The Everything Risk
It’s been one of those weird times lately when investors seem to be cheering poor economic data. That’s because recession risk has faded, so
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  • It’s been one of those weird times lately when investors seem to be cheering poor economic data. That’s because recession risk has faded, so bad numbers are seen as grist for faster interest rate cuts. When does sentiment shift, though?
  • Given the recent raft of weak jobs numbers, the risk is that it changes quite soon.
  • No one has been concerned about recession. So the emergence of real risks of a downturn, especially with inflation still elevated, would be a big market negative.
  • That’s probably an opportunity to buy, but caveat emptor: If an actual recession kicks in, elevated valuations will make the downdraft severe. 

Bad news is good news. So says the market.

Take a look at this chart.

What it shows is the 15-day correlation between the price of stocks and bonds.

The recent peak in positive correlation — when stocks and bonds rise and fall together — is the highest in at least a year.  In the three years since the fed funds rate has moved off the zero lower bound, there have only been three times when the positive correlation has been higher.

Translation: good economic data that causes Treasury prices to fall also has also tended to cause stocks to fall. Bad economic news, which causes Treasury prices to rise, has been good news for stocks. The thinking is that the news isn’t bad enough to risk recession but will help stocks out by lowering interest rates. 

The result: On Tuesday, the S&P 500 hit another record despite — or maybe because of — downward revisions to previous job figures. The Nasdaq 100 posted its fifth straight gain, its longest winning streak in more than a month, to also close at a record.

Producer prices help the prevailing narrative

Wednesday’s producer price figures tell the story best. The Bloomberg consensus estimate was for a 0.3% rise on both headline and core inflation figures, putting producer price inflation at 3.3% in the last 12 months, and 3.5% when you strip out food and energy. Instead, producer prices actually fell last month. That reinforces expectations for a rate cut next week.

That’s not just bullish for bonds, it’s helpful for stocks, too, because it allows the Federal Reserve to concentrate more fully on a weakening labor market and pull forward rate cuts.

By the numbers

6
The number of quarter-point equivalent rate cuts now being priced in by financial markets through the end of 2026

It’s all about the labor market now

How weak is the jobs market? The prevailing narrative — one supporting the rise in shares after a decent quarterly corporate earnings season — is that employment is weak but roughly in balance. As Fed Chair Jerome Powell outlined a few weeks ago, while job growth has slowed, firms aren’t firing people en masse. He added, though, that because supply and demand were lower, it means any weakness could unravel the balance more quickly. So the Fed is on the case.

My concern is that the current reality may actually be worse. For example, the latest jobs report showed not only weak numbers for August, but also downward revisions to prior months, with the US economy losing jobs in June. What’s more, that report showed a more comprehensive unemployment figure — including those who are underemployed, marginally attached to the workforce or have given up looking for work — as rising to the highest level in four years. That measure is a full 1 ½ percentage points higher than at its trough.

Add in Tuesday’s news of the biggest subtraction of job growth from any annual benchmark revision ever, and you get a labor market that is weaker than investors thought, perhaps much weaker.

Markets are still in a rallying mood. But more weak employment figures could quickly change things. I’d look at weekly initial jobless claims of more than 240,000 as a threshold for where bad news is treated as bad news, and the market sells off.

Risk of recession is not a problem. It’s a buy-the-dip opportunity

This isn’t cause for worry yet. Recession risk doesn’t seem particularly high yet. Polymarket pegs the chance of recession at a measly 8% before year-end. And my recent analysis shows that negative shifts in mood about equities don’t last long unless an actual recession comes. Whether its event risk or poor economic figures, time and again these have proven to be only temporary setbacks.

To wit, JPMorgan’s trading desk warned of a pullback after a rate cut on Monday, pointing to a number of risk factors including inflation, employment and the trade war. Still, if you read their note, they also say “we maintain our lower conviction Tactical Bullish call. This current bull market feels unstoppable with new support forming as former tent poles weaken …  Economic growth appears to be strengthening, earnings are robust, and the trade war has seen incremental improvement. ” In essence, buy the dip.

Big risks remain 

Put all of this together, and given the low recession risk, it still makes sense to  stay fully invested in the market. Recession risk that rises somewhat and triggers a drop in stock prices is essentially an opportunity in disguise.

Moreover, we saw that a short recession in 2020 and a historically aggressive rate hike cycle in 2022 and 2023 didn’t keep the market down for long. That underpins investors’ buy-the-dip mentality. In fact, because so far we’ve overcome policy shifts by President Donald Trump that I’d call the biggest risk to the economy since 2009, there’s even greater incentive to double down on equities.

The real risk? Experience from 2001 and 2007 shows that lengthy recessions and extreme overvaluation combine to be a wrecking ball to equity returns.  On valuation, Bank of America recently surveyed fund managers and found that more than nine in 10 of them think US equities are overvalued. I argued a few weeks ago that means investors will likely sell at the first sign of trouble.

That selling would continue if the risk of recession morphs into an actual recession. This expansion hinges on whether consumers can handle the impact of tariffs on inflation and on the ability of the AI boom to prop up capital spending and equity valuations.

On the jobs numbers. it’s a short stone’s throw from fewer than 30,000 jobs being added to the economy to the economy actually losing jobs. And while Big Tech’s capital spending plans say this AI cycle can go on for a few more quarters, technology consultant Gartner’s view that we’re heading for a “Trough of Disillusionment by 2026” is a reality check on how long this boom can last.

Things on my radar

  • Evidence this bull market has legs? Oracle just surged the most since 1992 on some good cloud-computing news.
  • Broadcom is offering Nvidia overdue competition in AI. Sort of like Juniper Networks did for Cisco Systems during the Internet bubble.
  • Time and again, bearish investors have been run over by the data. This time it was in the bond market as jobs numbers disappointed.
  • Companies that have turned themselves into a bet on crypto have seen the market move against them. The trend is evidence of froth though. Financial conditions aren’t tight. 
  • Subprime auto just experienced a significant bankruptcy. It highlights the risks lurking beneath. 

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