If everybody sees a recession coming, wouldn’t cutting rates now be the right thing for the Fed to do? The short answer is no. After all, we haven’t seen any material change in the labor market just yet. And inflation was already too high before tariffs began. So, just as Fed Chair Jerome Powell argued today, it makes sense to wait and see how things develop rather than rush headlong into a policy that might have to be reversed. The Fed’s hands are basically tied because the starting point — low unemployment and elevated inflation — makes preemptive cuts seem irresponsible. We already saw last year that when the Fed is aggressively dovish and tries to stick a soft landing, rate cuts can cause bond yields to rise as inflation angst grows. But this situation creates two-sided risk. On the one hand, the Fed is biased toward standing pat because it’s concerned that inflation expectations could become unanchored (much as they did in the late 1960s when the first great stagflation cycle was seeded). But they then risk cutting too late and being forced to do so aggressively as the economy turns down sharply. Historically speaking, the spike in tariffs is loosely akin to the oil embargo in 1973 because it’s a sudden price shock that will be felt much earlier than Fed policy. Bottom line: Trump’s tariffs are taking a toll, and empty store shelves and higher prices are coming even if Trump eventually caves on 145% Chinese tariffs. Look at this one example of $417 million in tariffs on goods from just one cargo ship that was able to dock on April 24 in the port of Long Beach. It’s stuff like this that risks an inflationary growth slowdown, with a high likelihood of a recession. But the Fed can’t risk its credibility by bailing out Trump preemptively. It can only wait and react. A bear market with nowhere to hide, but with differentiation in the Magnificent Seven | A few months into this trade war, evidence of a slowdown in consumption is mounting. The 1.8% level from the first quarter’s GDP was a lot lower than the 4% from the prior three months. And the next quarter will be even lower. That’s largely priced in to equities now, so the best case is one where the market treads water until the growth and inflation overhang is lifted, something that should take a few months. My base case is mild stagflation that leads to a recession, thus creating a bear market in stocks. And for the first time in nearly two decades, this will present active investors with some opportunities. For one, the rotation in shares out of Big Tech has seen consumer staples as one of the biggest beneficiaries. But stocks in that sector have high valuations. Utilities look like a better bet given their lower multiples. And energy, which has been beaten up during the rotation, could be near a bottom in terms of expectations given that oil prices are now below breakeven for many shale producers. Even within the large-cap tech stocks there is a clear differentiation. Tesla and Nvidia have the highest earnings multiples and thus the most to lose but are also some of the most exposed to China and tariff policy. Apple and Amazon have a lower multiple but high China-specific risk. Meanwhile, the three companies that showed the best results in the first quarter — Meta, Alphabet and Microsoft — also have the least tariff risk for now, being pure data companies. I strongly suspect, though, that when the US economy rights itself, big tech won’t lead the market. There will be new sector leaders. And active management will outperform indexing in that transition. As this plays out, bonds will suffer some because of inflation risk. But a recession and massive rate cuts will make locking in yield a good bet, too. The question is whether we exit recession with high inflation. If so, bonds aren’t going to hold value after the recession-induced brief winning run. I want to flag the possibility of a more aggressive downside scenario from a liquidity crisis. For example, I saw that elite colleges were pressuring private equity firms for an exit from their investments. That’s understandable given the risks to funding from Trump’s stance toward these institutions. But it also is a reminder that these PE companies have a lot of illiquid assets that they have had a hard time selling. A recession will create liquidity pressures that cause some investors to sell good assets when they can’t sell illiquid ones. And it’s that kind of liquidity pressure that leads to panics and exacerbate bear markets. |