Monthly Market Update: Remaining invested, even in the face of a recession

Monthly Market Update: Remaining invested, even in the face of a recession

Thu 14 Apr 2022

It takes a confluence rather than individual risks to cause catastrophe, as any veteran of the Global Financial Crisis will attest. We believe that there’s a mounting  probability that we are seeing such a confluence of risks now, one that could significantly hurt growth:

  • A weak economic backdrop: Economies had barely recovered from the pandemic before the Ukraine war caused prices to spike.
  • Broad-based high inflation: Inflation in raw materials is much broader
  • Policy mistakes from central banks who might suffocate growth instead of combatting inflation
  • Policy mistakes from Government Treasuries who may opt for reducing debt instead of fostering growth
  • A possible ‘stealth’ Chinese slowdown.  China spent the last year trying to burst a Real Estate Bubble, both commercial and residential. The US (1996-2006), Spain (1985-2008), Japan (1985-1991) all experienced deep recessions immediately following the bursting of real estate bubbles. To the real estate pressures one must add higher energy costs, a clampdown on tech and other sectors, high municipal debt, wild demand fluctuations and a fresh Covid outbreak.

In this environment, we have to boldly state that we are not sure what the Fed means by suggesting it can “engineer a soft landing”. Even without the confluence of so many anti-growth factors, western economies are driven primarily by consumption, which means they are influenced by sentiment. Instead of keeping hopes up for just slower growth, the world should prepare for the possibility of a bona fide global economic recession. It could be slowed possibly by bank de-regulation or a swift Chinese economic rebound, however we have seen evidence of neither yet.

Instead of keeping hopes up for just slower growth, the world should prepare for the possibility of a bona fide global economic recession. This could be slowed possibly by bank de-regulation or a swift Chinese economic rebound, however we have seen evidence of neither yet.