A recession has an important technical definition that is different than what many people think. Earlier this year when Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth was negative, many were under the impression that two consecutive quarters of negative GDP make a recession. Often that view is a good general approximation but not the technical definition. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is the official arbiter of U.S. business cycles, and they consider a wide range of economic indicators other than just the quarterly GDP metric. The official definition of a recession is “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and that lasts more than a few months.” For most investors, this definition does not sound very specific and raises questions about things like the meaning of “significant.”
The three factors for defining a recession are depth, diffusion, and duration – conveniently referred to as the “three D’s.” Depth refers to declining economic activity that is more than a relatively small change. Diffusion describes an economy that has experienced a contraction in a wide range of sectors, such as trade, business activity, and consumer spending. Duration is likely the least important of the three D’s and measures the time between the previous business cycle peak and the following trough. Given the unique cause of the 2020 recession, the time between peak and trough was the shortest on record – only two months.
Warning signals usually precede a recession, and these signals are clearly set forth by NBER. The relevant data for determining the onset of a recession is conveniently categorized at the St. Louis Federal Reserve.
- Consumer metrics, specifically real spending and personal income, give investors an early read on the health of the consumer and are good warning signs.
- Employment activity, as reported by both businesses and households, begin to decline before the onset of a recession.
- Industrial production often stalls near the beginning of a recession, indicating cracks in the business sector.
- Indexes with aggregate economic and financial metrics give early broad-based warnings about market conditions and are also historically good leading indicators
One reason we see healthy debate on the likelihood of recession is that for most of this year, not all metrics were flashing warning signs. However, recent data may give us more clarity. On October 20, the Conference Board released the Leading Economic Index (LEI) and as of September, the LEI had declined seven out of the last nine months, showing that the economy could enter a period of significant and broad-based contraction. The decline is predictable because many sectors, such as housing, started slowing months ago. Since the inception of the index, a decline of this magnitude over a six-month period has always foreshadowed a recession in subsequent quarters. As such, recession risks appear more probable by the beginning of next year. If the economy does fall into a recession, the cause will likely be from the consumer sector retrenching after years of inflationary pressures, high housing costs, and slow real wage growth.
Most importantly, recessions historically have not perfectly coincided with market declines. Bear markets, defined by a market decline of at least 20%, and recessions overlap but investors should remind themselves that markets are forward-looking, so current market volatility is often about future recession risk. As predictable as this slowdown is, the markets have likely priced in much of the slowdown but that remains to be seen.
Even though investors are tempted to say, “this time is different,” we all can take note of general principles about business cycles and the markets. The Federal Reserve (Fed) has warned that the current inflation fight will be painful, so a dip into recession should not be surprising. As more metrics start blinking red, sticking to long-term investing plans with the guidance from a financial professional is becoming more and more important.
- The economic forecast set forth in this presentation may not develop as predicted, and there can be no guarantee that strategies promoted will be successful.
- Data provided by FactSet and LPL Financial, tracking # 1-05340859.
- Indexes are unmanaged statistical composites and cannot be invested into directly. Index performance is not indicative of the performance of any investment and do not reflect fees, expenses.*
US Treasuries may be considered “safe haven” investments but do carry some degree of risk including interest rate, credit, and market risk. Bonds are subject to market and interest rate risk if sold prior to maturity. Bond values will decline as interest rates rise and bonds are subject to availability and change in price. - The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (S&P500) is a capitalization-weighted index of 500 stocks designed to measure performance of the broad domestic economy through changes in the aggregate market value of 500 stocks representing all major industries.
