By Brad McMillan December 6, 2018
Tuesday’s market
drop reversed all of Monday’s gain and then some, reportedly on growing doubts
regarding the exact terms of the trade war truce announced by President Trump.
That might be the
case, but I suspect the headlines pointing out that part of the yield curve had
inverted played a bigger role in the decline. This inversion is usually a sign
of economic trouble, so it would make sense for the market to pull back.
The problem is
that, while technically true, the inversion we saw typically indicates that
trouble will show up in a couple of years—if it does at all. If the market was
reacting to the inversion, it was overreacting.
What
Is A Yield Curve Inversion?
As a reminder, the
yield curve simply means the difference between the interest rates charged for
different time periods. You would expect to pay more for a 30-year mortgage
than for a 10-year mortgage, for example, and that is normally the case.
Sometimes, though,
the combination of rising short-term rates (usually driven by rate increases by
the Fed) and declining longer-term rates (driven by pessimism about growth)
pushes shorter rates higher than longer-term ones. This is called an inversion
of the yield curve.
Sign
Of Trouble Ahead?
If it costs more to
borrow for longer, something must be out of whack. That is why, historically,
an inverted yield curve has been a good sign of economic trouble ahead. It is
also why the stock market would tank—fear of an economic recession.
The problem?
Although an inverted yield curve is a good indicator of trouble, it has never
been a good sign of immediate trouble. For the particular inversion we are
seeing, there has typically been a delay of two years or more between the
initial inversion and the actual recession.
This indicator is a
yellow light, telling us something that we actually already know (i.e., that
the economy is slowing) and not a red light announcing imminent trouble.
Yield
Curve: A Timely Indicator
If we want to look
at the yield curve as an economic indicator, a more timely indicator is the
spread between the 10-year and 3-month rates. This is the indicator I use in
the monthly Economic Risk Factor Update. The reason I use this one specifically
is that it is the most timely, with about a one-year delay.
Note, however, that
this spread has not yet inverted. As such, we likely have longer than that
before market trouble. Once again, a yellow light even when it actually
inverts—and it hasn’t yet.
One thing that has
kept markets moving up until recently has been the steady if slow growth of the
economy. The fear now is that when the economy declines, so will the market.
Any signs of economic trouble are therefore doubly damaging to the market: not
only to the fundamentals but also to confidence. That is what we are seeing
right now.
Recession
Ahead?
That fear is
reasonable. After all, bear markets are typically associated with recessions,
so watching for a recession makes sense. Someday, we will indeed have one—very
likely with the associated bear market.
Right now, though,
the signs simply don’t seem to be there. The economy is slowing, but it is
still growing. Although corporate earnings growth will likely moderate next
year, expectations are that it will still be strong. Valuations are expensive
by historical standards, but they are cheap by recent history. In other words,
things are not as good as they were—but they are still not bad at all.
You can see this in
the performance of markets during the most recent downturn, including
yesterday’s decline. Depending on how you measure it, we either just avoided or
barely edged into a correction earlier in the pullback, before recovering some
of the losses. This is normal.
The current further
pullback is also normal. As I write this (December 4), the S&P 500 is down
about 7 percent, or half of the decline we see in a typical year. It could get
worse again without signifying a sustained bear market.
Economic
Fundamentals Remain Solid
Market volatility
is scary. It could continue or get worse. Even if it does, though, what we are
seeing is still normal and nothing to worry about yet. While some lights are
flashing yellow, most (e.g., job growth, confidence, and even most of the yield
curve) are still green. With the economic fundamentals solid, any further
volatility will likely be limited.
Keep calm and carry
on.
Brad McMillan is the chief investment
officer at Commonwealth Financial Network, the nation’s largest privately held
independent broker/dealer-RIA. He is the primary spokesperson for
Commonwealth’s investment divisions.
https://insurancenewsnet.com/innarticle/economy-is-slowing-not-tanking-commentary#.XA_09yX4-JA
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