Between Howard Lutnick saying there will not be a recession and President Trump not ruling out a recession, I'm beginning to understand a bit on what's happening behind the scenes.
I'm speculating that behind closed doors, Trump may have already scolded at Lutnick for divulging his plan(s)/strategy/tactic.
At least for me, it's less likely to believe that a full blown out recession will happen anytime soon.
That said, I've also learned a new term called "Technical Recession". A technical recession is defined simply as two consecutive quarters of declining GDP.
Unlike broader economic recessions that factor in unemployment rates and consumer spending patterns, this metric is purely mathematical, i.e a threshold that economists and related parties use to categorize economic activity.
I think it's a bit revealing on how a relatively straightforward measurement can trigger a powerful market responses but we won't officially know if we're in a technical recession until months after it begins.
Also, I've learnt that definitions do change in the world of economics and politics.
Another economic or political body might come out tomorrow and say a technical recession is so and so, because it is more aligned with their policy objectives or economic outlook.
The point is economic terminology often becomes fluid when political considerations enter the picture.
Besides, markets seem to operate on a different timeline than the actual economy. To a certain degree, economic reports tell us where we've been, market movements reflect where investors think we're heading.
So a gap(sometimes a chasm) is formed between market sentiment and economic reality.
Some experts like Mohamed El-Erian mentioned that markets typically anticipate economic changes by 6-9 months.
When looking back at past downturns, such as the 2008 financial crisis or the 2020 pandemic shock, this pattern seems consistent.
When Fear Creates Its Own Reality
On the other side of the spectrum, fear itself can change economic outcomes.
Not so recently, I've read/heard somewhere that one of the triggers of the Great Depression was the bank runs caused by public panic and loss of confidence in financial institutions.
If that's the case, then recession fears can ironically help manifest the very recession everyone feared.
It's sort of a self-fulfilling prophecy that makes me question whether staying optimistic might actually be the more rational economic position at this point in time.
History suggests that market corrections happen more frequently than full-blown recessions, and panic-selling usually leads to missed opportunities when markets eventually recover.
Still, I can't shake the feeling that there might be a wild card nobody's fully accounting for.
Be it the cumulative impact of interest rate policies, global trade tensions, or some factor that isn't yet on the radar of mainstream economic discussion.
Zoom out and remember that throughout history, markets have consistently rewarded those who can distinguish between temporary setbacks and fundamental shifts in economic reality. I'm leaning more into the former(temporary setbacks) at this point in time.
Thanks for reading!! Share your thoughts below on the comments.
One thing is for sure: the language is heavily modified. Recession used to mean something years ago. These days they are changing terms all over the place or inventing new ones to take the pressure off the bullshit that's going on around the world. Really just a game of manipulation no matter how you shake a stick at it. People are struggling just as much or more than they were before and seemingly no end in sight, especially if AI is going to destroy a shit-ton of jobs.
At the same time though, there is truly an era of abundance upon us. Technology has done amazing things and decimated the cost for so many things in the world, which is a great benefit to people despite the tough economics of it all.
Yin and Yang!
Definitely, I think these two almost opposing trends of both good and bad is the main characteristics of our modern era, and we individually and also collectively decide where to focus much of our time and effort. I think definitely the bad should be acknowledged, as it aldo helps in making better decisions with regards to taking the good path. Sometimes, I do joke that the bad is merely a smokescreen to distract us from all the good that we can do to shift the tide and achieve true abundance.
Thanks for stopping by :)
stumbled on the comparison of the us stock market valuations to the costs of labor yesterday. they have not been aligned since the 70s and 80s.
were the to align, the AVERAGE hourly wage would be ~$250. OR of course the stock market come down 60-90% from its hypervaluation highs.
i still see a lower high, maybe this summer or fall. of that were to happen crypto might get its (shortlived) altseason. and then bear market time ahahhaa.
all just ideas of course, i have no clue what ia going to happen these days ;)
Yes, I think there's a growing divorce between the two, the value of labor is generally diminishing in monetary terms yet stock prices keep going up and to the right generally. Which makes you wonder where the money is really coming from and who are really the buyers that a pushing the charts upwards abd for what reasons, is it just a smokescreen to mask something more important that's happening?
Oh wow, what a blow that would be lol, a lower high, short-lived altseason and back to the bear trenches. I'm not sure what the probability of that happening is from a data perspective but sentiment wise, it's around 40% for me.
Hope for the best, give it your all and prepare for the worst, I guess :)
Thanks for stopping by :)