The U.S. economy, if left to its own devices, probably wouldn't even come close to falling into recession in 2019-2020, even amid the uncertain outlooks for Europe, Japan, China and the large oil producers. But the economy is not being left to its own devices.
In recent weeks, it has become more vulnerable to the possibility of policy mistakes and market accidents. These self-inflicted wounds, while yet to constitute a critical mass, have become more of a threat to economic and corporate fundamentals, rendering both more susceptible to the slowing global economy.
The U.S. economy has a lot going for it. Consider its three biggest drivers of growth:
Thus, the U.S. economy is in a good position to sustain a 2.5-3 percent growth rate in 2019, while also resisting the headwinds created by the following:
The problem for the U.S. economy goes beyond just the challenges facing other major economies.
The shutdown of the federal government amplifies uncertainties associated with what many market participants complain have become at times rather muddled and confusing signals from the nation’s two most important economic policy making agencies. Specifically:
The impact of these two factors would be less worrisome if it weren’t for the fact that markets already confront unstable technical conditions and a growing inclination by some market participants to talk themselves into recession-like behavior.
This should all be seen in the context of the prolonged period of ample and predictable liquidity injections by central banks, which gave rise to market features that have now become a source of volatility and vulnerability. These include asset prices that were decoupled substantially from less-buoyant fundamentals; the rapid rise of passive investing; excessive risk taking; and the over-promise of liquidity, including through exchange-traded funds, in market segments prone to bouts of illiquidity. With that, the past inclination of investors to buy on market dips -- a pattern that contributed to last year’s impressive market gains with virtually no volatility -- has given rise to consistent selling on rallies when these occasionally arise.
The risk of a downward overshoot for markets cannot be dismissed absent external circuit breakers and/or the internal self-exhaustion of poor fundamentals, neither of which seems imminent. This increases the risk of bad market technicals contaminating the economy through the combination of a negative wealth effect and diminished household and business sentiment.
As of now, these mounting threats to U.S. economic growth are still risk factors in a relatively positive baseline scenario. Keeping it this way will require policy mindsets that are more agile, more global and more understanding of the underlying and changing psychology of markets.
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