These three indicators stand out⦠[The Jolt with Stephen McBride] Are we slipping into a recession? Are we slipping into a recession? Thatâs the question on every investorâs mind right now. Because recessions are bad for stocks. In todayâs Jolt, Iâll walk you through what the three most accurate recession indicators are telling us⦠and suggest what to do about it. Letâs get after it. - First of all, how bad are recessions for stocks? Pretty bad. During the eight recessionary bear markets since WWII, the average top-to-bottom S&P 500 decline was 36%. Youâve likely heard the saying âthe stock market is not the economy.â True, but only in the short term. Over time, stocks and the economy are joined at the hip. Thatâs why, although not every recession leads to a brutal bear market, almost every brutal bear market has occurred around a recession. Bear markets outside of recessions are rare, and they tend to be shallower and quicker. Recessions are the dividing line between ânot so badâ market declines and brutal bear markets. - Is the US economy hitting the rocks? We sifted through dozens of indicators to find the most reliable recession predictors. Three stood out: Unemployment claims usually start rising 11 months before a next recession. The yield curve ([which I explained here]() inverts 19 months before a downturn, on average. New home sales typically peak and begin falling more than two years ahead of a recession. Hereâs what theyâre telling us right now: [ShareÂ]( #1: Unemployment claims have inched higher since bottoming more than two years ago. #2: The yield curve has inverted before every recession since the 1960s. But itâs been almost two years since the curve inverted (the longest stretch on record), and still no recession. Our research shows the more accurate signal is when the curve un-inverts. Thatâs occurred two months ahead of a recession, on average. As I type, the curve is inches away from un-inverting. #3: New home sales peaked almost four years ago and have continued to trend down. You could dismiss any one of these warning signals on their own. Itâs harder to dismiss that all three are flashing. The likelihood of a recession is much higher than itâs been in some time. - But thereâs one giant caveat. COVID messed up the âset in stoneâ indicators we relied upon for decades. Weâre still working through all the weirdness that came from shutting down the economy⦠handing out trillions of dollarsâ worth of stimulus checks⦠and slashing interest rates to zero. Just look at the unemployment rate during COVID. Never seen anything like it. You have to put an asterisk next to all these data points. Source: Federal Reserve Economic Data Weâre [listening to earnings calls to get a âreadâ on the economy]( and watching jobs numbers closely. Remember how everyone was glued to the screen on inflation numbers for two years? Now all eyes are on jobs numbers. There are no certainties in investing, only probabilities. I put the odds of the US entering a recession before the end of 2024 at 60%. If we do get a recession, I think thereâs a 90% chance it will be mild and short, based on a lot of data I wonât get into here. - But hereâs something important I bet you donât know about recessions. The S&P 500 rose in seven of the past 13 recessions. Huh? The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is the official scorekeeper of recessions. Problem is⦠it moves as slow as a snail. Remember the Great Recession that began in December 2007? The NBER didnât officially âcall itâ until December 2008. WAY too late for investors to act upon it. In fact, the stock market put in a generational bottom three months laterâthe buying opportunity of a lifetime. Remember, stocks fall well before we know if the economy is in a recession. Thatâs why, if youâre going to act, nowâs the time. As I explained in the new issue of [Disruption Investor](, I think the period from now until the election is the most dangerous for markets. If youâre a member, I hope you acted on our guidance. Chris Wood and I walked through several ways to âbuy insuranceâ on your stock portfolio in order to blunt losses and preserve the substantial gains weâve enjoyed. Our strategy is working. [(Upgrade here if youâre not a member yet.)]( The #1 thing that separates investors who grow rich from those who see mediocre results is the ability to manage risk. Making money in the first half of the year was âeasy.â Recognize weâre now in a different environment. Even if we avoid recession, expect turbulent markets heading into Novemberâs political âSuper Bowl.â Our edge in Disruption Investor is owning great, disruptive businesses in long-term megatrends. Over a multi-year period, the companies we own will continue to power ahead, no matter what markets do. But extra caution is warranted for now. - Todayâs dose of optimism⦠America is winning the Olympics. Team USA has won 30 gold medals and 103 total medals. Thatâs 30 more than second-place China. Is it because America has the best athletes? Or because itâs not afraid to use air conditioning? Someone put a bunch of environmental wingnuts in charge of the Olympic village. They wanted this to be the âgreenestâ games ever, and told teams air conditioning was a no-no. âHey, athletes. I know you worked your whole lives for this moment. Itâs 80°F+ outside and itâs brutally hot in those stuffy rooms without aircon. But conserving energy is more important than your Olympic dreams, so youâll have to make do with a small fan.â âNo problem,â said team USA. âWeâll bring our own ACs!â Look at this chart showing countriesâ wealth compared to the average temperature. Hotter countries are poorer: Source: World Bank The exceptions are countries like Singapore, Australia, and the UAE, which embrace air-cooling technologies. If you want to get rich, install AC. Have a great weekend. Stephen McBride
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