Doomsayers begin to see cracks in healthy world economy
With much of the pain having subsided and US interest rates steadily rising, prominent investors and economists are shining a light on the issues that could trigger the next recession.
Douglas Gillison
Over the last decade, the world's major economies floated themselves out of recession on oceans of easy money and low, or even negative, interest rates.
For the moment, policymakers and analysts talk of a “Goldilocks economy” in the United States, which is enjoying low unemployment, brisk growth, improved household finances and a strengthened banking system.
But with much of the pain having subsided and US interest rates steadily rising, prominent investors and economists are shining a light on the issues that could trigger the next recession.
They point not to risky subprime mortgage lending, which sparked the last crisis 10 years ago, but instead to voracious borrowing by corporations and emerging market economies.
Martin Feldstein, chief economic adviser to President Ronald Reagan, paints a grim picture where rising interest rates could pop a debt-fuelled Wall Street bubble, gutting investment portfolios and consumer confidence, and causing “another long, deep downturn.”
He offered some eye-watering numbers in a column in The Wall Street Journal on Thursday, warning that a drop in stock prices back to their historical averages from current dizzying heights would eliminate US$10 trillion of US household wealth, slashing consumer spending by about US$400 billion, and cutting two percentage points off GDP growth.
“Add in the effects on business investment, and this spending crunch would push the economy into recession,” Feldstein wrote.
Neither the Federal Reserve nor Congress are in a position to do much to respond, since there is little room to cut interest rates, and the government deficit and debt are high.
Outside US
Outside the United States, liabilities may also lurk under all the accumulated debt.
Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller warned that US dollar-denominated borrowing by emerging markets, like Turkey, Argentina and others, meant they already are facing “a shrinkage of liquidity” as the US central bank raises interest rates.
Federal Reserve rate hikes raise borrowing costs for companies and governments, particularly those with dollar-denominated debt, and those who need to refinance.
“My assumption is one of these hikes - I don't know which one - is going to trigger this thing,” Druckenmiller said, according to Business Insider.
Ruchir Sharma, chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, said: “The Fed's tightening is already rattling emerging markets.”
He worries that markets have grown “too big to fail,” bloated by money which poured in following the 2008 meltdown as central banks tried to stabilise the system.
Balance sheets
Central bank balance sheets went from US$5 trillion to US$17 trillion in the last decade, he wrote this month in The New York Times, swelling the value of global markets to US$290 trillion, or a record 360% of global gross domestic product.
Meanwhile, debt held by S&P 500 corporations has risen to 1.5 times earnings since 2010, near peaks that preceded past recessions.
The typical privately-held corporation purchased by private equity investors in that time is leveraged to six times earnings, twice what a ratings agency would consider junk, according to Sharma.
“When the American markets start feeling it, the results are likely be very different from 2008 - corporate meltdowns rather than mortgage defaults, and bond and pension funds affected before big investment banks,” he warned.
Economist Joel Naroff told AFP the fading boost of December's tax cuts, combined with stagnant wage growth, could leave consumer spending “out of gas” in the next six to nine months.
With the housing market already soft, a slowdown in the real economy could be the first shoe to drop, he added, with debt-fuelled market bubbles being the second.
“My view is that the next recession will be an average recession,” Naroff said, but added, “The worst-case scenarios are not unreasonable to project.” – Nampa/AFP
Over the last decade, the world's major economies floated themselves out of recession on oceans of easy money and low, or even negative, interest rates.
For the moment, policymakers and analysts talk of a “Goldilocks economy” in the United States, which is enjoying low unemployment, brisk growth, improved household finances and a strengthened banking system.
But with much of the pain having subsided and US interest rates steadily rising, prominent investors and economists are shining a light on the issues that could trigger the next recession.
They point not to risky subprime mortgage lending, which sparked the last crisis 10 years ago, but instead to voracious borrowing by corporations and emerging market economies.
Martin Feldstein, chief economic adviser to President Ronald Reagan, paints a grim picture where rising interest rates could pop a debt-fuelled Wall Street bubble, gutting investment portfolios and consumer confidence, and causing “another long, deep downturn.”
He offered some eye-watering numbers in a column in The Wall Street Journal on Thursday, warning that a drop in stock prices back to their historical averages from current dizzying heights would eliminate US$10 trillion of US household wealth, slashing consumer spending by about US$400 billion, and cutting two percentage points off GDP growth.
“Add in the effects on business investment, and this spending crunch would push the economy into recession,” Feldstein wrote.
Neither the Federal Reserve nor Congress are in a position to do much to respond, since there is little room to cut interest rates, and the government deficit and debt are high.
Outside US
Outside the United States, liabilities may also lurk under all the accumulated debt.
Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller warned that US dollar-denominated borrowing by emerging markets, like Turkey, Argentina and others, meant they already are facing “a shrinkage of liquidity” as the US central bank raises interest rates.
Federal Reserve rate hikes raise borrowing costs for companies and governments, particularly those with dollar-denominated debt, and those who need to refinance.
“My assumption is one of these hikes - I don't know which one - is going to trigger this thing,” Druckenmiller said, according to Business Insider.
Ruchir Sharma, chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, said: “The Fed's tightening is already rattling emerging markets.”
He worries that markets have grown “too big to fail,” bloated by money which poured in following the 2008 meltdown as central banks tried to stabilise the system.
Balance sheets
Central bank balance sheets went from US$5 trillion to US$17 trillion in the last decade, he wrote this month in The New York Times, swelling the value of global markets to US$290 trillion, or a record 360% of global gross domestic product.
Meanwhile, debt held by S&P 500 corporations has risen to 1.5 times earnings since 2010, near peaks that preceded past recessions.
The typical privately-held corporation purchased by private equity investors in that time is leveraged to six times earnings, twice what a ratings agency would consider junk, according to Sharma.
“When the American markets start feeling it, the results are likely be very different from 2008 - corporate meltdowns rather than mortgage defaults, and bond and pension funds affected before big investment banks,” he warned.
Economist Joel Naroff told AFP the fading boost of December's tax cuts, combined with stagnant wage growth, could leave consumer spending “out of gas” in the next six to nine months.
With the housing market already soft, a slowdown in the real economy could be the first shoe to drop, he added, with debt-fuelled market bubbles being the second.
“My view is that the next recession will be an average recession,” Naroff said, but added, “The worst-case scenarios are not unreasonable to project.” – Nampa/AFP
Kommentaar
Republikein
Geen kommentaar is op hierdie artikel gelaat nie