Bear Market

June 16, 2022 | Tim Fisher


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The markets have been under pressure in recent days. The trigger was a recent inflation report that has investors believing central banks will have to tighten financial conditions more than planned, which could increase the odds of a future recession

Good morning,

 

The markets have been under pressure in recent days. The trigger was a recent inflation report that has investors believing central banks will have to tighten financial conditions more than planned, which could increase the odds of a future recession.

 

The most recent U.S. inflation reading for the month of May came in at 8.6%, representing the highest inflation rate in over 40 years. It indicates pricing pressures are not only elevated, but still rising. That stands in contrast to what some investors were hoping for: signs that inflation may have already peaked and was on the verge of easing.

 

The predominant concern is higher rates will lead to tight financial conditions. This is often characterized by a material change in the availability and access to credit that causes consumers and businesses to re-evaluate their spending, hiring, and capital expenditure plans. Historically, these kinds of conditions have resulted in recessions. Not surprisingly, recessions, or even the anticipation of them, have driven some of the weaker periods of stock market performance. On the other hand, some of the strongest periods of market performance have traditionally begun amidst periods of economic hardship, as markets begin to anticipate the potential for an economic and earnings recovery well ahead of one actually occurring.

 

The odds of a recession over the next few years have undoubtedly risen, and may continue to increase through the second half of the year given the tightening of financial conditions. There are early signs of a slowing in some of the more interest rate sensitive sectors of the North American economy, such as housing for example. In some ways, this comes as a relief to many who have been concerned, particularly in Canada, about the seemingly endless rise of house prices and the significant decline in affordability. A slowing in the domestic housing market, should it occur, may ironically be a positive development and a sign that policy makers are effectively reining in pricing pressures in some parts of the economy. Elsewhere, some of the indicators in our RBC U.S. recession scorecard framework are also moving in a direction that suggest the odds of a recession are rising, but not necessarily imminent.