent, the highest in two years. This is double the odds economists had anticipated in February.
Morgan Stanley projects (pdf) a 27 percent chance of a recession in the next 12 months, up from 5 percent in March.
“It now appears that inflation is broadening out and has the potential to stay higher for longer,” wrote Morgan Stanley Wealth Management’s chief investment officer Lisa Shalett, in her weekly note. “This is a scenario that places upward pressure on longer-run inflation expectations and keeps the Fed in a policy acceleration mode.”
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari told a town hall event in Michigan on Tuesday that it is unclear if the central bank will need to trigger a recession to bring inflation down.
“My colleagues and I are going to do what we need to do to bring the economy back into balance,” he said. “What a lot of economists are scratching their heads and wondering about is: If we really have to bring demand down to get inflation in check, is that going to put the economy into recession? And we don’t know.”
This comes after former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke acknowledged that the central bank moved too late to tackle inflation, telling The New York Times that the United States could slip into a period of stagflation.
Most CEOs are also bracing for a recession, according to a recent Conference Board Measure of CEO Confidence. The gauge dipped into negative territory, tumbling in the second quarter to 42, down from 57 in the first quarter.
While CEOs believe the Fed’s quantitative tightening will help combat inflation over the next few years, they are worried that the central bank’s efforts will induce a recession.
“CEO confidence weakened further in the second quarter, as executives contended with rising prices and supply chain challenges, which the war in Ukraine and renewed COVID restrictions in China exacerbated,” said Dana M. Peterson, Chief Economist of The Conference Board, in a statement. “Expectations for future conditions were also bleak, with 60 percent of executives anticipating the economy will worsen over the next six months—a marked rise from the 23 percent who held that view last quarter.”
ING is not predicting a recession this year, “but it could be a close-run thing in 2023,” says James Knightley, the bank’s chief international economist, in a note.
The Atlanta Fed Bank GDPNow model suggests second-quarter growth of 2.4 percent.
Greg McBride, the senior vice president and chief financial analyst at Bankrate, does not believe there are signs of a recession right now because labor trends and consumer spending are strong.
“Even the Q1 GDP wasn’t a sign of recession as the contraction was due to the trade deficit (imports rise in a strong economy) and inventory adjustment (fluctuating due to persistent supply chain issues),” McBride told The Epoch Times. “The worries of recession are more about 2023, or even 2024, not 2022.”
Sankar Sharma, a market strategist, echoed this sentiment, telling The Epoch Times that recession signs are not prevalent today, but they could start forming in 2023 or 2024.
“We are in an environment where unemployment is very low, with millions of job openings available for the taking, companies, and banks’ balance sheets are strong, finance systems are strong and in good shape, and earnings reports are healthy, from today’s Home Depot and Walmart results we can see consumer is still spending, credit markets are not under stress, demand for housing hasn’t slowed drastically and banks are still well-capitalized,” Sharma stated.
Should the United States economy experience a hard landing after the Fed’s tightening cycle, the central bank could start cutting interest rates, he added.
But will the financial markets remain on a roller coaster ride over the next two years?
-
19:53
CatfishedOnline
10 hours agoMan Dates Jennifer Aniston Or Online Romance Scam?
6.29K12 -
11:40
Shea Whitney
13 hours ago $1.07 earned20 Best *DESIGNER INSPIRED* Items on Amazon!
5.33K4 -
11:05
Hannah Barron
21 hours agoFirst STEELHEAD Trip!
9.65K8 -
1:00:13
Trumpet Daily
19 hours ago $3.98 earnedThe World Realigns Against America - Trumpet Daily | Mar. 31, 2025
7.69K14 -
11:08
This Southern Girl Can
12 hours agoDIY Spring Wreath
8.13K3 -
3:04:40
Danny Polishchuk
17 hours agoLiberation Day Looms + Guest Richard Syrett Talks JFK Files | Low Value Mail Live Call In Show
53.1K23 -
2:40:15
Barry Cunningham
11 hours agoPRESIDENT TRUMP SIGNS NEW EXECUTIVE ORDERS AND THE EVENING NEWS!
51.1K53 -
2:49:55
TimcastIRL
11 hours agoGOP Office TORCHED, Terror Suspected, Elon Says ARREST Dem Funders w/Winston Marshall | Timcast IRL
223K111 -
1:39:42
Glenn Greenwald
13 hours agoMajor Escalation in Attempts to Purge U.S. Universities of Israel Critics; Who are the Israel Groups Providing Lists to the U.S. Government to Deport & Punish? | SYSTEM UPDATE #431
207K200 -
9:21:30
SpartanTheDogg
16 hours agoPro Halo Player
71.9K3