If you're reading this it means you've made it through the worst first half of a year for US stocks in more than 50 years. Congratulations.
Welcome to the second half, where any hope of relaxation has been dashed by nonstop talk of the US economy possibly slipping into recession.
In America, a recession is officially determined by eight economists who deliberate private. But a recession is commonly defined by analysts as two consecutive negative quarters of gross domestic product growth.
Real GDP shrank in the first quarter of 2022, but monthly data suggests there may have been solid growth in the second quarter and spending picked up in Covid-impacted sectors like travel and entertainment.
The third quarter, however, isn't looking so hot, says David Kelly, chief global strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management. He sees storm clouds gathering that threaten to seriously temper economic momentum.
David Bianco, chief investment officer for the Americas at DWS Group, says his team has already trimmed GDP forecasts several times over the course of the year.
"In past cycles investors and economists would tend to focus on the demand side: How strong is the consumer?" he said on a recent call. "People make the arguments that the economy's fine right now because the consumer is healthy. Our argument would be that this is an environment where the focus should be on the supply side."
"The underlying problem is that inflation has been a function of not enough supply versus too much demand," wrote Ivan Feinseth of Tigress Financial Partners in a note.
But faltering demand could become a bigger problem. An end to stimulus checks, enhanced unemployment benefits, enhanced child tax credits and other programs that aided lower and middle-income households during the height of the pandemic could cause a huge drag on spending in the near future, said Kelly.
He predicts that the end of these stimulus programs could lead to a drop in the federal budget deficit from 12.4% of GDP in 2021 to less than 4% of GDP in 2022. That would be the largest decline since the end of World War II.
No matter where you fall on matters of the rapidly growing US national debt, a decrease in stimulus spending will likely slow the economy, at least in the short-term.
Add to that a surge in 30-year mortgage rates, an 8% increase in the dollar against key currencies this year that makes exports more expensive and dropping consumer confidence and you've got a fairly heightened "risk that the US economy falls into recession in the near term," said Kelly.
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