https://dailyreckoning.com/100-chance-recession-within-7-months/
by Bryan Maher
We asked this question one
week after Trump was elected:
“What does history predict for
the Trump presidency?”
The answer we furnished —
based on over a century of data — was this:
A 100% chance of recession
within his first year.
Not a 90% chance, that is. Not
even a 99% chance. But a 100% chance of recession.
That answer came by way of a
certain Raoul Pal. He used to captain one of the largest hedge funds in the
world.
And to prove his case he
called the unimpeachable witness of history to the stand…
Crunching 107 years worth of
data, he showed the U.S. economy enters or is in a recession every time a
two-term president vacates the throne:
Since 1910, the U.S. economy
is either in recession or enters a recession within 12 months in every single
instance at the end of a two-term presidency… effecting a 100% chance of
recession for the new president.
Obama was a two-term president
— if memory serves.
Only two incoming presidents
were not treated to a recession within the first year of office. And both
followed one-term reigns:
Not every single election sees
a recession, only every two-term incumbent change… Only two presidents in
history did not see a recession, and they were inaugurated after single-term
presidents.
Mr. Pal couldn’t fully explain
the phenomenon.
Maybe it takes two terms for
presidential mischief to work its way into the economic machinery.
One-term presidents just can’t
heave enough sand in the gears.
Regardless of the reason, this
fellow’s research pointed him to one conclusion:
“It is not a coincidence.”
Trump’s now five months into his
first 12. Where does the prediction stand?
By grace of God or Janet
Yellen or neither or both, no recession yet.
But our pessimistic side
reminds us that seven months remain. And anxiety riles the deeps of our being…
For we’ve spotted ill omens…
disturbing portents of recession among the recent economic data…
Old Daily Reckoning hand Wolf
Richter:
Over the past five decades,
each time commercial and industrial loan balances at U.S. banks shrank or
stalled… a recession was either already in progress or would start soon. There
has been no exception since the 1960s. Last time this happened was during the
financial crisis.
“Now,” Wolf says, “it’s
happening again.”
Last month commercial and
industrial loans (C&I) outstanding fell to $2.095 trillion, according to
the St. Louis Fed. That’s down 4.5% from their November 2016 peak, says Wolf.
And it marked the 30th
consecutive week of no growth in C&I loans.
Wolf argues C&I loans
matter because they directly reflect the real economy — unlike today’s stock
market, which is crooked as a Brit’s teeth.
Tuomas Maln is CEO of GnS
Economics. He argues that today’s credit flows of commercial and industrial
loans have not been this negative for 27 years… outside a recession anyway.
Sometimes credit flows turn
negative before a recession, he notes. And sometimes after.
During the 2008 crisis for
example, Malinen notes that credit flows didn’t veer negative until the economy
already entered recession.
But before the shorter
recessions of 1990 and 2001, he says credit flows started falling three–six
quarters before the recession.
Overall though, Malinen says
the relationship between negative credit flows and recessions holds true since
1948.
And here’s where the needle
scratches the wax:
The current decline in the
credit impulse started in the third quarter last year. Thus, the U.S. economy
may be just one–two quarters away from a recession.
Is the economy just one or two
quarters away from recession?
That would put it within
Trump’s first year in office — and keep the 107-year record perfect.
First-quarter GDP grew at a
slender 1.2% annualized rate. Not recessionary — but growth at a tortoise pace.
In March the New York Fed
guessed (that seems to be just the right word here) that second-quarter GDP
would bloom just under 3%.
But last week it had to
downgrade its forecast… to a mere 1.9%.
We wouldn’t be the least
surprised if they have to downgrade it again. That seems to be the pattern.
Heaping Pelion upon Ossa,
they’re now projecting total 2017 growth at a dangerously underweight 1.5%.
The economy only expanded 1.6%
last year.
And since they keep having to
revise their forecasts lower… would you be surprised if the economy doesn’t
grow at all this year?
Or worse, if it actually
enters recession?
Remember, 107 years of history
say it will…
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