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Conor Sen

By Conor Sen Bloomberg View

Published May 27, 2022


So here we are: When investors aren't worried about inflation, they're worrying about recession. Tech companies are announcing hiring freezes and job cuts in growing numbers. Homebuilders are starting to talk about slowing demand and the supply of existing homes is rising. Walmart reported this week that it has excess inventories.

Isn't this exactly what we wanted?

With the exception of some geopolitical shocks - the war in Ukraine's impact on food and energy, and another round of Covid-19 lockdowns in China - the rebalancing we've seen in the US economy in recent months reflects trends that were expected and desired when forecasters were thinking about 2022 at the end of last year. The changes in the economy that have people so worried are in large part what, six months ago, economists were hoping to see.

Let's start with the housing market. It was overheating as recently as March, with conditions that were stagflationary. Inventories were at record lows and home prices were soaring even as mortgage rates had risen from below 3% to above 4%.

At some point affordability was going to be an issue, but it wasn't clear what level of home prices or mortgage rates it would take to cool things down. Two months later, we know - current asking prices and mortgage rates of around 5.5% have finally led to a rebalancing in the market. It's too soon to tell whether this is a temporary pause or something worse, but the unhealthy pandemic boom in the housing market appears to be over for now.

Another trend economists were looking for was a shift from goods spending back to services spending as consumers took fewer pandemic-related cautions and got back to more normal behavioral patterns. We're now seeing this happening. Amazon said in its quarterly earnings report that it found itself overstaffed in March, and Walmart is in the process of working down excess inventories. Meanwhile, airline and hotel companies are reporting strong demand and pricing power. Yet investors have become more anxious about signs of softness in goods consumption than they've been cheered by the boom in leisure.

For years, market watchers have been concerned about signs of froth in Silicon Valley and the cryptocurrency ecosystem. Countless numbers of companies with dubious business models went public over the past two years via either the Special Purpose Acquisition Company or the traditional IPO process.

Now in 2022 we're seeing all of that fall back to Earth. Stock prices and the value of cryptocurrencies have been hammered. Cash-burning companies like Peloton Interactive Inc. and Carvana Co. have announced layoffs. Venture capitalists are telling anyone who will listen to prepare for a more sober environment for the foreseeable future. The heady days for tech companies and crypto appear to be over for now.

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All these shifts are necessary because inflation was running too hot and the Federal Reserve had to do something to rein it in. At the beginning of the year the market was priced for the Federal Reserve's target rate to be 1% in March 2023. Based on the booming signals throughout the economy, that didn't appear to be enough to rein in inflation.

Today, expectations for the Fed Funds rate in March 2023 are more like 3%. We don't yet know if that will be enough to get inflation back to where the Fed wants it to be. But based on the slowing in the housing market, the reining in of tech and crypto excesses and tightening conditions priced into the stock market, and extra capacity at Amazon.com Inc. and Walmart Inc., it's now at least a possibility in a way it wasn't at the start of 2022.

The question investors are wrestling with is whether the Fed can manage this process and rein in inflation without the economy tipping into recession. The irony is that if you asked forecasters in December what a healthy rebalancing of the economy and monetary policy would look like in the first half of 2022, they would probably say something exactly like what we're seeing now.

(COMMENT, BELOW)


Previously:
05/04/22
01/20/22 Don't call me on Friday. That's my 'me time'
01/06/22 2022 is the year to buy your first luxury electric car
06/03/21 The post-pandemic boom will have a sequel in 2022
05/31/21 Florida may lose some of its boomer shine
01/11/21 Colleges bet on football in their own K-shaped recovery
12/31/20 Just send the bigger bucks already
08/24/20 Young people can't buy homes until older owners . . . move on
08/18/20 Our pandemic love affair with e-commerce could soon sour
08/10/20 Booming 'zoom towns' should ease city housing costs
07/11/20 With a Biden economy, will America be condemned to relive the '70s?
07/14/20 Renting and homebuying swap roles in the covid-19 market
07/13/20 Markets may have a reason to rise along with covid-19 cases
04/27/20 U.S. economy may have hit the coronavirus bottom
11/12/19 The 2020 economy should feel a lot better: What to, realistically, expect
04/23/19: Gen Z is likely to temper aging socialist millennials
03/25/19: All signs point to a housing boom ahead
02/19/19: Trump's economic gamble might make sense
02/15/19: Scaring off Amazon will backfire for the Left
01/29/19: The 2020 election will shred the Obama coalition
11/15/18: Amazon proving the 'rich get richer'?
11/13/18: How gerrymandering can reduce the partisan divide
10/22/18: The politics of the next recession will be a disaster
08/02/18: The future of the US looks a lot like ...
05/05/18: Brick-and-mortar stores may start to make sense again
05/05/18: College admissions season is about to get much easier
05/03/18: Changing housing needs of millennials will change economic development
02/13/18: The big idea for Middle America is to think small
02/07/18: Dems are caught in a tax bill trap this year
10/25/17: Good times have come to Trump-leaning states

Sen is a portfolio manager for New River Investments in Atlanta and has been a contributor to the Atlantic and Business Insider.

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