Here’s Why Experts Predict A Return To Negative Economic Growth—And Potential Recession—Despite Strong GDP

Topline

The U.S. economy grew more than expected in the fourth quarter despite key measures of activity—including consumer spending and business investments—weakening amid worsening layoffs and a deteriorating overall outlook, prompting experts to warn the economy could start to shrink again as soon as this quarter.

Key Facts

U.S. gross domestic product grew at an estimated annual rate of 2.9% in the fourth quarter—after 3.2% growth in the third quarter— more than the 2.6% economists expected, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported Thursday.

Despite the overall strength, Glenmede Vice President of Investment Strategy Michael Reynolds says the report contains “telltale signs” that the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes, which tanked stocks and the housing market last year, are “beginning to cascade through the economy,” with business investments, for example, decelerating “meaningfully” in a likely reaction to the higher costs.

Though consumer spending still appears in “decent shape,” Reynolds notes household spending growth has “begun to lose momentum,” with spending up 2.1% last quarter versus 2.3% in the third quarter and 3.1% one year earlier.

The data was “better than expected at a headline level, but weaker under the hood,” says Kroll Institute chief economist Megan Greene, who points out growth was boosted by the biggest gain in inventories in a year, which aren’t a “sustainable driver for growth” because they’re highly susceptible to changes in prices.

In a Thursday email, Pantheon Macro chief economist Ian Shepherdson agreed, saying the inventory component will likely fall this quarter—putting the economy at a high risk of facing an outright drop in first-quarter GDP.

“Whether this eventually is declared a recession will depend on what happens to employment and incomes,” Shepherdson posits, noting they are both likely to “soften markedly,” with a recent surge in layoff announcements pointing “unambiguously” to much higher unemployment in the coming months.

Key Background

The Fed’s interest rate hikes—and central bank tightening around the world—have triggered steep downturns in the housing and stock markets, and a growing number of experts worry the turmoil could ultimately spark a deep global recession. According to British investment firm Schroders, a rate hike can take up to two years to fully ripple across the economy, and signs the turmoil could be spreading into the job market have intensified in recent weeks, with tech giants Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft among corporations announcing widespread layoffs. Oanda analyst Edward Moya expects the layoff theme will spread across other sectors throughout the year.

What To Watch For

The Fed’s next interest rate announcement is slated for February 1. Economists at Goldman Sachs expect the central bank will deliver quarter-point hikes at their next three meetings and hold top interest rates at 5.25%, the highest level since 2007, for the rest of the year. However, any signs the economy is cooling too rapidly—or not cooling rapidly enough—could change those projections.

Further Reading

2023 Layoffs: Vacasa Lays Off 1,300 Employees (Forbes)

Spotify, Alphabet And Meta Lead Tech Stock Surge After Massive Layoff Announcements (Forbes)

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/jonathanponciano/2023/01/26/heres-why-experts-predict-a-return-to-negative-economic-growth-and-potential-recession-despite-strong-gdp/