Recession for Me But Not for Thee?

 | Mar 06, 2024 07:19

In late 2022, I often said that while I didn’t think it would be severe I figured we would have a recession in 2023 because we had never seen an energy spike at the same time that the Fed was aggressively tightening and not had a recession. Indeed, it would be weird if those things could happen and not result in a recession. Then, what causes a recession?!?

And as we all know by now, 2023 was not a recession. So, like any good trader who makes a bad call, I want to look and figure out why that happened. The funny thing is I wasn’t completely wrong on that.

We need to continue to remember that the volatility of 2020-2022 is something that doesn’t just vanish; the oscillations echo and repeat with slowly decreasing amplitude. The story of those years was this:

The economy was mostly shuttered in mid-2020, and the federal government and Federal Reserve showered money on consumers and businesses. Because service providers were basically closed, the money was poured into goods. This surge in demand led to long port delays and lead times, higher prices for goods, and a boom time for manufacturing.

In the chart below, the orange line is the ISM Manufacturing New Orders index where 50 represents a dividing line between expansion and contraction (it’s a survey, so it’s not absolute levels but rather the change that is noted by respondents).